1 Peter 5.1-11 – Addressing the Shepherds of God’s Flock

There is an economy in God’s Kingdom that sits upon His perfect Order.  This economy is of rewards – both positive and negative – that involves every human being ever to exist.  The rewards include Damnation for unrepentant sinners, as well as the rewards of Salvation/praise/responsibility/Crowns/His Joy for the redeemed.  The Shepherds He appoints over His flock oversee their wellbeing – instructing, correcting, protecting, and guiding them until they meet the Lord for their Judgement.  Paul tells of the women who in faith before the Cross strove for ‘a better resurrection (Heb 11:35-38); He also offered his example of striving for the prize, finishing his race well (1 Cor 9:24-27); And Jesus encourages us to strive for His rewards (Matt 10:40-42)1Peter 5 is written to guide and encourage those Shepherds, reminding them of this economy and encouraging them to labor well towards the Crown their Lord will include as their reward.

​1 Therefore, I exhort the elders among you, as your fellow elder and witness of the sufferings of Christ, and a partaker also of the glory that is to be revealed, 2 shepherd the flock of God among you, overseeing not under compulsion, but willingly, according to God; and not for dishonest gain, but with eagerness; 3 nor yet as lording it over those allotted to you, but being examples to the flock.

After addressing the Saints to persevere (1 Pet 4:12-19) Peter turns to instruct and encourage their Shepherds.  Peter establishes himself as a direct witness to Jesus’ ministry, death, and resurrection.  He also stands alongside them as their peer as they (and we) await the glorious Hope of His appearance. (Titus 2:11-14)

We look at the character of these men as the ones Paul prescribes to Timothy.  Peter instructs them to lead in their true nature as servants endowed by the Holy Spirit, avoiding the use of the forces of the flesh for control or self-gain.  These are neither weak nor ignorant men, but men who would be courageous in guiding and defending their people in both spirit and flesh.  True, our Jesus is often described as meek and mild (Isa 53:7), but He is also the Lion of Judah, the One Who allowed the created to murder the Creator for their own rescue, the only One worthy to open the Scroll (Rev 5:5).  It is a mistake to see His countenance as evidence of weakness, but instead we see the Strongest One bravely muting His passion and power in obedience to the Father that the Sacrifice would make way to save us.  True Shepherds given responsibility over His Flock, emboldened and endowed with His same Spirit, are not weaklings who’d shun away or brutes who’d use cowardly force to control.  These are expected to be ‘men above reproach’ (1 Tim 3:1-7). A portion of His flock has been allotted to each of them; They have been intentionally given to their care by God.  They are not to dominate and guide by force, but exercise their authority as given by God, as God would.

They are not to see their responsibility as a burden thrust upon them, but serve God by shepherding willingly.  And, they certainly are not to be driven by self-enrichment of any sort but instead be motivated and encouraged for the sake of serving Him.  This last point is particularly important.  Anyone in authority faces opportunities of some sort of ‘gain’, be it recognition, praise, monetary, control, etc.  As the ‘worker is due his wage’, all of our works result in reward, either immediately or later, as a pay for service.

The contemporary use of the words ‘gain, wage or reward’ implies a positive outcome, yet the Biblical use is both positive or negative- IE: “For the wages of sin is death” (Rom 6:23a), and,“The wage of the righteous leads to life, the gain of the wicked to sin.” (Prov 10:16)  Jesus also warned against seeking public acknowledgement (Matt 6:1-6), as this immediate gain is a bad exchange instead having the reward secured in Heaven ‘where neither moth nor rust destroys’. (Matt 6:20)

​1 “Beware of doing your righteousness before men to be noticed by them; otherwise you have no reward with your Father who is in heaven. 2 “Therefore, when you give to the poor, do not sound a trumpet before you, as the hypocrites do in the synagogues and in the streets, so that they may be glorified by men. Truly I say to you, they have their reward in full. 3 But when you give to the poor, do not let your left hand know what your right hand is doing, 4 so that your giving will be in secret; and your Father who sees what is done in secret will reward you. 5 “And when you pray, you are not to be like the hypocrites; for they love to stand and pray in the synagogues and on the street corners so that they may be seen by men. Truly I say to you, they have their reward in full. 6 But you, when you pray, go into your inner room, and when you have shut your door, pray to your Father who is in secret, and your Father who sees what is done in secret will reward you. (Matthew 6:1-6)

4 And when the Chief Shepherd appears, you will receive the unfading crown of glory.

A straight reading of Jesus’ Revelation to John, and supporting statements by Jesus and Paul, indicate the sudden and immediate gathering of the Church (John 14:1-4, 1 Thes 4:13-17), followed by Christ’s Bema Seat Judgement of the resurrected New Covenant Saints (Rom 14:10, 2 Cor 5:10, 1 Cor 3:11-15).

The Rapture

1 “Do not let your heart be troubled; believe in God, believe also in Me. 2 In My Father’s house are many dwelling places; if it were not so, I would have told you; for I go to prepare a place for you. 3 And if I go and prepare a place for you, I will come again and receive you to Myself, that where I am, there you may be also. 4 And you know the way where I am going.” (John 14:1-4)

 13 But we do not want you to be uninformed, brothers, about those who are asleep, so that you will not grieve as do the rest who have no hope. 14 For if we believe that Jesus died and rose again, even so God will bring with Him those who have fallen asleep in Jesus. 15 For this we say to you by the word of the Lord, that we who are alive and remain until the coming of the Lord, will not precede those who have fallen asleep. 16 For the Lord Himself will descend from heaven with a shout, with the voice of the archangel and with the trumpet of God, and the dead in Christ will rise first. 17 Then we who are alive and remain will be caught up together with them in the clouds to meet the Lord in the air, and so we shall always be with the Lord. (1 Thes 4:13-17)

The Bema Seat

10 But you, why do you judge your brother? Or you again, why do you view your brother with contempt? For we will all stand before the judgment seat of God. (Rom 14:10)

10 For we must all appear before the judgment seat of Christ, so that each one may be recompensed for his deeds in the body, according to what he has done, whether good or bad. (2 Cor 5:10)

11 For no one can lay a foundation other than the one which is laid, which is Jesus Christ. 12 Now if anyone builds on the foundation with gold, silver, precious stones, wood, hay, straw, 13 each man’s work will become evident, for the day will indicate it because it is revealed with fire, and the fire itself will test the quality of each man’s work. 14 If any man’s work which he has built on it remains, he will receive a reward. 15 If any man’s work is burned up, he will suffer loss, but he himself will be saved, yet so as through fire. (1 Cor 3:11-15)

Peter encourages the Overseers of the Church, that following the appearance of Christ, He will judge their work and reward them accordingly.  Amongst the reward to be given to Saints found worthy are five crowns listed in Scripture, the Shepherd’s being the ‘Elder’s Crown’, the Crown of Glory:

Incorruptible Crown (The Victor’s Crown)

25 Now everyone who competes in the games exercises self-control in all things. They then do it to receive a corruptible crown, but we an incorruptible. (1Cor 9:25)

Crown of Rejoicing (Soul Winner’s Crown)

19 For who is our hope or joy or crown of boasting? Is it not even you, before our Lord Jesus at His coming? (1Thes 2:19)

Crown of Righteousness (Those who love His appearing)

8 In the future there is laid up for me the crown of righteousness, which the Lord, the righteous Judge, will award to me on that day, and not only to me, but also to all who have loved His appearing. (2 Tim 4:8)

Crown of Glory (The Elder’s Crown)

4 And when the Chief Shepherd appears, you will receive the unfading crown of glory. (1 Pet 5:4)

Crown of Life (The Martyr’s Crown)

12 Blessed is a man who perseveres under trial; for once he has been approved, he will receive the crown of life which the Lord has promised to those who love Him. (Jas 1:12)

10 Do not fear what you are about to suffer. Behold, the devil is about to cast some of you into prison, so that you will be tested, and you will have tribulation for ten days. Be faithful until death, and I will give you the crown of life. (Rev 2:10)

5 You younger men, likewise, be subject to your elders. And all of you, clothe yourselves with humility toward one another, for GOD IS OPPOSED TO THE PROUD, BUT GIVES GRACE TO THE HUMBLE. 6 Therefore humble yourselves under the mighty hand of God, that He may exalt you at the proper time, 7 CASTING ALL YOUR ANXIETY ON HIM, because He cares for you.

The younger men who do not yet have opportunity to shepherd, but are still growing as disciples, are to submit to the authority of the older ones towards that same goal (v5).  Together, the elder and the younger are reminded to humbly submit to the other under Christ, avoiding the common hurdle and sin of pride, that together they would cooperate under His Hand.

8 Be of sober spirit, be watchful. Your adversary, the devil, prowls around like a roaring lion, seeking someone to devour. 9 But resist him, firm in the faith, knowing that the same experiences of suffering are being accomplished among your brethren who are in the world.

The Enemy’s goal isn’t primarily our suffering, but our deterrence.  This may include suffering, but whatever his devices, he wants to destroy our faith and turn our eye away from our Sovereign, loving God.  He wants to lull us into not noticing the Almighty, lead us to believe God isn’t concerned of our heart and actions since we’re under Grace.  Satan looks to steal the rewards the Lord would give us if we would engage in the opportunities He puts before us (Ecc 9:10a, Col 3:23-25).  Paul counters this with his exhortation to join him in a steady and dedicated cadence.

10 Whatever your hand finds to do, do it with all your might (Ecc 9:10a)

23 Whatever you do, do your work heartily, as for the Lord rather than for men, 24 knowing that from the Lord you will receive the reward of the inheritance. Serve the Lord Christ. 25 For he who does wrong will receive the consequences of the wrong which he has done, and that without partiality. (Col 3:23-25)

The thief, the Enemy, turned from smooth talk to Eve towards a campaign of open deception that still prevails upon us.  While his methods are often subtle, the Bible explains a furious interference is underway by the Father of Lies.  He wants to undermine the confirmation of our faith, deprive us of an essential measure of comfort we’d have in resting in the God Who delivers, destroy our assurance He is still in command.

Our Elders are tasked with helping to us resist in the faith, as they also resist for themselves.

10 And after you have suffered for a little while, the God of all grace, who called you to His eternal glory in Christ, will Himself restore, strengthen, confirm, and ground you. 11 To Him be might forever and ever. Amen.

These challenges too shall pass.  Our Father, in His Grace, allots and secures every last follower of Christ – He will prevail and we will find our rest in Glory.  He will make us perfected (restored), established (strengthened), and settled in our Foundation (confirmed).  Deeply grateful, we praise His eternal might that will see us delivered to His goals.




The Dispensations of God’s Covenants

This is an excerpt of Scripture and Prophesy – Understanding, Error, and Its Effect on the Church

As our approach to interpreting Scripture is foundational (see Basics of Biblical Interpretation), so too is how we understand God’s Dispensations and Covenants. As with the consequences of a literal vs allegorical approach to prophetic Scripture arrives at very different conclusions, so too are Dispensations and Covenants a great rudder to the eschatological ship.

The word Dispensation is used in the New Testament (Luke 16:1–4; 1 Cor. 9:17; Eph. 1:10; 3:2, 9; Col. 1:25; 1 Tim. 1:4) and coveys the picture of responsibilities delegated to a steward by the owner (God), with positive and negative consequences following the execution of the owner’s expectations. Ryrie explains a Dispensation is “a distinguishable economy in the outworking of God’s purpose.” Charles C. Ryrie, Dispensationalism (Chicago: Moody, 1995), 28

Dispensations

Dispensations stand individually yet are continuations of the prior stated purposes of God, the Salvation of Mankind and all Creation. They can have features overlapping prior Dispensations because the Word of God always stands in continuity and He will not rescind or change. Some examples of earlier Dispensational statements continuing on would include not to again destroy the Earth by flood, the continuation of His expectations related through Mosaic Law to the Church (though Christians will not be condemned by the Law, we would still be expected to live as that Law is written on soft hearts), and the blessings and curses for those relating to treatment of Israel. Not one jot or tittle will pass away from the Law until all is accomplished. (Matt 5:17-18)

As with Prophetic Scripture, a framework to interpret Dispensations are necessary. Efforts to interpret and understand God’s Words to us is a sincere work, yet not a science. God has offered insight and understanding to those who will seek Him, and He encourages it. We are to seek Him (Psa 34:8); To obey in repentance through understanding (Rom 8:29); To be transformed by the renewing of our minds (Rom 12:2); To avoid foolishness (Psa 92:4-6); And to receive the Word with great eagerness, examining the Scriptures daily to see whether these things (are) so (Acts 17:10-11).

Three foundational objectives are employed in any understanding of Dispensations from God:

  1. God’s Glory in history is His primary goal
  2. A literal reading of the text as with all Scripture
  3. A clear distinction and preservation of the separate entities of Israel and the Church.

The 3rd point is the hill on which Literalists and Spiritualizers choose to die. This is explained later below (See Origins of Amillennialism, Postmillennialism, and Replacement (of Israel) Theology). For the Covenants to read naturally and in the order God gave them, it is impossible to exclude or replace Israel as a central aspect in Jesus’ Revelation to John without spiritualizing and changing the clear and literal meanings. The ramifications to the rest of our understanding are significant.

Dispensations are summary names or categories given by theologians to the resultant changes following a Covenant. For example, following God’s Covenant with Noah after the Ark landed when the waters of the flood receded (The Noahic Covenant, Gen 9:11-16) the Dispensation including Human government is commonly called Post-Diluvian. While a Covenant was spoken by God at a particular time, Dispensations are periods of time that follow. They are continuations following but not negating prior Dispensations, and they can also carry specific aspects of the priors. They are alluded to but not named in Scripture, and are a tool for understanding the Works of God. Theologians generally agree on the number but the names and level of detail can vary. The illustration below divides the Dispensations between the Covenants.

Summary of the Major Dispensations

  1. Edenic (Gen 1:28-30) (From Man’s creation to the Fall)
    1 28 God blessed them, and God said to them, “Be fruitful and multiply, and fill the earth, and subdue it; and have dominion over the fish of the sea and over the birds of the sky and over every living thing that creeps on the earth.” 29 Then God said, “Behold, I have given to you every plant yielding seed that is on the surface of all the earth, and every tree which has the fruit of the tree yielding seed; it shall be food for you; 30 and to every beast of the earth and to every bird of the sky and to everything that creeps on the earth which has life, I have given every green plant for food”; and it was so.

The Dispensation of “Innocence”: God initially instructed Adam and Eve of their dominion and its use

  1. Ante-Diluvian (Gen 6:11-22) (From Ejection from Eden to the Flood)
    6 11 Now the earth was corrupt before God, and the earth was filled with violence.
    12 And God saw the earth, and behold, it was corrupt; for all flesh had corrupted their way upon the earth.
    13 Then God said to Noah, “The end of all flesh has come before Me; for the earth is filled with violence because of them; and behold, I am about to destroy them with the earth.
    14 Make for yourself an Ark of gopher wood; you shall make the ark with rooms, and you shall cover it inside and out with pitch.
    15 Now this is how you shall make it: the length of the ark 300 cubits, its breadth 50 cubits, and its height 30 cubits.
    16 You shall make a window for the ark, and complete it to one cubit from the top; and set the door of the ark in the side of it; you shall make it with lower, second, and third decks.
    17 As for Me, behold I am bringing the flood of water upon the earth, to destroy all flesh in which is the breath of life, from under heaven; everything that is on the earth shall breathe its last.
    18 But I will establish My covenant with you; and you shall enter the ark—you and your sons and your wife and your sons’ wives with you.
    19 And of every living thing of all flesh, you shall bring two of every kind into the ark, to keep them alive with you; they shall be male and female.
    20 Of the birds after their kind, and of the animals after their kind, of every creeping thing of the ground after its kind, two of every kind will come to you to keep them alive.
    21 As for you, take for yourself some of all food which is edible, and gather it to yourself; and it shall be for food for you and for them.”
    22 Thus Noah did; according to all that God had commanded him, so he did.

The Dispensation of “Conscience”: Following the Fall and consciousness of good and evil, God gave the Adamic Covenant (Gen 3:15), and Adam’s descendants multiplied both in number and of the evil of their hearts. Even fallen angels laid with the sons of Men (Gen 4:1-6) producing the giant Nephilim. God decided to destroy them all except 8, and instructed Noah to build the Ark

  1. Post-Diluvian (Gen 11:1-9) (From Post-Flood to the Calling of Abram)
    11 1 Now the whole earth had the same language and the same words.
    2 And it happened as they journeyed east, that they found a plain in the land of Shinar and settled there.
    3 Then they said to one another, “Come, let us make bricks and burn them thoroughly.” And they had brick for stone, and they had tar for mortar.
    4 And they said, “Come, let us build for ourselves a city, and a tower whose top will reach into heaven, and let us make for ourselves a name, lest we be scattered over the face of the whole earth.”
    5 Then Yahweh came down to see the city and the tower which the sons of men had built.
    6 And Yahweh said, “Behold, they are one people, and they all have the same language. And this is what they have begun to do. So now nothing which they purpose to do will be impossible for them.
    7 Come, let Us go down and there confuse their language, so that they will not understand one another’s language.”
    8 So Yahweh scattered them from there over the face of the whole earth; and they stopped building the city.
    9 Therefore its name was called Babel, because there Yahweh confused the language of the whole earth; and from there Yahweh scattered them over the face of the whole earth.

The Dispensation of “Human Government”: Following the Flood, God gave The Noahic Covenant, (Gen 9:11-16). The dispersion at Babel would soon follow, sending government and language across the world

  1. Patriarchal (From the calling of Abram to the Exodus)
    15 13 Then God said to Abram, “Know for certain that your seed will be sojourners in a land that is not theirs, and they will be enslaved and mistreated four hundred years.
    14 But I will also judge the nation to whom they are enslaved, and afterward they will come out with many possessions.
    15 As for you, you shall go to your fathers in peace; you will be buried at a good old age.

The Dispensation of “The Family”: Following the dispersion at Babel God gave The Abrahamic Covenant, (Gen 12:1-3, Gen 15:4-7, 12-16, 17-21). God called out Abram and over 430 years eventually swelled the host of Israel while in captivity in Egypt, then delivered them through Moses in the Exodus.

  1. Legal (Gen 19:3-6) (From the Exodus to the Tearing of the Temple Veil, resuming at Christ’s Millennial Reign)
    19 3 Now Moses went up to God, and Yahweh called to him from the mountain, saying, “Thus you shall say to the house of Jacob and tell the sons of Israel:
    4 ‘You yourselves have seen what I did to the Egyptians, and how I lifted you up on eagles’ wings and brought you to Myself.
    5 So now then, if you will indeed listen to My voice and keep My covenant, then you shall be My treasured possession among all the peoples, for all the earth is Mine;
    6 and you shall be to Me a kingdom of priests and a holy nation.’ These are the words that you shall speak to the sons of Israel.”

The Dispensation of “The Law”: After Moses led Israel in the Exodus from captivity in Egypt, God gave the Law in The Mosaic Covenant, (Exod 19:5-6, 24:1-8, 30:1-10). Following Mankind’s demonstrated failure to self-govern, God would next would introduce Israel to life under Him and His Theocratic rule through Moses, including the Ten Commandments, the Tabernacle and its accessories, Priests and Sacrifices. This was active through the coming of Christ until the tearing of the curtain in the Temple (Matt 27:50-51) and will resume at Christ’s Millennial Reign (Deut 30-1-10)

  1. Ecclesiastical (2 Sam 7:16-17, Luke 1:30-33) (From Christ’s Birth to His Second Coming)
    7 16 And your house and your kingdom shall endure before Me forever; your throne shall be established forever.”’”
    17 According to all these words and according to all this vision, so Nathan spoke to David.

1 30 And the angel said to her, “Do not be afraid, Mary, for you have found favor with God.
31 And behold, you will conceive in your womb and bear a son, and you shall name Him Jesus.
32 He will be great and will be called the Son of the Most High, and the Lord God will give Him the throne of His father David,
33 and He will reign over the house of Jacob forever, and there will be no end of His kingdom.”

The Dispensation of “Grace”: The Conception of Christ enacted The Davidic Covenant (2 Sam 7:8-17) with the arrival of the promised One to sit on David’s Throne. In the hours before His Sacrifice, Jesus announced The New Covenant (Luke 22:20). This marks the beginning of His Church for Jew and Gentile prior to the Jewish Dispersion after the destruction of the Temple in AD 70, through the current regathering to National Israel, until the Church is taken in the Rapture. His New Covenant of Grace will continue to be available through the Tribulation to all until death or His Return (Zech 14:1-4)

  1. Messianic (Psalms 2:9-12, Isa 2:2-4, Jer 30:7; Dan 9:24; Zech 8:3-8, Zech 14:16-17, Micah 4:1-7, Hag 2:8-9, Matt 24:45-47, Rev 20:1-3, Rev 20:4-5) (Prophesized, 1000 years + unknown months)
    Dan 9 24 “Seventy weeks have been determined for your people and for your holy city, to finish the transgression, to make an end of sin, to make atonement for iniquity, to bring in everlasting righteousness, to seal up vision and prophecy, and to anoint the Holy of Holies.

Part of the Prophesy to Daniel 9 of the ‘Seventy Weeks’, the 70th is still to come. The subject of Jesus’ Revelation to John, Daniel was told all prophesies will be concluded with the finish of His Work in history. This time is also known as the Tribulation and the time of Jacob’s trouble (Jeremiah 30:7)

Rev 20 4 Then I saw thrones, and they sat on them, and judgment was given to them. And I saw the souls of those who had been beheaded because of their witness of Jesus and because of the word of God, and who also had not worshiped the beast or his image, and had not received the mark on their forehead and on their hand. And they came to life and reigned with Christ for a thousand years.
5 The rest of the dead did not come to life until the thousand years were finished.

The Dispensation of “The Millennium”: With Christ’s Return and the binding of Satan, The Everlasting Covenant the 1000-year Reign begins, concluding Revelation with the loosing of Satan, Armageddon (Rev 20:7-10), and the Great White Throne Judgement unto the Lake of Fire (Isa 66:23-24, Dan 12:2, Dan 7:9-14, Mal 3:5-6, Matt 13:41, Matt 13:42, Matt 24:48-51, Matt 25:31-46, Rom 14:10, 1 Cor 6:3, Rev 20:11-15).

  1. Fullness of Times (2 Pet 3:11-13) (The New Heavens and the New Earth)
    3 11 Since all these things are to be destroyed in this way, what sort of people ought you to be in holy conduct and godliness,
    12 looking for and hastening the coming of the day of God, because of which the heavens burning will be destroyed, and the elements will melt with intense heat!
    13 But according to His promise we are looking for NEW HEAVENS AND A NEW EARTH, in which righteousness dwells.

The Dispensation of “The Fullness of Times”: With the full host of all of Christ’s enemies dispatched eternally to the Lake of Fire (Rev 20:11-15), The Davidic Covenant and The New Covenant begin the march to completion with the Creation’s destruction by fire. With Earth’s and the Heavens renovation complete, God brings down the New Jerusalem, the Holy City (Rev 21:10-14), where God Himself will reside with the Saints. (Isa 65:17-25)

Covenants

Covenants concerning God are of first-order importance because a covenants rests in the character of the participant as long as they live. Covenants are an enduring commitment that participants commit to do or not do. They are eternal so as to be absolutely binding, unalterable, and are non-transferrable. Only a new or additional addendum covenant can add to the former.

15 Brothers, I speak in human terms: even though it is only a man’s covenant, yet when it has been ratified, no one sets it aside or adds conditions to it.
16 Now the promises were spoken to Abraham and to his seed. He does not say, “And to seeds,” as referring to many, but rather to one, “And TO YOUR SEED,” that is, Christ.
17 And what I am saying is this: the Law, which came 430 years later, does not invalidate a covenant previously ratified by God, so as to abolish the promise.
18 For if the inheritance is by law, it is no longer by promise, but God has granted it to Abraham through promise. (Gal 3:15-18)

A covenant is superior to a contract as the latter can be broken, and even the terms of an agreed or forced exit might be outlined in the contract. Contracts are agreements between participating entities with specific terms of performance but tend to be inflexible to terms relating to intent or ‘spirit’ of the agreement because these are not easily measurable. They are not designed to operate on ambiguity but are instead rigid, seeking to quantify narrowly specific actions and outcomes.

Covenants contain much of the same performance expectations but also employ the character and intent of the participants – they are intentionally more flexible to deal with deviations or infractions while still expecting the stated outcome. A marriage covenant is a good example. Any married person knows the failures they’ve experienced, but recovery and realignment are still possible. Even in the event of infidelity, forgiveness of a repentant partner can right the course without shattering the covenant. We see proof of this in God through Moses granting a certificate of divorce as a mercy for the offended spouse. Jesus specifies that it is “Because of your hardness of heart Moses permitted you to divorce your wives”. (Matt 19:8)

Covenants between two parties are most common, yet obligation of the second party is not necessary if the covenantor is willing to assume all of the performance responsibilities for both parties involved. In most cases this would be ill advised because of the exhaustive responsibilities of the covenantor despite any positive or negative response from the covenantee. The single covenantor would need considerable patience and resource to see the agreement not fail. This is exactly what God chose to do in His unilateral covenants towards Mankind through Israel.

Because a covenant expects performance relying on character, any covenant relying on Man’s fidelity would fail. Of the seven major covenants – the Adamic (Gen 3:15), Noahic (Gen 9:11-16), Abrahamic (Gen 12:1-3, Gen 15:4-7, 12-16, 17-21), Mosaic (Exod 19:5-6, 30:1-10), Davidic (2 Sam 7:8-17), New (Luke 22:20) and Everlasting (Gen 17:7-8) – only the Mosaic is a bilateral covenant requiring Israel’s obedience (resulting in blessing) else disobedience (resulting in punishment). The rest of the major covenants are cumulative advancements upon the prior, ultimately bringing about the redemption of Mankind through Christ from the otherwise irreconcilable result of sin. These same covenants, because fallen Mankind is unable to perfectly and perpetually fulfill the necessary terms thus keeping the covenant in place, were intentionally unilateral and wholly reliant upon God to uphold.

Illustration of the Covenants and Dispensations

Summary of the Major Covenants

  1. Adamic (Gen 3:15)
    3 15 “And I will put enmity between you and the woman, and between your seed and her seed; He shall bruise you on the head, and you shall bruise him on the heel.”

God indicates Eve’s offspring Jesus will come to defeat Satan

  1. Noahic (Gen 9:11-16)
    9 11 Indeed I establish My covenant with you; and all flesh shall never again be cut off by the water of the flood, and there shall never again be a flood to destroy the earth.”
    12 Then God said, “This is the sign of the covenant which I am giving to be between Me and you and every living creature that is with you, for all successive generations;
    13 I put My bow in the cloud, and it shall be for a sign of a covenant between Me and the earth.
    14 And it will be, when I bring a cloud over the earth, that the bow will be seen in the cloud,
    15 and I will remember My covenant, which is between Me and you and every living creature of all flesh; and never again shall the water become a flood to destroy all flesh.
    16 So the bow shall be in the cloud, and I will look upon it, to remember the everlasting covenant between God and every living creature of all flesh that is on the earth.”

After giving instructions concerning procreation, meat for food, and capital punishment, God covenants with Noah and all the Earth’s inhabitants never to destroy it again by flood

  1. Abrahamic (Gen 12:1-3, Gen 15:4-7, 12-16, 17-21)
    12 1 And Yahweh said to Abram, “Go forth from your land, and from your kin and from your father’s house, to the land which I will show you;
    2 And I will make you a great nation, and I will bless you, and make your name great; And so you shall be a blessing;
    3 And I will bless those who bless you, and the one who curses you I will curse. And in you all the families of the earth will be blessed.”

God initially pronounces His intent to bless and protect a Nation through Abram

15 4 Then behold, the word of Yahweh came to him, saying, “This one will not be your heir; but one who will come forth from your own body, he shall be your heir.”
5 And He brought him outside and said, “Now look toward the heavens, and number the stars, if you are able to number them.” And He said to him, “So shall your seed be.”
6 Then he believed in Yahweh; and He counted it to him as righteousness.
7 And He said to him, “I am Yahweh who brought you out of Ur of the Chaldeans, to give you this land to possess it.”

God pronounces the vastness of the Nation and announces the Land promise

15 12 Now it happened that when the sun was going down, a deep sleep fell upon Abram; and behold, terror and great darkness fell upon him.
13 Then God said to Abram, “Know for certain that your seed will be sojourners in a land that is not theirs, and they will be enslaved and mistreated four hundred years.
14 But I will also judge the nation to whom they are enslaved, and afterward they will come out with many possessions.
15 As for you, you shall go to your fathers in peace; you will be buried at a good old age. 16 Then in the fourth generation they will return here, for the iniquity of the Amorite is not yet complete.”

God foretells the Egyptian captivity during a pause as the Amorites accrue the sin in preparation for the taking of the land

15 17 Now it happened that the sun had set, and it was very dark, and behold, there appeared a smoking oven and a flaming torch which passed between these pieces.
18 On that day Yahweh cut a covenant with Abram, saying, “To your seed I have given this land, From the river of Egypt as far as the great river, the river Euphrates:
19 the Kenite and the Kenizzite and the Kadmonite
20 and the Hittite and the Perizzite and the Rephaim
21 and the Amorite and the Canaanite and the Girgashite and the Jebusite.”

Abram arranged the birds and animal pieces as instructed (vs 8-10), and God alone consecrated to covenant as Abram slept (v12)

  1. Mosaic (Exod 19:5-6, 24:1-8, 30:1-10)
    19 5 So now then, if you will indeed listen to My voice and keep My covenant, then you shall be My treasured possession among all the peoples, for all the earth is Mine;
    6 and you shall be to Me a kingdom of priests and a holy nation.’ These are the words that you shall speak to the sons of Israel.”
    7 So Moses came and called the elders of the people and set before them all these words which Yahweh had commanded him.
    8 And all the people answered together and said, “All that Yahweh has spoken we will do!” And Moses brought back the words of the people to Yahweh.
    9 Yahweh said to Moses, “Behold, I will come to you in a thick cloud, so that the people may hear when I speak with you and may also believe in you forever.” Then Moses told the words of the people to Yahweh.

Following their liberation from Egypt, God declares His covenant with Israel who would be required to comply by Works of obedience. The Ten Commandments would next be delivered, followed by the Mosaic Law

24 1 Then He said to Moses, “Come up to Yahweh, you and Aaron, Nadab and Abihu and seventy of the elders of Israel, and you all shall worship at a distance.
2 Moses alone, however, shall come near to Yahweh, but they shall not come near, and the people shall not come up with him.”
3 Then Moses came and recounted to the people all the words of Yahweh and all the judgments; and all the people answered with one voice and said, “All the words which Yahweh has spoken we will do!”
4 And Moses wrote down all the words of Yahweh. Then he arose early in the morning and built an altar at the foot of the mountain with twelve pillars for the twelve tribes of Israel.
5 And he sent young men of the sons of Israel, and they offered burnt offerings and sacrificed young bulls as peace offerings to Yahweh.
6 And Moses took half of the blood and put it in basins, and the other half of the blood he sprinkled on the altar.
7 Then he took the book of the covenant and read it in the hearing of the people; and they said, “All that Yahweh has spoken we will do, and we will be obedient!”
8 So Moses took the blood and sprinkled it on the people and said, “Behold the blood of the covenant, which Yahweh has cut with you in accordance with all these words.”

30 1 “So it will be, when all of these things have come upon you, the blessing and the curse which I have set before you, and you cause these things to return to your heart in all the nations where Yahweh your God has banished you,
2 and you return to Yahweh your God and listen to His voice with all your heart and soul according to all that I am commanding you today, you and your sons,
3 then Yahweh your God will return you from captivity and return His compassion on you, and He will gather you again from all the peoples where Yahweh your God has scattered you.
4 If those of you who are banished are at the ends of the sky, from there Yahweh your God will gather you, and from there He will take you back.
5 And Yahweh your God will bring you into the land which your fathers possessed, and you shall possess it; and He will prosper you and multiply you more than your fathers.

An addition to the beginning stated in Exod 19:5-6, God vows to regather the diaspora back to their land, now known as national Israel

30 6 “Moreover Yahweh your God will circumcise your heart and the heart of your seed, to love Yahweh your God with all your heart and with all your soul, so that you may live.
7 And Yahweh your God will inflict all these curses on your enemies and on those who hate you, who persecuted you.
8 And you shall return and listen to the voice of Yahweh, and you shall do all His commandments which I am commanding you today.

God continues, referring to the Salvation of Israel during the course of Daniel’s 70th week (Rev 7:4-8)

9 Then Yahweh your God will prosper you abundantly in all the work of your hand, in the offspring of your body and in the offspring of your cattle and in the produce of your ground, for Yahweh will return to rejoice over you for good, just as He rejoiced over your fathers,
10 when you listen to the voice of Yahweh your God to keep His commandments and His statutes which are written in this book of the law, when you return to Yahweh your God with all your heart and soul.

God says He will conclude with the prospering of Israel under the Stone Kingdom (Dan 2:44-45), the 1000-year Millennial Kingdom of Christ (Rev 20:1-6)

  1. Davidic (2 Sam 7:8-17)
    7 8 So now, thus you shall say to My servant David, ‘Thus says Yahweh of hosts, “I Myself took you from the pasture, from following the sheep, to be ruler over My people Israel.
    9 And I have been with you wherever you have gone and have cut off all your enemies from before you; and I will make you a great name, like the name of the great men who are on the earth.
    10 And I will appoint a place for My people Israel and will plant them, that they may dwell in their own place and not be disturbed again; and the unrighteous will not afflict them any more as formerly,
    11 even from the day that I commanded judges to be over My people Israel; and I will give you rest from all your enemies. Yahweh also declares to you that Yahweh will make a house for you.
    12 When your days are fulfilled and you lie down with your fathers, I will raise up one of your seed after you, who will come forth from your own body, and I will establish his kingdom.
    13 He shall build a house for My name, and I will establish the throne of his kingdom forever.
    14 I will be a father to him and he will be a son to Me; when he commits iniquity, I will reprove him with the rod of men and the strikes from the sons of men,
    15 but My lovingkindness shall not be removed from him, as I removed it from Saul, whom I removed from before you.
    16 And your house and your kingdom shall endure before Me forever; your throne shall be established forever.”’” 17 According to all these words and according to all this vision, so Nathan spoke to David.

God promises peace in David’s kingdom for the rest of his life and that his son Solomon would build the Temple desired by David. God also covenants to establish David’s throne by bringing the Messiah through David’s line, establishing His Throne for perpetuity. Also see Psa 110:1-7

  1. New (Luke 22:20)
    22 17 And when He had taken a cup and given thanks, He said, “Take this and share it among yourselves.
    18 For I say to you, I will not drink of the fruit of the vine from now on until the kingdom of God comes.”
    19 And when He had taken some bread and given thanks, He broke it and gave it to them, saying, “This is My body which is given for you. Do this in remembrance of Me.”
    20 And in the same way He took the cup after they had eaten, saying, “This cup which is poured out for you is the new covenant in My blood.”

Jesus announces the New Covenant we enjoy today, the essential advancement of God’s promises to Save Mankind, as well as the precursor to the fulfillment of His promise of the woman’s seed Who will defeat Satan

  1. Everlasting (Gen 17:7-8)
    17 7 And I will establish My covenant between Me and you and your seed after you throughout their generations for an everlasting covenant, to be God to you and to your seed after you.
    8 And I will give to you and to your seed after you, the land of your sojournings, all the land of Canaan, for an everlasting possession; and I will be their God.”

A capstone covenant to Israel through Abram assuring the perpetual possession of the land under the everlasting possession of God

The unilateral covenants of God are the means made necessary by God to rescue the people He would choose (the predestined saints) for Jesus, through the people He would choose (Israel) to bring forth His Messiah. Per Jesus: “You worship what you do not know; we worship what we know, for salvation is from the Jews.” (John 4:22)

One’s understanding of covenants with God has far-reaching ramifications. A view that His redemptive covenants are bilateral places performance responsibilities upon fallen Man who cannot possibly deliver and who will have the authority to fall out of the agreement. Instead, a recognition of God’s redemptive covenants as His sole work necessary to rescue otherwise irredeemable sinners must acknowledge these are His unilateral responsibility alone. Sinners cannot be a failing party to the requirements of the covenants and still be beneficiaries of His Grace. God is not asking; He is Sovereignly saving rebellious sinners who have no means to save themselves. A bilateral covenant with sinners would not be able to result in Salvation. Only a unilateral covenant upheld by God to the benefit of sinners could succeed. And all of this is part of His larger intent in addressing the Church, Gentiles, Creation, and obedient as well as disobedient angels.

Therefore, if God’s Salvific covenants are unilateral, and if God can and will hold true to the stated terms and goals of the covenants, we must agree that the covenants will succeed per His intentions. This then dismisses the false doctrine that with Israel’s failure to embrace the Messiah but instead murder Him nullified the unilateral covenants, and that God would sever the covenants and reassign the Church as the recipients of the promises intended for Israel. Not only does this doctrine attempt to invalidate God’s salvation of Mankind through the Jewish Messiah, but it would conveniently benefit the increasingly Gentile Church. And most egregiously, this doctrine seeks to displace the Jews as the people central to God’s Kingdom, replacing them with the “New Israel”, the Church.




Is the Bible you have today true to the original writings, or to the Spirit’s Intent?

Is the Bible you have today an exact copy of the original writings, or more so, is It true to the Spirit’s Intent?  Perhaps a good answer is while not a flawless reproduction, it is by God’s Volition, sufficient towards Salvation and edification.

There are scholars not satisfied with that answer who hold that the Scripture (specifically the New Testament), to be quickening and effective (even unto Salvation), must be the exact same words delivered by the Holy Spirit to the human author without addition, omission, or error.  I expect if they are right, everyone once or more removed from the original NT author’s script is in danger.

Every New Testament available today is a translation from a Hebrew, Greek or Latin manuscript that is a copy of the original report by the human author as he was “…carried along by the Holy Spirit.” (2 Pet 1:21)  The truth is we don’t realistically have any of the “original” documents that comprise the Canon of the Bible.  The oldest duplicates of the New Testament we have were compiled 300 years after the originals were written.  A second major group of manuscripts used by Bible translators dates from compilations of the ninth century.

All native language Bible translations are derived from these base manuscripts.  Further, there are demonstrable clerical errors in their reproduction when compared to each other, yet not errors of substance.  So, scholars insisting that God’s inspiration of an inerrant Bible requires His preservation of its text lack a square foundation to rest upon.  The original manuscripts simply do not exist.

Translators render the words and meaning of the base manuscripts into the destination language of the reader.  The nature of translation doesn’t mean every translator arrives at the same exact word and sentence structure conclusions.  They work to bring across the base manuscripts’ intended ideas, but the existence of so many English translations demonstrate how many ways the ideas can be presented.  Translations run a spectrum of function and outcome – A literal translation like the Legacy Standard Bible (LSB) strives to present the manuscript words with as little variation from the words’ meaning as possible, while an amplified or conversational translation like The Message (MSG) seeks more to convey the meaning of the sentences.

These two approaches show the fundamentally different intents of the translators.  A Literalist seeks to give the words as written, leaving the understanding of their meaning to the teacher or reader, while an Amplifier seeks to provide the meaning to the reader.  In between these two extents fall the other translations to one degree or another.  For example, consider Gal 4:4-7:

But when the fullness of the time came, God sent forth His Son, born of a woman, born under [d]the Law, so that He might redeem those who were under [e]the Law, that we might receive the adoption as sons. And because you are sons, God sent forth the Spirit of His Son into our hearts, crying, “Abba! Father!” Therefore you are no longer a slave, but a son; and if a son, then an heir [f]through God. Gal 4:4-7 (LSB)

But when the set time had fully come, God sent his Son, born of a woman, born under the law, to redeem those under the law, that we might receive adoption to sonship.[b] Because you are his sons, God sent the Spirit of his Son into our hearts, the Spirit who calls out, “Abba,[c] Father.” So you are no longer a slave, but God’s child; and since you are his child, God has made you also an heir.Gal 4:4-7 (NIV)

4-7 But when the time arrived that was set by God the Father, God sent his Son, born among us of a woman, born under the conditions of the law so that he might redeem those of us who have been kidnapped by the law. Thus we have been set free to experience our rightful heritage. You can tell for sure that you are now fully adopted as his own children because God sent the Spirit of his Son into our lives crying out, “Papa! Father!” Doesn’t that privilege of intimate conversation with God make it plain that you are not a slave, but a child? And if you are a child, you’re also an heir, with complete access to the inheritance.Gal 4:4-7 (MSG)

Any translation, be it into English or Kenyan Swahili, requires a translational bridge from the original writings to the base manuscripts to the destination language.  Even if the originals were available, would not the translators need be inspired by the Spirit as well to maintain this inspired cohesion?  It seems clear another factor must be in play to explain a verse like Isaiah 40:8 that says God’s Word will be preserved –  “ 8 The grass withers, the flower fades, But the word of our God stands forever.”.

Isaiah 55:10-11 says that Scriptural quickening and effectiveness is God’s Work, not the human messenger’s who is ‘given the seed’ and ‘given the bread’:

10 For as the rain and the snow come down from heaven,
And do not return there without watering the earth
And making it bear and sprout,
And giving seed to the sower and bread to the eater,
11 So will My word be which goes forth from My mouth;
It will not return to Me empty,
Without accomplishing what pleases Me,
And without succeeding in the matter for which I sent it.

Also consider the event of Peter addressing the crowd gathered at Pentecost.  The Apostles and Peter were overcome with the Holy Spirit and spoke “the mighty deeds of God” (Acts 2:11) in several languages represented by people present who were from 15 geographic locations. This was clearly beyond their abilities and the was the work of the Holy Spirit through them.

1 And when the day of Pentecost had fully come, they were all together in one place. 2 And suddenly there came from heaven a noise like a violent rushing wind, and it filled the whole house where they were sitting. 3 And there appeared to them tongues like fire distributing themselves, and they rested on each one of them. 4 And they were all filled with the Holy Spirit and began to speak with other tongues, as the Spirit was giving them utterance.

5 Now there were Jews living in Jerusalem, devout men from every nation under heaven. 6 And when this sound occurred, the multitude came together, and were bewildered because each one of them was hearing them speak in his own language. 7 So they were astounded and marveling, saying, “Behold, are not all these who are speaking Galileans?

8 And how is it that we each hear them in our own language in which we were born? 9 Parthians and Medes and Elamites, and residents of Mesopotamia, Judea and Cappadocia, Pontus and Asia, 10 Phrygia and Pamphylia, Egypt and the district of Libya around Cyrene, and visitors from Rome, both Jews and proselytes, 11 Cretans and Arabs—we hear them in our own tongues speaking of the mighty deeds of God.” – Acts 2:1-11

Also, as Jesus is credited as performing miracles through His Apostles (Mark 16:20), so too it seems apparent that the Holy Spirit be credited with quickening through the words spoken by those who belong to God through Jesus.  In both cases, it is not the volition of the person through whom God’s Acts come, but the Acts are of the God Who delivers them through the person cooperating with Him.

If the original words of Scripture’s human authors were the requirement for a quickening and effective outcome, or if translators of the base manuscripts (or even those translators at work today) are not inspired as the original authors, we would be Lost.  On the contrary it must be the volition of God Who authors His Word’s effectiveness, as always, through fallen Humanity.

All of this said, the accuracy and truth of God’s Word continues to be beyond question. These Words of God are essential in understanding and knowing Him, in seeing ourselves as He does, and opening the mind’s path to receiving the Holy Spirit’s quickening even unto Salvation. Clerical alterations cannot equate to the loss of Scripture’s efficacy because the real efficacy resides with the One Who is the Author and Protector of faith (Heb 12:2).

There is also the Reformer’s central principle of Analogia Scriptura, or the Analogy of Faith. The Westminster Confession states: “The infallible rule of interpretation of Scripture is the Scripture itself: and therefore, when there is a question about the true and full sense of any Scripture (which is not manifold, but one), it must be searched and known by other places that speak more clearly.” As Scripture is the Word of One Author, of one mind as well as Divine, His Scripture cannot contradict itself and so is qualified for proof and clarification of the rest of Scripture.

My conclusion: God HAS providentially preserved His infallible Word, not only on paper, but more importantly in His Volition. The protected Word rests in God Himself and it continues to effectively be provided to us through faith in the written Word we read today. Choose a translation as close and literal to the original manuscripts as possible, as free of any outlook that would color the translation away from the Character and Intent of God.  In study, consider the surrounding context, root word meanings, and their use elsewhere in Scripture to discern the intent of the writer.  And if anyone were to say to you their Bible is translated from the very original texts of God’s inspired writers, perhaps you can help them understand otherwise. For a more thorough examination of the topic, see https://bible.org/article/inspiration-preservation-and-new-testament-textual-criticism




If you are new to a Saving faith in Jesus, this is written for you.

Anyone ever to be Saved will be so because of their faith in the person Jesus, not because of anyone or anything else – not because of following the rules of God (except to believe in His Son Jesus, the only Person Who will Save you from your sin against God), or because of attending Church, or because of the actions of any priest or pastor or minister, or because of any confessions, special prayers or penance.  Those things have been added on by men, not God – otherwise He would have told us so.  We are Saved because of a Person, not because of rules or an ideal.  If you are now Saved, the Bible says it is a gift from Him if you’ve acknowledged Who He is (God), who you are (a sinner against Him), and asked Him to forgive you, knowing He said He would.  The Bible tells us any other way to peace with God is a lie.

 

The Bible tells us Jesus said: 6 …“I am the way, and the truth, and the life; no one comes to the Father but through Me. John 14:6

More specifically, if in a full belief (faith) you’ve said (prayed) to God that you know you’ve disobeyed (sinned) against Him, and you’ve asked Jesus His Son Who died and came back from the dead, to forgive you, the Bible says God has now adopted you into His family.  This is known as being Saved by Jesus through faith alone, not because you’ve tried to do anything to earn His forgiveness.  This is possible because Jesus is God and a person, alive and attending to you today.

These are a few Scriptures that address this:


23 …for all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God Romans 3:23

23a For the wages of sin is death Romans 6:23a

23b …but the gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord. Romans 6:23b

8 But God demonstrates His own love for us in this: While we were still sinners, Christ died for us. Romans 5:8

9 If you declare with your mouth, “Jesus is Lord,” and believe in your heart that God raised Him from the dead, you will be saved. 10 For it is with your heart that you believe and are justified, and it is with your mouth that you profess your faith and are saved. Romans 10:9-10

Everyone who calls on the name of the Lord will be saved. Romans 10:13

1 Therefore, since we have been justified through faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ Romans 5:1

38 For I am convinced that neither death nor life, neither angels nor demons, neither the present nor the future, nor any powers, 39 neither height nor depth, nor anything else in all creation, will be able to separate us from the love of God that is in Christ Jesus our Lord Romans 8:38-39


Instead, because we have faith in our relationship with God through Jesus, we will want to strive to follow His expectations, attend Church to worship and learn with others under the care of a godly leader, confess our failures to Him, be changed inwardly with His help, and grow in our relationship through experience and prayer.

This is a spiritual reality that has a great number of amazing consequences.  It does not necessarily mean you will never have troubles again, or that your physical or economic circumstances will improve.  That isn’t what Salvation is for.  The incredible gift of God’s blessings center around His new presence in you through the Holy Spirit, which is proof of your belonging to Him.  Your belonging to Him through Jesus means you can know He will keep your soul, which can never die, with Him.  It also means you will not be lost to Him in Hell, specifically the Lake of Fire (Revelation 20:15).  You are forgiven, adopted, and safe in Him now. Belonging to Jesus means more than avoiding Hell, It means from now on He is always with you, watching over you, comforting you and guiding you.  But you have to learn to keep Him in your sight and follow closely behind.

Everything we know about God has been given to us in the Bible.  We believe it was written by men across 1500 years as it was breathed out through them by God’s Holy Spirit.  This means He (the Holy Spirit, God) spoke through the authors, even through their human personalities.  Men wrote, driven by the Holy Spirit, Who is the unchanging author.  The Scripture is the Holy Spirit’s thoughts, not the writers’.


16 All Scripture is God-breathed and is useful for teaching, rebuking, correcting and training in righteousness, 17 so that the servant of God may be thoroughly equipped for every good work. 2 Timothy 3:16-17

20 Above all, you must understand that no prophecy of Scripture came about by the prophet’s own interpretation of things. 21 For prophecy never had its origin in the human will, but prophets, though human, spoke from God as they were carried along by the Holy Spirit. 2 Peter 1:20-21


The Bible tells us the truth about God and ourselves.  Scripture is special because it alone can be used by the Holy Spirit in us as believers to cut through our wrong perceptions (due to our sinful nature) and show us truth.  It was Scripture and the Holy Spirit that showed you your sin and that Jesus would Save you if you believed in Him and asked Him for help.  He (The Holy Spirit is a Person of what’s called the Godhead or Triune God, three Persons in one God) is also Who now comforts you in the truth that you are Saved and can have peace.


12 For the word of God is alive and active. Sharper than any double-edged sword, it penetrates even to dividing soul and spirit, joints and marrow; it judges the thoughts and attitudes of the heart. Hebrews 4:12


From here on, your study of Scripture and your prayer life with God will be how you continue to see where you are not seeing things God’s way so you can change to be more like Jesus.  You won’t do this to keep your Salvation because the gift was given by Him – and no one, including you, can take it away.  Instead, He will help you work towards change because you’ll grow in wanting to be like Jesus.  These are changes to your ‘heart’ that only He can help you with.  This is called Sanctification.

What’s next?

To set yourself on a good footing, there’s a few things to do next.

First, find a good Church that is led by men who know Jesus and the Scriptures.  This is where you’ll find people who also belong to Jesus, and if they are also growing in their relationship with Him, will be able to help you grow under Him too.  This sort of Church is usually called non-denominational, meaning it is an independent Church, not held to the curriculum of a larger organizing body.  This can matter because Jesus said His Church’s organizational chart is very short.  We have direct access to Him, and He has given the Church others who are gifted to help us.  Some have a responsibility to govern us to protect the Church, but they do not govern our access to Jesus.


11 So Christ himself gave the apostles, the prophets, the evangelists, the pastors and teachers, 12 to equip his people for works of service, so that the body of Christ may be built up 13 until we all reach unity in the faith and in the knowledge of the Son of God and become mature, attaining to the whole measure of the fullness of Christ. Ephesians 4:11-13


Second, get a Bible in a readable translation that you can read and make notes in. Options include a paper book, Kindle (or a device with the Kindle reader app), or Olive Tree’s free version.  Starting with the Gospel of John is a great way to begin understanding Jesus.  There are many versions/translations, and many are terrific – ESV (English Standard Version) and NIV (New International Version) are in plain English and easy to understand.  When you read the Bible, the Holy Spirit is with you to help you understand.  Learn to pray to Him for help when you’re reading the Bible.  The person helping you at the Church will explain how to navigate the Bible’s Books, Chapters, and Verses.  Grow in a Biblical worldview, checking everything in your life against the Truth of the Scripture.  It’s always reliable.

Third, be Baptized.  Baptism is a public declaration of your following Jesus.  It’s usually done in a Church by either a Pastor or someone significant to you who belongs to Jesus.  Baptism is not a step in Salvation, it’s one of the two “Ordinances” (not sacraments, see HERE) given by Jesus.  The other is Communion, the taking of bread and wine or grape juice.  Both Ordinances are for believers only in worship of Jesus.  The Bible states they do not convey Grace or forgiveness – that only comes from Jesus as a gift to us as underserving but thankful people.

Fourth, understand He is the main priority and order your life accordingly.  Make Church, study and prayer a priority.  Like anything else in your life, you pay attention to what matters to you.  As you grow in your relationship with Him – the Person Who has rescued you – your priorities will change as He is so important to you.  No one is more important than God the Father, the Son Jesus, and His Holy Spirit.

Fifth, learn Who Jesus is, what He commands, and how to follow Him.  One of our main jobs is to work towards understanding Him, to pay attention to where we are not like Him, and with His help be changed.  Another job is to pay attention to opportunities around us and share His Gospel, the good news of His gift.  Some Scripture that speaks of this includes:


36 “Teacher, which is the greatest commandment in the Law?”  37 Jesus replied: “‘Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind.’ 38 This is the first and greatest commandment. 39 And the second is like it: ‘Love your neighbor as yourself.’ 40 All the Law and the Prophets hang on these two commandments.” Matthew 22:36-40

27 My sheep listen to My voice; I know them, and they follow Me. 28 I give them eternal life, and they shall never perish; no one will snatch them out of My hand. 29 My Father, who has given them to Me, is greater than all; no one can snatch them out of My Father’s hand. 30 I and the Father are one.” John 10:27-30

21 Whoever has My commands and keeps them is the one who loves Me. The one who loves Me will be loved by My Father, and I too will love them and show Myself to them.” John 14:21

5 I (Jesus) am the vine, you are the branches; he who abides in Me and I in him,he bears much fruit, for apart from Me you can do nothing. John 15:5

8 For it is by grace you have been saved, through faith —and this is not from yourselves, it is the gift of God— 9 not by works, so that no one can boast. 10 For we are God’s handiwork, created in Christ Jesus to do good works, which God prepared in advance for us to do. Ephesians 2:8-10


Sixth, learn to weigh everything against the Bible and gain a Biblical worldview.  The Bible, God’s Word to us, is absolutely correct.  He uses it to inform us and guide us.  As we consider the world around us – personally, relationally, financially, politically, everything – all of our opinions and actions should be compared to the Scriptures to understand how to see things His way and respond accordingly.  His Grace relieves us of the punishment for mistakes, but Jesus also expects us to learn and grow to be more and more like Him.  He helps us through His Holy Spirit. Learn to hear Him and obey, be Sanctified (changed).

Finally, show this to the person helping you at the Church, and remember Proverbs 4:23:

23 Watch over your heart with all diligence,
For from it flow the springs of life.




Berean Prophecy Study – Larkin & Benware

 

This Post is the central source of all materials we’re considering and it will grow as we expand details of our curriculum. Click on the links below for each part’s details.

Our travels have brought us to a study of prophetic Scripture, beginning with Dr. Paul Benware’s Understanding End Times Prophesy: A Comprehensive Approach. As new students of the topic we appreciated Dr. Benware’s approach because he didn’t begin by promoting the Millennial order of End Times he concludes are true to the Word, but allowed for an honest investigation to the other major lines of thought. This is not to say he or we believe the theologies that don’t agree with a plain reading of Scripture are correct, but they are considered through their conclusions to weigh their possible validity. Benware does conclude on the Apostolic view of reading Scripture literally (more on that topic below), irrevocable and unilateral Covenants to the Jews, the pre-Tribulation Rapture of the Church, Daniel’s 70th Week of the Tribulation, Christ’s Second Advent beginning His 1000 year Millennial Reign, the White Throne Judgment of those not His and their removal to the Lake of Fire, and the destruction of Creation with the replacement with the New Jerusalem. Benware’s book is but a subset of his large body of knowledge, but is a terrific introduction to the topic.

A couple years later we became aware of the extensive works of Pastor Clarence Larkin, a Baptist active during the turn of the 20th century whose writings and illustrated works influenced countless Pastors. Larkin was a contemporary of Moody, who promoted Larkin’s works through the Moody Bible Institute. We’re finding his work to be very extensive and thorough, as he being a trained mechanical Draftsman before coming to Jesus, producing an extensive set of illustrations to help students understand many important details of Scripture. Larkin’s book, The Book of Revelation: A Study of the Last Prophetic Book of Holy Scripture shows the understanding of a classically educated theologian and brings incredible new perspective to contemporary Christians. Larkin wasn’t a magical source of hidden Bible truths, but was a Bible student, Pastor and Teacher who’s depth of Scriptural awareness was expressed through his writings and beautiful illustrations. His work is foundational to teachers today, with the interesting perspective of a Pre-National Israel – which per Scripture proved accurate up to this time. He was aware of the Zionist Movement taking shape about 40 years prior but it wouldn’t materialize for another 30 years.

Resource Links




What Did Jesus Do Between His Death and Resurrection?

Charles Larkin’s Illustration – The Heavens (Download below)

Christ’s Work & Actions Between Bodily Death and Resurrection, Ascent – 1 Pet 3:18-22

Christ’s Work on the Cross was not the end of His Work.  What was seen on this side of the Creation:  50 And Jesus cried out again with a loud voice, and yielded up His spirit. 51 And behold, the veil of the temple was torn in two from top to bottom; and the earth shook and the rocks were split. 52 The tombs were opened, and many bodies of the saints who had fallen asleep were raised; 53 and coming out of the tombs after His resurrection they entered the holy city and appeared to many. Matthew 27:50-53

On the other side of Creation unseen, while between His Body’s death and His Ascent to the Throne, Jesus in Spirit preached the Word to the most disobedient spirits in the underworld prison called Tartarus (2 Peter 2:4).  These are not the fallen angels of Satan but the ‘sons of God’ in pre-flood Genesis 6 who fathered the Nephilim giants.  They will be taken straight to the White Throne Judgement. (Jude 6-7, Rev 20:11-15)

The Gospel is vital and relevant to all, both the Quick (for Salvation) and the Dead (for Judgement).  Jesus also preached to the disembodied souls of Hades (not the final place of eternal torment, the Lake of Fire) emptying the Paradise side (Abraham’s Bosom/Lazarus) to bring them to the Heaven that still awaits us who sleep in the grave before the Rapture.  Post-Cross, the souls of the Saints proceed to the same place immediately to the Lord (2 Cor 5:8)

7 But to each one of us grace was given according to the measure of Christ’s gift. 8 Therefore it says,
“WHEN HE ASCENDED ON HIGH, HE LED CAPTIVE A HOST OF CAPTIVES, AND HE GAVE GIFTS TO MEN.” 9 (Now this expression, “He ascended,” what does it mean except that He also had descended into the lower parts of the earth? 10 He who descended is Himself also He who ascended far above all the heavens, so that He might fill all things.) Ephesians 4:7-10

Jesus’ total domination and Authority given by Father would be settled.  As He already demonstrated His being the perfect Prophet, and is now exercising the office of High Priest, we await His return as King of all Kings ushering in the end of the kingdoms of Man.

17 When I saw Him, I fell at His feet like a dead man. And He placed His right hand on me, saying, “Do not be afraid; I am the first and the last, 18 and the living One; and I was dead, and behold, I am alive forevermore, and I have the keys of death and of Hades. Rev 1:17-18




Life Under Grace in Christ the Victor – 1 Pet 3:8-22

1 Pet 3:8-22

Period of Grace – 1 Pet 3:8-9a

Peter concludes his instructions to Believers, explaining life in this present time of Grace.  This period we’re currently in following the Cross will continue until He retrieves (snatches up, 1 Thess 4:13-18) His Church, beginning the time of Wrath.  Until then, Peter explains grace towards others as we “were called for the very purpose that (we) might inherit a blessing.”  1 Peter 3:9

This blessing is the Holy Spirit given to us in Salvation, through faith – “…in order that in Christ Jesus the blessing of Abraham might come to the Gentiles, so that we would receive the promise of the Spirit through faith.”  Galatians 3:14

Harmony with Others – 1 Pet 3:9b-12

Citing Psa 34:12-13, Peter explains how to employ a blessed and Saved life while we still live amongst sin, with a reminder that the LORD watches and hears the righteous and opposes those doing evil.  The same is taught by James, “The effective prayer of a righteous man can accomplish much.”  James 5:16b

Paul wrote this same declaration to Titus:

11 For the grace of God has appeared, bringing salvation to all men, 12 instructing us to deny ungodliness and worldly desires and to live sensibly, righteously and godly in the present age, 13 looking for the blessed hope and the appearing of the glory of our great God and Savior, Christ Jesus, 14 who gave Himself for us to redeem us from every lawless deed, and to purify for Himself a people for His own possession, zealous for good deeds.”  Titus 2:11-14

Stand Firm under Christ, Suffer as He did – 1 Pet 3:13-17

Living in the reality of being reborn in God through Jesus – while still assailed by the sin that envelops us – Peter urges grace, grace, grace.  Emulating the same Grace as Jesus when suffering unrighteousness, we like Him shall strive to tamp down wrath and make as much way possible for the Spirit to do the work only He can do.  Our response should act in support of Him as we would be “ready to make a defense to everyone who asks you to give an account for the hope that is in” us, even patiently suffering wrongs against us “if God should will it so”.  The whole of the equation in this Period of Grace rests in making the case for Christ to sinners and staying out of the way to let Him do His Work.  When the Time closes, no one will be ignorant of the opportunity.

Christ’s Work/Actions Between Bodily Death and Resurrection, Ascent – 1 Pet 3:18-22

Christ’s Work on the Cross was not the end of His Work.  What was seen on this side of the Creation:

50 And Jesus cried out again with a loud voice, and yielded up His spirit. 51 And behold, the veil of the temple was torn in two from top to bottom; and the earth shook and the rocks were split. 52 The tombs were opened, and many bodies of the saints who had fallen asleep were raised; 53 and coming out of the tombs after His resurrection they entered the holy city and appeared to many. Matthew 27:50-53

On the other side of Creation unseen, while between His Body’s death and His Ascent to the Throne, Jesus in Spirit preached the Word to the most disobedient spirits in the underworld prison called Tartarus (2 Peter 2:4).  These are not the fallen angels of Satan but the ‘sons of God’ in pre-flood Genesis 6 who fathered the Nephilim giants.  They will be taken straight to the White Throne Judgement. (Jude 6-7, Rev 20:11-15)

The Gospel is vital and relevant to all, both the Quick (for Salvation) and the Dead (for Judgement).  Jesus also preached to the disembodied souls of Hades (not the final place of eternal torment, the Lake of Fire) emptying the Paradise side (Abraham’s Bosom/Lazarus) to bring them to the Heaven that still awaits us who sleep in the grave before the Rapture.  Post-Cross, the souls of the Saints proceed to the same place immediately to the Lord (2 Cor 5:8)

7 But to each one of us grace was given according to the measure of Christ’s gift. 8 Therefore it says,
“WHEN HE ASCENDED ON HIGH, HE LED CAPTIVE A HOST OF CAPTIVES, AND HE GAVE GIFTS TO MEN.” 9 (Now this expression, “He ascended,” what does it mean except that He also had descended into the lower parts of the earth? 10 He who descended is Himself also He who ascended far above all the heavens, so that He might fill all things.) Ephesians 4:7-10

Jesus’ total domination and reclamation of all Authority given by Father would be settled.  As He already demonstrated His being the perfect Prophet, and is now exercising the office of High Priest, we await His return as King of all Kings ushering in the end of the kingdoms of Man.

17 When I saw Him, I fell at His feet like a dead man. And He placed His right hand on me, saying, “Do not be afraid; I am the first and the last, 18 and the living One; and I was dead, and behold, I am alive forevermore, and I have the keys of death and of Hades. Rev 1:17-18

Baptism in Allegiance to Him – 1 Pet 3:21-22

”Corresponding to that”, the chapter closes out with the reasoning for a Believer’s Baptism.  While a physical act, it no more enacts a spiritual outcome than does fasting or a shorn head (Acts 18:18).  Instead, it reflects an inner conduct of the heart that God recognizes.  Baptism is a show of surrender to Christ the Lord.  Fasting demonstrates a devotion to Him and a denial of the flesh to amplify the spirit’s focus.  A vow is in devotion and obedience to God despite protests in ourselves.

The only Ordinances given by Moses – Circumcision and Temple Sacrifice – have been rendered obsolete and unnecessary by the New Covenant, entered through our death in Christ and so a release from the Law.




Is Man’s sin intended or unintended?

6/29/20

Is Man’s sin intended or unintended?

Is Man’s sin intended or unintended?  Is it intended or unintended by God?  By Man?

Sin in a correct tense is intended by God, so to speak, while often unintended by the sinner. As well, God commands not to sin, and we willingly commit it. The two parties are related in regards to sin, but separate in that the Sovereign sees and commands all, while mere men can barely see beyond themselves.

It’s easy to forget, but Mankind and God, in their roles, are not competing spheres of influence.  While each has influence respectively, Mankind is overarched and encapsulated within God’s sphere.  Sin abounds when we forget this.

The issue of whom – God or Man – is responsible for the sin Man commits can be clouded the same way.  Surely God is Sovereign, and surely Man stands to be weighed by God for his conduct.  But, if we can acknowledge that Man has a genuine autonomy in his sphere under the sphere of God, the issues of our culpability under a true Sovereign works out.

If we are granted sailing boats (our sphere of responsibility and existence) by God, and God owns us/the boat/water/planet, and He says to us “Use your boat as I intend, in the environment I alone provide” – can’t He propel us/sink us/protect us?  Can’t we choose to ignore Him/defy Him/obey Him?  Can’t He hold us responsible for all of our choices and actions as sovereigns of our spheres as He is Sovereign over the whole?

I believe this answers the intended/not intended sin question.  The problem is that this isn’t a two-faceted, either/or question between two equal footings, but instead a subordinate/subset sphere operating within a Complete sphere.

I marvel at the daring approach God has taken with Man.  As Sovereign, He could have exercised His singular control over us and forced us through the paces to achieve His Goals.  Instead, He has deemed all things under Him must obey in lockstep – except Man.  We are the only thing in Creation that He allows to defy Him.  Why?  I think it’s because His chosen approach far better demonstrates His Attributes.  Which is a better show of wisdom, skill, love, and sovereignty – An animal led by the nose to the destination, or a self-interested free-range animal beckoned and compelled to that same end?  God is undertaking the incredible – the calling and drawing of dumb sheep into the Pen, who would otherwise ignore Him/defy Him/hate Him.

God has created an environment that allows sin, and people who are free to choose whether to sin or not.  We are sometimes aware of the sin and consequences, sometimes not.  God is free to allow our Enemy to incite us to sin, and free to keep us from it.  He sees the whole in absolute truth, we at best see through a glass dimly.  Is our sin intended or unintended?  I believe it depends on the circumstances.




Thoughts on Avarice

Thoughts on Avarice

There are perhaps few truly pure issues in life, and if found, they will be in alignment with God’s pure thoughts.  Most issues are grey, with the pure truth cast towards grey by exceptions, misunderstanding, falsehoods, or outright deception and lies.  This is the result of the work of the Enemy in concert with our sinful cooperation.  Navigating life requires the division of truth from the grey, and this requires an understanding of both.  Dividing the fine points of the mixed truths begins with seeking the fine points of His Word and discerning the fine divisions of the grey.  The outcome of this is wisdom.

Avarice is known by Catholic thought as one of the ‘Capital’, ‘Cardinal’, ‘Mortal’ or ‘Seven Deadly Sins’.  First construed by Pope Gregory (~600 AD), the Italian Dominican friar Thomas Aquinas (1273 AD) who refined Gregory’s dissertation preferred the term ‘Vices’ because they are the precursors to sin – “A capital vice is that which has an exceedingly desirable end so that in his desire for it, a man goes on to the commission of many sins, all of which are said to originate in that vice as their chief source”.

Avarice is our challenge to God’s intent for our representation of Him, to His promise of our provision, and our mismanagement of the stewardship of His charity.

Avarice is part of a broken use of God’s Economy, and could be framed like this:

Scripture frames a right use of God’s Economy:

And the crowds were questioning him, saying, “Then what shall we do?”  And he would answer and say to them, “The man who has two tunics is to share with him who has none; and he who has food is to do likewise.” And some tax collectors also came to be baptized, and they said to him, “Teacher, what shall we do?”  And he said to them, “Collect no more than what you have been ordered to.”  Some soldiers were questioning him, saying, “And what about us, what shall we do?” And he said to them, “Do not take money from anyone by force, or accuse anyone falsely, and be content with your wages.” Luke 3.10-14 Avarice Cooperate with God’s Economy, neither overreaching His allotment to you, nor withholding your allotment from those in need.
For this reason I say to you, do not be worried about your life, as to what you will eat or what you will drink; nor for your body, as to what you will put on. Is not life more than food, and the body more than clothing?  /…/  Do not worry then, saying, ‘What will we eat?’ or ‘What will we drink?’ or ‘What will we wear for clothing?’  For the Gentiles eagerly seek all these things; for your heavenly Father knows that you need all these things.  But seek first His kingdom and His righteousness, and all these things will be added to you. Matt 6.25, 31-33 Provision God’s provision to His own will always be sufficient.
Make sure that your character is free from the love of money, being content with what you have; for He Himself has said, “I will never desert you, nor will I ever forsake you,” Heb 13.5 Provision, Greed, Avarice God will always provide – cooperate with His Economy.
I know how to get along with humble means, and I also know how to live in prosperity; in any and every circumstance I have learned the secret of being filled and going hungry, both of having abundance and suffering need.  I can do all things through Him who strengthens me. Phil 4.12-13 Provision, Greed Avarice Be comfortable in God’s Economy, regardless of His allotment.
If we have food and covering, with these we shall be content.  But those who want to get rich fall into temptation and a snare and many foolish and harmful desires which plunge men into ruin and destruction.  For the love of money is a root of all sorts of evil, and some by longing for it have wandered away from the faith and pierced themselves with many griefs. 1 Tim 8.10 Greed, Avarice The danger of living contrary to God’s Economy, overreaching His allotment.



On the topic of Atonement

By definition, Atonement, must be had from beyond us. One might reason that if there is no God above me, I have no hope of true Forgiveness, for I cannot provide it to myself. But because this is not the case, as our conscience and Nature testify to Someone greater. Forgiveness must come from that Someone greater than me, or else it is just one thief forgiving his peer. The God over me has the means, the final say, over me.

Any Atonement must be from my Superior, on His terms, by His acknowledgement. There is no way I can provide that for myself. It must come from Someone greater. As long as there is a Force above me, ‘bigger than me,’ I have no security unless that Force is satisfied. Condescending to become One of us, and being One of that Force, Jesus is established to sufficiently provide Atonement and Forgiveness, to us. He has made it clear, and “It Is Finished.” Praise God!!




The sinful Human Heart is a fortress

The sinful Human Heart is a
fortress

Matthew 5:38-40

4/6/20

The Human heart and the motives that proceed from it are
powerful.  In the Original, right way it
was a force of Good that enjoyed the backing of the blessings and resources of
God.

This Heart learned disobedience and sin, yet it is still
formidable.  Further, God continues to
respect each Soul’s personhood.  In other
words, God will not force anyone to do anything.  True, He uses circumstance and His managing
of our Hearts to achieve His Goals – but no one has ever found Salvation and
said “This is not what I want, it was against my will.”

We can strive to follow the commands of Jesus concerning
loving those who hate us, without any further consideration as to why.  True, this is one of His expectations, and He
arguably owes us no explanation.

But, we enjoy a God Who offers us charity by oftentimes
explaining why.  It’s not because His
commands need justification, but instead it can help us to see His depth and Character,
and maybe even help us see ourselves.

The sinful Human Heart is a fortress, and it’s respected
by God.  Consider Rev 3.20 – “Behold, I
stand at the door and knock: if any man hears My voice and open the door, I
will come in to him, and will sup with him, and he with Me.”

All of us are given the reserved right to choose to
respond to Him.  On top of that, He alone
can move and quicken a Human’s Heart.

If these things are so, perhaps we could consider the
Human Heart – in its current, ‘natural’ state – to be a locked up fortress.  Only the occupant can unlock the door and
open it from the inside.  While God could
surely force His way in, He instead beckons and makes way to convince the Rebel
to let Him enter.

With all of this, if we turn to Jesus’ commands on how to
love and respond to those who (like us) have selfish tendencies that hurt
others, His prescription appears to show that we are participating in His Work
to beckon the Rebel.  1 Cor 13b is one
example of Scripture that assures us the greatest force amongst faith, hope and
love, is, love.

Showing love towards offenders is powerful because that
loving response does nothing to add to the fire of the rebelling Heart.  Instead, the Love and provision of God demonstrated
through Christ in us is the overwhelming force that calls to the Rebel to open
the door.

In our responding as Jesus commands, we are:

  1. Not adding to the problem
  2. Reflecting Christ as His vessel, and
  3. Exposing the Rebel to the greatest force God has
    created against the sin that enslaves Mankind



Thoughts in Considering Anger – Expanded

Rough Draft – sorry for the typos and cadence

Thoughts in Considering Anger – Expanded

Several
years ago, I sat with a Christian friend whose family was reeling from the
sudden loss of a young relative.  This
young man held promise and was pursuing the Lord, and his death seemed shocking
and senseless, unfair.  My friend asked
me, through teared eyes, “I love the Lord and so did my nephew.  I know James writes ‘Count it all joy’ and I
know it is true.  But how can this be
true?  I just can’t see how in this
case.”

Count it all joy, my brothers, when you meet trials
of various kinds – James 1.2

In
this death, there was no apparent reason or fault of his own, no violence
against him.  It was more difficult
because the only reason he could see would fall to God.  And this led to the next hurdle – how to deal
with Anger towards God.

Anger
is a difficult and potentially confusing topic for followers of Christ.  It’s especially problematic because,  handled incorrectly, we can be unknowingly
committing sin.  Anger is largely
unavoidable, and in many cases it is right. 
Understanding the mechanics behind Anger can help us be free of the sins
that drive it, which clears our vision to see issues and allows a proper
perspective to manage the responsibilities given to us by God.  In our confusion, we can also choose not to
embrace right Anger in a misdirected sense of peace and thus abandon our
responsibility, allowing evil to go on.

Finally,
when faced with a loss that lacks any other person responsible but God, we are
open to sinning against Him, or falling into a long spinning decline of grief
as we struggle to reconcile a loving God with the outcome He has allowed upon
us.  Assigning a loss like this to fate
or an indifferent God clashes with His declarations of Sovereign care over us.

This
has been written to try to resolve these problems of Loss, Grief, and Anger as
His Word explains it.  The hope is that
clarity will help us see this hidden sin, grow our faith, bring us comfort, and
expand our love for the God Who loves us.

Why this matters

God
is unchanging.  What He revealed of
Himself to Moses also is unchanged.  With
the appearance of Jesus, the many important terms of our dealings with God have
changed under the New Covenant, but God and how He operates remains unchanged.

His
expectations of us to obey His Commandments remain.  We can make a mistake in believing He no
longer cares if we obey, since we enjoy forgiveness through Jesus.  But as Paul wrote:

What shall we say then? Are we to continue in sin
that grace may abound?  By no means! How
can we who died to sin still live in it? – Rom 6.1-3

It
still matters whether we understand God’s expectations and follow them,
avoiding sin:

Only be very careful to observe the commandment and
the law that Moses the servant of the Lord commanded you, to love the Lord your
God, and to walk in all his ways and to keep his commandments and to cling to
him and to serve him with all your heart and with all your soul. – Josh 22.5

And we have the prophetic word more fully confirmed,
to which you will do well to pay attention as to a lamp shining in a dark
place, until the day dawns and the morning star rises in your hearts. – 1 Pet
1.19

Sin
offends God, and hurts us.  Our
Sanctification is the process of quitting our sin, committed in error or
not.  The exercise of wrong Anger is
hurtful because not only does it work against His design, it can also further
includes wrongly judging others.  Anger
can be a breeding ground for unforgiveness, of which Jesus gives serious
warning:

And forgive us our debts, as we also have forgiven
our debtors. //  For if you forgive
others for their transgressions, your heavenly Father will also forgive you.
But if you do not forgive others, then your Father will not forgive your
transgressions. – Matt 6.12, 14-15

Life
is difficult, and most of us will come to face issues that seem
unbearable.  Understanding how God sees
these issues, and how He would have us learn to respond, is for His Glory and
our benefit.  Misused or misplaced Anger,
and the Judgment that precedes it are opportunities to sin.  Consider, if forgiveness is associated with
Judgment, and Judgment with Anger, how grievous is it if we Judge even God?

It
is said that ‘still waters run deep’. 
Judgement and unforgiveness can run below the surface of Anger.    Believing that our wrong Anger is just a Human
natural response is contrary to God’s facts. 
So too is believing that all Anger is unjust.  Understanding the terms and how they interact
is important.

The
famous argument defended by French philosopher Rene Decartes, “I think
therefore I am”, seeks to demonstrate that the most foundational proof of one’s
existence is Thought.  If one has Thoughts,
he must exist.  Without existence, Thoughts
are not possible.  Thoughts are the first
essence of existence.

We,
who God made in His image, are isolated from one another in our Thoughts.  God graces every new Human with core Thoughts
and understanding – a common consciousness of morality and a testimony of
Himself in Nature (Rom 1.18-20).  From
there we are responsible to strive to form and know and shape our own Thoughts.  We cannot simply inherit another’s Thoughts,
nor God’s.  But, He alone fully knows
ours.  We are alone and responsible for
our Thoughts, and the Lord tells us repeatedly to recognize, pursue, test, and
embrace His Thoughts in order to obey and be free of wrong Thoughts and their
consequences:

So Jesus said to the Jews who had believed him, “If
you abide in my word, you are truly my disciples, and you will know the truth,
and the truth will set you free.” – John 8.31-32

Because
we cannot directly share Thoughts, words are extremely important.  Words seek to summarize and convey Thoughts
and notions.  Thoughts are the primary
expression of our being, and words are a secondary description of Thoughts.  A dozen Thoughts can stand behind a single
word, with each word also having words summarizing them.  Because words are summaries of Thoughts, they
must be carefully understood and considered if we are to clearly associate them
with the underlying Thoughts.  We see the
importance God’s living Word, in that Jesus Himself is the Word embodied and
revealed:

In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with
God, and the Word was God.  He was in the
beginning with God. – John 1.1-2

This
is why God’s Word, and our understanding of those Words, is so significant.  God also tells us His Thoughts are beyond us:

“For my thoughts are not your thoughts, neither are
your ways my ways, declares the Lord. 
For as the heavens are higher than the earth, so are my ways higher than
your ways and my thoughts than your thoughts.” – Isa 55.8-9.

God’s
Thoughts are so far beyond ours, yet He graciously stooped down to convey His Thoughts
for us through Words that we strive to understand.  If words are can only summarize greater Thoughts,
how shrouded is our understanding of the Mind of God?

“For we know in part and we prophesy in part, but when
the perfect comes, the partial will pass away. 
When I was a child, I spoke like a child, I thought like a child, I
reasoned like a child. When I became a man, I gave up childish ways.  For now we see in a mirror dimly, but then
face to face. Now I know in part; then I shall know fully, even asI
have been fully known.” – 1 Cor 13.9-12

And
any understanding we might have is possible, again, only with His help:

But the Helper, the Holy Spirit, whom the Father
will send in my name, he will teach you all things and bring to your
remembrance all that I have said to you. – John 14.26

Whoever is of God hears the words of God. The reason
why you do not hear them is that you are not of God. – John 8.47

For the word of God is living and active, sharper
than any two-edged sword, piercing to the division of soul and of spirit, of
joints and of marrow, and discerning the thoughts and intentions of the heart.
– Heb 4.12

God
as a Person is wholly complete and perfect. 
There is no disconnect between Who He is in His Thoughts and any action
or outcome that proceeds from His Sovereign actions.  Whoever God is and whatever He does, it is
purely expressed in agreement with His Thoughts.  There is absolutely no deviation.

We,
made in His image, were created to exist in exactly that same way, without
deviation.  The Fall of Adam became
possible once he disregarded God’s warning and he turned to a knowledge that
threatened to give him opportunity to embrace Thoughts God had commanded
against.  Embracing these Thoughts and
choosing to act on them, Adam became dangerously exposed to deviation.  With this Fall, all individuals descending
from him would also have the disadvantage of a freedom to deviate.  The result today is a world of persons of
mixed Thoughts, who have part God-given sensibilities, yet polluted with Thoughts/beliefs/actions
that deviate from God.  This state of
existence begins with the first choice to deviate (to sin), and once entered, each
person is condemned.

This
mixed state of wrong and right Thought, of sin and not, brings our lives misery
and threatens our final standing before God. 
Knowing the right thing to do is challenged by a competing throng of
embedded, wrong Thought.  God tells us
this in a thousand different ways throughout His Word.  His goal is to Save us from deviation, and He
demands it if we are to make the cut. 
Jesus is the culmination of our rescue, and coming to belong to Him is among
the most relevant commands to right Thought. 
Jesus offers to bring us into a forgiven state, that we would have the
Holy Spirit to quicken our ability to further understand and embrace God’s Thoughts,
and make way for Father to accept us. 
All of this is an incredibly costly and gracious effort to see us led
back into conformity, into non-deviation in our Thought and action.

A
big problem with our mixed state of Thought is that while we are held
responsible to right Thought and action, our Thoughts, deviant to His, can
deceive us to believe our wrong Thoughts and actions are right.  We are created fully equipped to have
opinions and beliefs.  Yet, wrong Thoughts
and actions that we allow to masquerade as right give us a false assurance of
God’s assessment of them.  We cannot
simply trust our Thoughts but have to always check them for conformance to His Thoughts.  We always have to ask if we are fulfilling
His expectation of us to live in agreement with His intention, as created in
His Image.

Words are given to instruct
us

Words
are important, and their meaning can be confusing.  Consider Anger, and its close relative Judgment.  How are they defined, and what might they
show of the Thoughts of God?  How do we
understand and employ these words that represent Thoughts that direct action?

For
example, God’s Word instructs us that most anything made by God in itself is
not wrong (unclean), but the definition belongs to God alone.  Further, He expects us to learn how to divide
the truth, and use anything made by Him only to His Glory.  We deviate if we divide it or use anything
otherwise.  Two general examples are:

“I was in the city of Joppa praying, and in a trance
I saw a vision, something like a great sheet descending, being let down from
heaven by its four corners, and it came down to me.  Looking at it closely, I observed animals and
beasts of prey and reptiles and birds of the air.  And I heard a voice saying to me, ‘Rise,
Peter; kill and eat.’  But I said, ‘By no
means, Lord; for nothing common or unclean has ever entered my mouth.’  But the voice answered a second time from
heaven, ‘What God has made clean, do not call common.’  This happened three times, and all was drawn
up again into heaven.” – Acts 11.5-10

One person esteems one day as better than another,
while another esteems all days alike. Each one should be fully convinced in his
own mind.  The one who observes the day,
observes it in honor of the Lord. The one who eats, eats in honor of the Lord,
since he gives thanks to God, while the one who abstains, abstains in honor of
the Lord and gives thanks to God.  For
none of us lives to himself, and none of us dies to himself.  For if we live, we live to the Lord, and if we
die, we die to the Lord. So then, whether we live or whether we die, we are the
Lord’s. – Rom 14.5-8

The
list of Thoughts and actions that can be used in deviance (or not) is endless –
Food, money, clothing, sex, killing, love, worship, music, possessions,
position, authority, military, taxes, etc. 
The topics of Anger, and its close relative Judgment, are also highly
subject to misuse.

God has expectations

Christ’s
forgiveness is complete, yet God still has demands upon us.  We are to ‘work out our salvation with fear
and trembling’.  This includes striving
to know Him and be conformed to His Thoughts.

One
example is of God calling Job to face Him and answer for his Thoughts, followed
by a greater revelation of God’s Thoughts. 
Job was at a disadvantage in that the whole of God’s Word had not yet
been revealed, and he was in uncharted waters. 
However, Job was born within about a hundred years of the Flood, and
alive while Noah and his sons still lived. 
Job was aware of many things said of God, and Job’s Thoughts were
informed by what was available to him at that point:

Have you listened in the council of God?  And do you limit wisdom to yourself?  What do you know that we do not know?  What do you understand that is not clear to
us?  Both the gray-haired and the aged
are among us, older than your father. – Job 15.8-10

“Who is this that darkens counsel by words without
knowledge?  Dress for action like a man;
I will question you, and you make it known to me.  “Where were you when I laid the foundation of
the earth?  Tell me, if you have
understanding.” – Job 38.1-3

Jesus
also summarizes His expectations in John 14.21:

“Whoever has my commandments and keeps them, he it
is who loves me. And he who loves me will be loved by my Father, and I will
love him and manifest myself to him.” – John 14.21

God
has expectations that are to govern us in all of the factors involved.  However, there are defined lines of
responsibility He assigns to us, and the rest He reserves for Himself.  Wrath and Vengeance (Punishment) is one
example He largely keeps for Himself:

If possible, so far as it depends on you, live
peaceably with all.  Beloved, never
avenge yourselves, but leave it to the wrath of God, for it is written,
“Vengeance is mine, I will repay, says the Lord.” – Rom 12.18-19

Yet,
he assigns responsibility to everyone to strive – within the bounds of what we are
responsible for, and in the way He prescribes
–  to:  a)
know and correct our Thoughts; b) Discern the world around us; c) Judge
everything His terms of right from wrong; d) Do not wrongly Condemn, even
ourselves; e) exercise Anger in a right way; f) dispense Punishment.

A Pathology of Anger

Anger
is one of the more conspicuous actions we exercise, but it resides in a path
that is tied within a series of other factors. 
While Anger can seem to pop up almost unexpectedly, it cannot appear by
itself without the involvement of a preceding series of factors, and unchecked
it can progress to latter factors.  While
this statement might seem untrue, the fact that Thought cannot be denied from a
conscious Being, and that any action a Being commits is a result of Thought, shows
there are dependencies.  The dependencies
are described to us in His Word, which can be arranged into a ‘Pathology’. 

The
progressive factors described in God’s Word concerning Anger are:

Thought – The intellectual product
of, and the essence of, Being

Discernment – The testing, comprehension
and perception of the obscure

Judgment – To compare facts and seek
just-ness

Condemnation – To pronounce wrong and
assign blame

Anger – A violent passion of the
mind with a propensity even towards vengeance

Punishment – To inflict suffering on
an offender found un-just

Each
factor is foundational to the factor that follows it; none of the factors can
exist without first employing those before it:

Thought rests upon the bedrock of
the Being who expressed the Thought;

Discernment must be rightly informed
and governed by Thought;

Judgment can only function upon a Discernment of the details perceived;

Condemnation’s pronouncement relies upon a
Judgment of facts towards just-ness;

Anger reacts to Condemnation, which was initiated by Judgment;

Punishment fulfills the demands of Condemnation.

For
example, Thought has no predecessor except existence, and Jesus’ instruction of
the Thoughts of the ‘heart’ demonstrates that the heart is the seed bed,
nurturing our Thoughts that derive our actions:

The driver of the sin of unforgiveness leading to
divorce –He
said to them, “Because of your hardness of heart Moses allowed you to divorce
your wives, but from the beginning it was not so.” – Matt 19.8

The driver of the actions of the person – And He said, “What comes
out of a person is what defiles him. For from within, out of the heart of man,
come evil thoughts, sexual immorality, theft, murder, adultery, coveting,
wickedness, deceit, sensuality, envy, slander, pride, foolishness.  All these evil things come from within, and
they defile a person.” – Mark 7.20-23

“Hear then the parable of the sower: When anyone
hears the word of the kingdom and does not understand it, the evil one comes
and snatches away what has been sown in his heart. This is what was sown along
the path.  As for what was sown on rocky
ground, this is the one who hears the word and immediately receives it with
joy, yet he has no root in himself, but endures for a while, and when
tribulation or persecution arises on account of the word, immediately he falls
away.  As for what was sown among thorns,
this is the one who hears the word, but the cares of the world and the
deceitfulness of riches choke the word, and it proves unfruitful.  As for what was sown on good soil, this is
the one who hears the word and understands it. He indeed bears fruit and yields,
in one case a hundredfold, in another sixty, and in another thirty.” – Matt
18-23

Each
factor relies on its predecessor.  An
attempt to skip over any of the factors threatens the intentions of Thought, tainting
the process and its outcome.  God calls
this a perversion, or subversion, of Justice:

“You shall not pervert justice. You shall not show
partiality, and you shall not accept a bribe, for a bribe blinds the eyes of
the wise and subverts the cause of the righteous.” – Duet 16.19

The definitions of words are
important

The
factors can be defined as:

Thought – The intellectual product
of, and the essence of, Being

Discernment – The testing,
comprehension and perception of the obscure

Judgment – To compare facts and seek
just-ness

Condemnation – To pronounce wrong and
assign blame

Anger – A violent passion of the
mind with a propensity even towards vengeance

Punishment – To inflict suffering on
an offender found un-just

Our
attention here will touch on Discernment, and focus on Judgment, Condemnation,
and Anger.

Discernment leads to Right Judgment

Discernment
is easily confused with Judgment.  Again,
the two are closely related, but Discernment precedes Judgment.  If Judgment occurs, it began first with
Discernment.  Confusion of the two and
our responsibilities in it will badly affect our perception and subsequent
actions.

Discernment
requires us to carefully “divide” the facts of the situation and consider what
God has to say about them in His Word. 
Since the Word is considered complete in addressing our need to
understand how to see things, the Word is indispensable.  So too is a careful investigation of the
facts.

Walk as children of light (forthe
fruit of light is found in all that is good and right and true),andtry to discern what is pleasing to the Lord. – Eph 5.8b-10

Judgment, informed by
Discernment, directs Condemnation

Judgment
is an important initiator to Anger. 
Judgment indirectly precedes Anger, and the two usually closely
accompany each other.  Of the two, Judgment
is an easier action to learn to see in ourselves before Anger erupts.  Judgment misused or outside of our
responsibility breeds sin.

A main reason Judgment is important in understanding Anger is that
neither of the proceeding factors – Thought and Discernment – call for, or from
themselves result in, Anger.  This does
not negate the importance of right Thought and Discernment.  Both are necessary to establish right
Judgment.  However, Anger can only begin
if Judgment has occurred – even if flawed. 
If so, then wrong Judgment gives opportunity to wrong Anger.  Therefore, if Judgment is the earliest
indication of where we can begin the fight against sinful Anger, as the phrase
goes “Better to crush the egg than to have to kill the snake”.

Judgment in Salvation

God’s
Judgment is an immense concern to anyone who has been faced with the terrible
Holiness of his Creator, and it’s perhaps the main reason most Christians have
historically concluded to surrender to Jesus. 
(Surrender to the compelling love of God alone, without escape also from
His Wrath, is another topic.)  It is also
the foundation beneath Salvation, the reason for it and how Salvation is
carried out through Jesus.  The Old
Testament, particularly the Books of Moses, is awash with God’s punitive
actions against those who oppose Him. 
The New Testament, Gospels and the rest, also speak much on the topic,
but include a different facet.

Judgment in the Bible

Like
many subjects we study in the Bible, we can wonder about seeming
contradictions.  Translations from the
original language can contribute to the problem, as translations inherently
tend to summarize an original word’s richer meaning into the lesser translated word
– the full meaning can be lost in the translation.  So, we must remember to be diligent.

Judgment defined:

Judgment:  The process of forming an opinion or
evaluation by discerning and comparing; an opinion or estimate so formed. – https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/judgment

JUDG’MENT, n. The act of judging; the
act or process of the mind in comparing its ideas, to find their agreement or
disagreement, and to ascertain truth; or the process of examining facts and
arguments, to ascertain propriety and justice; or the process of examining the
relations between one proposition and another. – https://av1611.com/kjbp/kjv-dictionary/judgment.html

Biblical examples of Judgment:

Judgments Past

  • The introduction of sin: Banishment from Eden and
    over Creation and mankind (Overall Judgment on sin) – Gen 3:14–24
  • A rampant Evil: On the Earth’s Human and
    Demonic inhabitants (The Flood) – Gen 7:17-24
  • Striving for equality with
    God
    : On
    evil Human collaboration (Tower of Babel) – Gen 11:5-9
  • A higher regard for false
    gods
    : On
    Egypt, their gods, and Pharaoh (Release of the Hebrews) – Exod 7-12
  • Rejection of God’s and His
    imposed Authority
    : On persons challenging God’s man, Moses (The rebellion of Korah) –
    Num 16:1-35
  • And again on the next day (Grumbling
    community, 14,700 killed by instant plague) – Num 16:41-50
  • And again with Moses’ sister and
    brother (Miriam made leprous) – Num 12:1-12
  • The sin of the individual
    affects the community
    : One person’s sins can’t hide in the crowd (Achan, his family and
    possessions killed for taking spoils of war) – Josh 7

Judgments
Future

  • On the whole World: The Tribulation (Seven
    Seals) – Rev 6-16
  • On individuals belonging to
    Christ
    : The
    Judgment Seat of Christ (Resurrected and Raptured Christians) 2 Cor 5:10; 1 Cor
    3:12; Heb 6:10; Rev 3:11
  • On the Nations: Jesus begins the
    Millennial Reign separating His Own and the Rest (Sheep and Goats) – Matt
    25:31-46
  • The Judgment of the Angels: A future task given to
    Christ’s followers (Judgment of fallen Angels) – 1 Cor 6:2-3; Jude 1:6
  • The Final Judgment: All unbelievers from the
    whole of Humanity judged and banished to Hell (The Great White Throne) – Rev
    20:11-15

Judgments
Present

  • Of Self: Evaluation of ourselves
    (Motives of heart, resultant actions towards God and others) – Matt 15:17-20;
    James 3:14-16, 19-22; James 1:14-15
  • From God: His correction of His
    children in Christ (He disciplines those He loves) – Heb 12-5-11; 1 Cor 11:32;
    Rev 3:19; Prov 13:24 and Eph 6:4; Mark 3.1-5; John 2:13-16; Matt 23.1-4, 29-33
  • Towards Others: Judgment and discernment
    of our peers (How we weigh and act on the actions and heart of others around
    us) –

Why do you pass judgment on your brother? Or you,
why do you despise your brother? For we will all stand beforethe
judgment seat of God; for it is written,“As I live, says the
Lord, every knee shall bow to me, and every tongue shall confess to God.”  So theneach of us will
give an account of himself to God. – Rom 14.10-12

Condemnation obeys Justice, precedes
Anger, and establishes the terms of Punishment

Condemning,
or Condemnation, is a larger issue that follows Judgment.  Condemnation cannot exist without Judgment
first, and, Judgment potentially leads to Condemnation, if it is taken that
far.  The issue then is, does God command
Judgment without proceeding to Condemnation, and if so, how does this matter?

Responsibility
for Discernment, Judgment, Condemnation and Punishment are afforded by God to
those who govern us.  Judges in
particular exercise this role.  We’ll
note that Anger is not usually highlighted in a Judge’s job, and certainly not
wrong Anger.  Of course there are plenty
of example of an angry Judge, but the danger is in Anger coloring the other
factors.  Traditional statues of Lady Liberty
feature her with a blindfold and an honest scale.  Why? 
Because the goal is a clear discernment in order to Judge impartially –
even impartial to the Judge himself.

Judges
also have the task of Condemnation, the pronouncement of wrongdoing and the assignment
of blame.  For the rest of us, there
seems to be a distinctive, fine line in the Condemnation we are allowed to
exercise.  We shall call things right or
wrong, but no further.  The dooming to
punishment remains the role of God and the permitted authority.

Condemnation defined:

The act of condemning; the judicial act of declaring
one guilty, and dooming him to punishment. –
http://www.kingjamesbibledictionary.com/Dictionary/condemnation

Condemnation is declaring an evildoer to be guilty
and can refer to the punishment inflicted on man because of that guilt. Without
Jesus mankind stands condemned before God, not only because of the sin of Adam
(Rom. 5:16-18) but also because of our own sin (Matt. 12:37). However,
“There is therefore now no condemnation for those who are in Christ
Jesus.  For the law of the Spirit of life
in Christ Jesus has set you free from the law of sin and of death,” (Rom.
8:1-2). Christians have passed out of condemnation because they are forgiven in
Christ. – https://carm.org/dictionary-condemnation

Then there is the topic of
Anger

Anger
is the one out-showing factor that can most easily ignore the responsibilities
and bounds of the other factors.  It is
emotional, as opposed to intellectual (Thought, Discernment, Judgment,
Condemnation), and physical (Punishment). 
Condemnation is by nature a mix of intellectual and emotional, but the emotional
factors can be bridled, leaving only intellect. 

Anger
can also pose a danger to subverting the other factors to satisfy itself.  Emotions are closest to the Flesh, and can have
great influence over our decisions and actions. 
As with all most things given by God, our emotions can be a considerable
blessing, or they can be misused and cause sin. 
Anger itself is not necessarily a sin, unless it is improperly employed
and outside of what God has commanded of us. 
A conscious choice towards Anger must be supported by the earlier steps
in order to appear.  It isn’t possible to
engage Anger without first Judging and Condemning, not matter how quickly or
insignificant the steps might seem. 
Consider, how is it possible to have Anger without first Judging and
Condemning?

Some
of the things that make Anger so tricky are:

1)
Anger is a natural emotion God made in us

2)
There are many instances when Anger is not a sin, which can further confuse the
issue

3)
Anger can suddenly appear with no other person apparently responsible for the
things that angers us

4)
We can easily assign our own reason and misuse Anger, apart from God’s Reason.

Anger,
even in the most instantaneous appearance (think hammer meets thumb), is a
choice that follows the Pathology.  A
clearer example might be someone greatly violating us.  Robbery at knifepoint for example, must
proceed through the series.  An angry response
might begin with knowing robbery is wrong; discerning you are being threatened
of loss of life and possessions; judging this is against what is right;
rejecting the assault and its consequences; expressing severe disapproval.  Whether the occurrence prompting Anger is
progressive or lighting fast, all of us must progress through the series.  Even when we acknowledge studies
demonstrating shortened neural pathways that summarize our responses into
almost instant reactions, they are still pathways trained through the exercise
of the Pathology.

God’s responsibilities, and
those He gives to us

God’s and Our Responsibilities within the Pathology

Thought – We are to reject our own
Thought as inferior to His, and test those Thoughts we already believe.

Discernment – We are to strive to grasp
all topics before us, divide them by His Truth, and pay attention to the
“times”.

Judgment – We are to compare our
conclusions to His Word and seek what would bring justice.

Condemnation – We are to call good as
good and evil as evil; every person responsible is warned of their deviance.

Anger – We are to be slow to
anger, to express anger without sin, and put it away quickly once used
properly.

Punishment – We are to bring
punishment according to our roles, not more or less than prescribed.

Terms by Which God and We Carry Out Our Responsibilities

Thought – God is the source of all
understanding, and He in infallible.  We
are responsible for what we believe or actually understand.

Discernment – God’s command of every
single aspect under Him is perfect Discernment. 
Our attempt to Discern is limited to what He has revealed to us, and no
farther – IE: Interaction with the dead to Discern information is prohibited.

Judgment – God is Supreme Judge of
all Creation.  We are mini-judges at
best, restricted to those things He has given us to oversee.

Condemnation – Condemnation rests
completely under God, as He is Sovereign. 
Our role is limited to warning only things under our specific
responsibility, but even then is limited outside of what God reserves for
Himself.

Anger – God’s Anger is Just and
perfect, reaching across all of Creation where He will exercise Vengeance.  Our Anger is to be a sinless exercise of
emotion, expressed only towards what God would call wrong.

Punishment –God’s Punishment is and
will be righteous and fully measured to meet His Justice.  Our exercise of Punishment is bound strictly to
our roles and responsibilities, and with measure as prescribed by Him.

Considering a Few Biblical Examples

The Archangel Michael

The
actions of Angels reported in the Word can bring insight.  Angels, by their created nature, are
perfectly in sync with God and His intent. 
If they weren’t, they would, by definition, not remain in His
employ.  Without any provision offered to
them for forgiveness or redemption, one sin would see them expelled from His
Presence.  They apparently have not been
afforded a Savior, as we have.  This is
why the exchange reported in Jude 1.9 between Michael and Satan is significant:

But when the archangel Michael, contending with the
devil, was disputing about the body of Moses, he did not presume to pronounce a
blasphemous judgment, but said, “The Lord rebuke you.” – Jude 1.9

This
exchange shows us a window of full and perfect execution of God’s ways, offering
insight to the actions and Thoughts played out lock-step with God’s Truths.

Thought – Michael fully knows and
understands everything God has given him as Truth.  Michael made no attempt to know more or
forget anything God had instructed.

Discernment – Michael is clear on what
is at hand; he was sent to retrieve Moses’ body, and Satan attempted to subvert
that, against God’s command.  Michael
weighed the situation and concluded Satan remained the enemy and intended to do
wrong.

Judgment – Michael rightly judged
that Satan had no business taking the body, and he judged Satan’s actions as
contrary to the task God had given to him. Michael continued to strive for
Justice, but left the Condemnation to the Lord.

Condemnation – Michael knew his
responsibility wasn’t here, and obeying God, he left all aspects to Him.

Anger – Michael may have
exercised righteous anger within his bounds. 
Some translations record him as saying “The Lord rebuke you!”

Punishment – Michael is not recorded
as exercising responsibility for Satan’s punishment, so we assume he did not,
in obedience.

Can
we reasonably infer that Michael had the reason and means to go further and
punish Satan?  Yes, as Michael and the
Host had already overcome Satan and the demons once before.  But as a servant of God holding strict
obedience, Michael pressed into the responsibilities charged to him, and
refused to engage the rest.

Paul, on Judgment and
Condemnation

The
Book or Romans in itself is thick study of Judgment and Condemnation.  But for one example, consider Paul’s words on
Judgment in 1 Cor 4.1-5, and the statement of Rom 8.1:

This is how one should regard us, as servants of
Christ and stewards of the mysteries of God. 
Moreover, it is required of stewards that they be found faithful.  But with me it is a very small thing that I
should be judged by you or by any human court. In fact, I do not even judge
myself.  For I am not aware of anything
against myself, but I am not thereby acquitted. It is the Lord who judges
me.  Therefore do not pronounce judgment
before the time, before the Lord comes, who will bring to light the things now
hidden in darkness and will disclose the purposes of the heart. Then each one
will receive his commendation from God. – 1 Cor 4.1-5

There is therefore now no condemnation for those who
are in Christ Jesus. – Rom 8.1

Here,
Paul, who clearly judged other people and topics within his responsibilities,
(see 1 Cor 5.1-5, for example) demonstrates that the final Judgment of persons
regarding sin or not, is left to the authority of God.  The difference is that Paul weighs the
actions and questions the heart of his Human peers, but in all cases, including
his own, leaves the final Judgment of all hearts to God.  Furthermore, of those found in Christ, all
sin is paid and there is no longer a basis for blame.

It is actually reported that there is sexual
immorality among you, and of a kind that is not tolerated even among pagans,
for a man has his father’s wife.  And you
are arrogant! Ought you not rather to mourn? Let him who has done this be
removed from among you.  For though
absent in body, I am present in spirit; and as if present, I have already
pronounced judgment on the one who did such a thing.  When you are assembled in the name of the
Lord Jesus and my spirit is present, with the power of our Lord Jesus, you are
to deliver this man to Satan for the destruction of the flesh, so that his
spirit may be saved in the day of the Lord. – 1 Cor 5.1-5

Paul
is an Apostle, an authority of Christ’s Church, charged with the oversight of
His members.  Within that authority he:

Thought – Paul understood, perhaps
more clearly than anyone, God’s Thoughts through Christ’s Spirit.

Discernment – Paul heard reliable reports
and discerned the actions of the people involved.

Judgment – Paul judged these actions
as deviant to God’s Thought, and looked to bring a just correction.

Condemnation – Paul, given this
authority under Christ, moved to enact measures that would bring correction,
that they would ultimately avoid Condemnation when they faced God.

Anger – Paul shows distress in
challenging them, within his responsibilities over them and their actions.

Punishment – Paul instructs the
congregation to invoke punishment in the name of Jesus, as a Church.  He and the Church carried out their
responsibilities, while remaining within their respective authority.

Jesus expresses righteous
Anger

Three
example of Jesus’ anger are reported in Mark 3.1-5, John 2.13-16, and Matt 23.1-4,
29-33:

He entered again into a synagogue; and a man
was there whose hand was withered. They were watching Him to see if He would heal him on
the Sabbath, so that they might accuse Him. He said to the man with
the withered hand, “Get up and come forward!” And He said to
them, “Is it lawful to do good or to do harm on the Sabbath, to save a
life or to kill?” But they kept silent. After looking around at
them with anger, grieved at their hardness of heart, He said to the man, “Stretch
out your hand.” And he stretched it out, and his hand was restored. – Mark
3.1-5

The Passover of the Jews was near, and
Jesus went up to Jerusalem. And He found in the temple those who were
selling oxen and sheep and doves, and the money changers seated at their tables. And He made a
scourge of cords, and drove them all
out of the temple, with the sheep and the oxen; and He poured out the coins of
the money changers and overturned their tables; and to those who were
selling the doves He said, “Take these things away; stop
making My Father’s house a place of business.” – John 2.13-16

Then Jesus spoke to the crowds and to His
disciples, saying: “The scribes and the Pharisees have seated
themselves in the chair of Moses; therefore all that they tell you, do and
observe, but do not do according to their deeds; for they say things and do not do them. They tie up heavy burdens
and lay them on men’s shoulders, but they themselves are unwilling to move them
with so much as a
finger.  //  “Woe to you, scribes
and Pharisees, hypocrites! For you build the tombs of the prophets and adorn
the monuments of the righteous, and say, ‘If we had been living in the days of our
fathers, we would not have been partners with them in shedding the blood of the
prophets.’ So you testify against yourselves, that you are sons
of those who murdered the prophets. Fill up, then, the measure of the guilt of your
fathers. You serpents, you brood of vipers, how will you escape
the sentence of hell? – Matt 23.1-4, 29-33

As
Jesus is God and is Perfect, we can begin on the basis that His conduct as
flawless.  If the framework drawn here is
sound, then we can presume this Pathology will withstand scrutiny and give fair
insight to His actions.  How does it hold
up in His examples?

Thought

Discernment

Judgment

Condemnation

Anger

Punishment

Is my Anger sin?

Thought
– The intellectual product of, and the essence of, Being

Discernment
– The testing, comprehension and perception of the obscure

Judgment
– To compare facts and seek just-ness

Condemnation
– To pronounce wrong and assign blame

Anger
– A violent passion of the mind with a propensity even towards vengeance

Punishment
– To inflict suffering on an offender found un-just

The
answer depends upon the previous steps of the Pathology.  If we, along the way leading to Anger, go
outside of our responsibilities given by God, we sin and taint the step.  A later step built upon a flawed, earlier
step only exasperates the sin.  Bad
foundations make for worse buildings. 
However, if we progress rightly from Thought through Discernment,
Judgment, and Condemnation, we have opportunity to also exercise right
Anger.  Understanding our Anger and how
we got there is key to walking well with the Lord.

If
I am angry towards something affecting or threatening me – or whatever is
different than what I want – I might reason that a person (their actions), or a
situation, or a potential outcome is a threat to what I desire.  I will naturally (in my Flesh) want to exercise
control over these things to try to affect the outcome to my desire.  The problem comes when I am looking to take
action over (or beyond) someone or something that is not my responsibility
under God.  Our desire to exercise
responsibilities beyond what God has allowed is rebellion and causes loss.  It is sin, which promises pain.

One
example might be we might face someone offensive wrongly who threatens our
peace and security.  If we consider the Pathology,
it might look like this:

Thought – I will see this person as
a creation of God, my peer, and understand how God instructs me to deal with
him.

Discernment – I will strive to
comprehend why I see this person as a threat, and try to understand the
perspectives that drive him.

Judgment – I will weigh my fear (of
loss, perhaps?) against what God says He has for me that is truly
important.  I’ll also consider the value
God places on this person and the long-term goals God wants him to embrace.

Condemnation – If I condemn anything, it
will be only my and this person’s actions that are contrary to God’s.  I will not condemn anything that God reserves
for Himself to Condemn.

Anger – If I express anger, it
will not be for the purpose of forcing this person to change for my sake.  It will be a clear emotional response, but
will be only used as warning towards the sin that opposes God.  I won’t employ it to exact vengeance.

Punishment – Whatever crime, if any,
is committed, I will look to whoever is responsible to press within the bounds
the authority they possess allows – be it me, the Church, the government, or
God.

Consider
another example, the meteor out of nowhere that paralyzes me:

Thought – No matter what, these
things remain:  God is Sovereign, even
over natural happenstance; there is nothing that escapes His oversight.  My lot in life under Christ is fully in His
care.  Did He allow it, or did He direct
it?  It doesn’t matter, as He ultimately
has the final word in all things. 
Fortunately, we cannot escape this fact.

Discernment – There are realities I
must now deal with – difficulties in living day to day; the loss of living in
mobility; the need to rely on others; the threat of discouragement and
resentment, even towards God.

Judgment – I have my outlook, and
God has His wise reasons.  I might have
learned from His Word that any real learning usually begins in difficulty, and
conclude that even in this, He is somehow loving me.

Condemnation – In the end, He is
responsible for my state, but I will not blame Him.  I will look to James 1.2-4.

Anger – Anger towards the
situation is an expected struggle.  It
has brought loss and pain, yet I cannot see how I ‘deserved’ it.  I will be honest in expressing my anger to
God, and temper it with His promise that I can trust His actions and motives.

Punishment – While this is likely an
opportunity that God will use to correct my Thoughts and strengthen my faith,
as a person belonging to Christ, I conclude to believe Him that this is not
punishment.  Correction, even difficult
correction, is for the child of God. 
Punishment is for those outside of Christ.

Concluding thoughts

This
argument began with a friend’s struggle with James 1.2.  The whole Thought is written as:

Count it all joy, my brothers, when you meet trials
of various kinds, for you know that the testing of your faith produces steadfastness.  And let steadfastness have its full effect,
that you may be perfect and complete, lacking in nothing.  If any of you lacks wisdom, let him ask God,
who gives generously to all without reproach, and it will be given him. – James
1.2-5

However
we choose to frame our understanding of God and our obedience to Him, it must begin
from His Word to us.  If we are to oppose
the world and our ‘former ignorance’ and ‘be conformed to the image of His
Son’, the first step is in embracing God’s statement to Job: “Behold, the fear
of the Lord, that is wisdom, and to turn away from evil is understanding.“

For
now, we are left in an environment that runs in the opposite direction from God
and His wisdom.  There is nowhere we
might turn and fully escape the effects of sin. 
Fortunately, in Christ, there is nowhere we are outside of God’s
care.  Until we are relieved of the
burden of life here, God expects us to know His responsibilities and ours, and
carry them out as Jesus would.  If we can
peer through the dim glass and clearly embrace His promises, we have the
assistance of God Almighty to aid us in our labors.  We have His promise, and the testimony of
five millennia of believers of God, that we too can find comfort in Him
alone.  Through the struggle to understand
Him, we can grow in conformity and enjoy what He offers.

Thoughts in Considering Anger

Consider (1):  Anger itself is not sin, but its exercise
either in or out of God’s sanctions.  Are
not food and sex similar?  They
themselves are not sin, but whether exercised according to God’s sanctions.

Consider (2):  Judgment is the foundation of anger.  At its core, is anger a response to a Judgment
of that which opposes our expectations? 
Is anger a force we use against what opposes us, that what opposes us
would come to meet our expectations?  Doesn’t
Judgment precede our anger?

Example:  My anger rages against [him/her/that] which
will affect the outcome [loss/gain/circumstances] I want.  I have judged this, and hate what brings this
outcome.

The Problem:  God governs all circumstances and
interactions, so He is exercising His Judgment. 
He also dictates how we should view and respond.  Anger is rightly expressed toward that which
opposes God, to as far as we are responsible to judge.  However, anger expressed outside of our
responsibility, or outside of God’s expectations, is sin.

The Solution:  Understand the bounds of your responsibility.  Surrender all opposition to God, and strive
to understand, repent, and obey.  Refuse any
expectations you find that oppose Him, and allow Him to overrun your heart.

Jude 1.9
But when the archangel Michael, contending with the devil, was disputing about
the body of Moses, he did not presume to pronounce a blasphemous judgment, but
said, “The Lord rebuke you.”

Mark 3.1-5
– He entered again into a synagogue; and a man was there whose hand was
withered. They were watching Him to see if He would heal
him on the Sabbath, so that they might accuse Him. He said to the man
with the withered hand, “Get up and come forward!” And He said to
them, “Is it lawful to do good or to do harm on the Sabbath, to save a
life or to kill?” But they kept silent. After looking around at
them with anger, grieved at their hardness of heart, He said to the
man, “Stretch out your hand.” And he stretched it out, and his hand
was restored.

John 2.13-16
– The Passover of the Jews was near, and Jesus went up to
Jerusalem. And He found in the temple those who were selling oxen and
sheep and doves, and the money changers seated at their tables. And
He made a scourge of cords, and drove them all out of the
temple, with the sheep and the oxen; and He poured out the coins of the money
changers and overturned their tables; and to those who were
selling the doves He said, “Take these things away; stop
making My Father’s house a place of business.” 

Matt 23.1-4, 29-33
– Then Jesus spoke to the crowds and to His disciples, saying: “The
scribes and the Pharisees have seated themselves in the chair of
Moses; therefore all that they tell you, do and observe, but do not do
according to their deeds; for they say things and do not
do them. They tie up heavy burdens and lay them on men’s
shoulders, but they themselves are unwilling to move them with so much
as
 a finger.  //  “Woe to
you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! For you build the tombs of the prophets
and adorn the monuments of the righteous, and say, ‘If we had been living in
the days of our fathers, we would not have been partners with them in shedding the
blood of the prophets.’ So you testify against yourselves, that
you are sons of those who murdered the prophets. Fill up, then,
the measure of the guilt of your fathers. You
serpents, you brood of vipers, how will you escape the sentence
of hell?




Is God at Fault for Bad Behavior From His Church?

//This is a letter sent to a person I met at a gathering, who turned away from the Church after feeling rejection from the Pastor and the people.//

It was nice meeting you at my friend’s party, and I
appreciate your openness in our discussion. 
Most people aren’t courageous enough to discuss their opinions with
someone with another view.

Out of everything we talked about, I find myself really grieved
over your story of how your Son felt he was treated during his time in AWANA,
and you feeling the Preacher was disrespectful and hateful.  May I speak into this?

We can know of people first hand, and we can know of someone by how they are represented by the people that know that person.  For instance, before we met last night, my friend could have related things about me to you, and my friend’s representation of me could have contributed to what you knew, second hand, about me.  If my friend knew me well and fairly represented me in a way that was true to the facts, he would be doing you and me a service.  In the same way, if my friend was mistaken about me, or misrepresented me, then I wouldn’t be correctly understood, and you would have a choice of how to view me.  This is why it seems so important that whoever we are trying to understand needs to be met first hand, and any representations need to be checked out before fully believed.

Unfortunately, I find it is easy to dismiss people who
are represented badly by others.  In your
case of the Church, the Pastor, and God – myself being a person who knows and
studies my relationship with Him – I don’t believe God was correctly
represented to you and your family.  As a
friend of God, I’m sorry about that and how it has affected you and your
family.  What you described to me was not
a fair show of who God is and how He expects to be represented.

Another aspect of all of this is the relationship between
the truth about God, a person’s understanding of it, and how we process
it.  If 2+2 equals 4, it is a truth in
itself.  We can accept the evidence and
agree, or, for whatever reason, we can argue it, misrepresent it, hurt other
people with it, even outright reject it. 
But, no matter what we do that misrepresents the truth, it remains the
truth in itself.  The thing about any
real truth is that is cannot be redefined into a non-truth.  However, it can be represented in a
non-truthful way, and the person exposed to this bad representation can
conclude it is not truth.  If either the
representative or the person exposed don’t know and accept the truth for what
it is, they will be wrong in how they process it.

A Christian or a Pastor who misrepresent God is in error,
and the recipient will have to choose to judge whether the God they describe is
fair or is unfair.  If we simply accept
any representation of the God we have not investigated ourselves, we’re likely
to be missing out on the most important issue any of us will face.  It is always better to judge God first hand,
for ourselves.

From what you described to me, I believe you were
presented with a partial truth, even if they could have been well-intentioned
people.  This doesn’t change the fact
that it directed you and your family into unfortunate conclusions about
God.  However, I humbly suggest that you
too have a responsibility to investigate God to best draw your conclusions,
first hand.

The reason I say this is mainly because the God I (and hundreds
of millions of others) know would not have responded to your Son’s sexuality in
the way you described that the Church did. 
And in response, I also humbly suggest you have chosen to dismiss the
most important Person in your life.  My
hope is you will re-approach the person of God yourself, and draw your conclusions
of Him honestly, first hand.

How other people can lead us feel is a reality.  The problem with this is that if we are
directed by our feelings more than we are directed by the truth, we can find
ourselves passionately insisting that 2+2 equals something other than 4.  But, if 4 is a very important issue for us,
we will be denying the truth and taking ourselves away from whatever important
thing the truth would bring us.

I will end on this, with the largest assurance I can
offer you as a friend of God:  He loves
you, and your Son, and your family. 
Whatever He has given us to understand Him is undeniable truth.  Whether we understand Him and accept His
truth is the most important issue in any person’s life.  He knows we don’t understand and even agree
with Him in an endless list of issues. 
However, He is patient, loving, understanding and merciful.  With 100% certainty, if we approach Him and leave
our demands behind, and ask Him for help in understanding Him first hand, any
of us can begin to see all aspects of God, and ourselves, and of life on His
truthful, loving terms.  Rejecting Him
because of a poor representation, or because of an unwillingness to consider accepting
His answer to 2+2, is a tragic mistake. 
He loves us and wants us to enjoy Him in the truth concerning Him and
all aspects of life.

We’ve only just met, but I care about you and your
family.  If I can be of any help to you
on these topics, I’m willing and available.

Sincerely,

Mike Scheffer




Know Your Place

Saturday 1/27/20 notes

‘Know Your Place’

We had three verses yesterday:

Acts 12.20-23  (the voice of a god)

Acts 8.19-24  (Simon the Magician)

Luke 14.7-11  (place at the table)

All three are demonstrations of knowing our place, our
pay grade.  Presuming to break outside of it will face correction.

This issue of Identity, specifically
desiring/choosing/assuming/promoting it is fraught with danger.  Step
outside of it and risk correction.  The correction will likely be measured
by the heart behind the infraction (Herod agrees with the crowd, gets smoked);
(Simon ask in ignorance ad gets a sincere warning); (The guest presumes
position and is shamed with public removal, while the humble is publicly
advanced to the right, higher place).

Of the difficulties facing society, social media has
emerged as one of the main opiates of our vanity.  Like anything else, it
can be used rightly, but it’s wrong exercise breeds all degrees of sin.

Choosing our identity is grossly inferior to realizing
the one given to us by the Master.  Anything we presume which is outside
or beyond what He has granted will take us off of the path.  And so, He
tells us to begin our understanding as meek and subservient, then accept and
reside in  any advances He might show us.  His way and wisdom is
perfect, and so His assignments for us.  To presume and assume a station
or responsibility outside of His prescription is foolish and possibly even
dangerous.

There is one other aspect I forgot to mention. 
While it is evil to assume a higher station for ourselves, it also is when we
presume a lower station and responsibility than He intends.  The first is
sedition (rebellious action against right authority and the order of things),
the latter is dereliction (failure to do what we should).  Or, don’t pull
on the leash, nor be dragged by it!

Everything on this topic revolves around knowing who we
are in Christ.  Embracing a self-prescribed
identity/station/responsibility other than what He declares or reveals – be it
above OR below – is a dismissal of His Sovereign assignment to us.




Headwaters of the Generations

Saturday 9/25/19 notes

‘Headwaters of the Generations’

Scripture explains the First and the Second Adams. 
The first proceeded all mankind to follow, and was shown to have a particular
role in his responsibility before God – See the Genesis 3.14-19, and 3.22 –
“Behold the man has become…”  While Eve was first to the Fruit, Adam is
God’s focus in his responsibility.  It is through the man that sin and the
propensity we are born with passes to the next generation.  This is why
none of us can escape it – by the time we are created then born, the die is
already cast.

The only way this cycle could be escaped was through a
father who was not of Adam’s line and was without the sin to be passed
on.  And, the Christ would also be a human to be eligible to be our High
Priest.  Add in that this Person would also need to be God and do
everything He does.  Thus, the Holy Ghost fathered the Christ through a
human, Mary.  Therefore, he would fulfill all of the parts necessary.

Christ brought a New Covenant that requires us to die and
be reborn in His Line.  The only way we can be released of the Law as an
Adamic descendant is to be spiritually removed from the original Covenant, much
the same way as a wife is held to her covenant with her husband until one of
them dies (1 Cor 7.39).  This person now in Christ is relieved of his
obligation to the Law as he was born under Adam’s generation, and transferred
to an obligation under Christ’s Covenant, under Christ’s generation.  He
is a new creation.

The generations to follow both Adam and Christ are bound
by their predecessor’s spiritual parentage, and both generations will reap the
consequences.




What is Worry?

What is Worry?

Worry is a difficult one,
because the issues that lay seed to our worry are potent and numerous.  The interesting thing about worry, though, is
that it is always a concern for the impact of a future event.  Worry is a fear about a bad consequence to
come, and is usually joined with a concern for a current circumstance that
might effect the future consequence.

Jesus teaches that our concern
is in the here and now, and we are not to look ahead and ‘borrow trouble’.

Matt 6.34 – So do not worry about tomorrow; for tomorrow will care
for itself. Each day has enough trouble of its own.

Shall we be attentive to
future goals and events, shall we plan for possibilities and hope for good
outcomes?  Of course – the future of
seeing the Lord in person is a chief example that this is right.

2 Tim 4.7-8 – I have fought the good fight, I have finished the
course, I have kept the faith; in the future there is laid up for me the crown
of righteousness, which the Lord, the righteous Judge, will award to me on that
day; and not only to me, but also to all who have loved His appearing.

However, planning for the
future is much different than fearing the future, as anything forthcoming is
under His realm, not ours.  We can
attempt to control future outcomes, but He alone knows and directs those
outcomes.  Worrying and fighting against
His dominion is illogical and wrong. 
Seeking His direction and proceeding in faith and peace is His goal for
us.

By God’s Word, worry is a
sin.  Before we hear ourselves say ‘I am
only human’, let’s acknowledge that this is true, and that the Lord is
sympathetic and forgiving.  However,
let’s also ask how we believe that God sees us. 
Are we failures who have slipped from perfection into the sin of worry,
or does He find us crippled beggars who He is nurturing to conquer worry and
grow towards the perfection He desires for us?

For God did not send His Son into the world to condemn
the world, but that the world through Him might be saved.  (Jn
3.17)

As God has said “do not worry”
(Luke 12.22,
25-26)
, and has also said “I will never leave you nor forsake you” (Deut 31.8, Heb
13.5)
, and also calls us “His workmanship” (Eph 2.10), we see His command,
His promise, and His goal.  It is sin to
worry, and it is His stated intent to carry us through any trouble, and His
stated goal is to make His children grow and trust in Him.  Therefore, worry is a sin of mistrust of God
and His ability and intent.

Resisting
Worry

When facing a situation or
dealing with an issue, His is not just one of many advising voices to
consider.  God is Almighty, we are
dust.  He is love and wisdom; we are
broken, naked, blind.  Discussing God’s
opinion of issues with our peers may be appropriate, but what the Lord speaks are
commands that He will enable us to obey – if we seek Him, trust Him, and
cooperate.  Our understanding and actions
must always begin in awe of “Thus says the Lord.”

Obeying requires us to
understand the instruction, decide if it is right, and doing so when the
occasion comes to follow through.  If any
of the parts – understand, decide, follow through – are missing or out of order
when the trial appears, we will fail. 
Fortunately, our Lord is kind and understanding, and He
encourages/enables/trains us to walk that path in an increasing success.  Our failures as we learn, as we are
sanctified and grow in holy obedience, are what His Blood was shed for.  We can effectively hear Father God saying
“It’s ok, child, you’re getting there – let’s get you back up and try again.”

Growing Past
Worry – Trust and Obey

Our ultimate rest is always in
our relation to God, as His child, adopted through the work of Jesus.  He tells us that if we would know, observe
and obey His ways, we will make the most of His means that He makes available
to us.

Knowing, observing and obeying
are not the source of His blessing.  He
is.  Yet, He makes it clear that His
advantages will not, cannot be expected outside of our actions in faith in His
truth.

Lk 17.5-6 – And the apostles said to the Lord, “Increase our
faith.”  So the Lord said, “If you have
faith as a mustard seed, you can say to this mulberry tree, ‘Be pulled up by
the roots and be planted in the sea,’ and it would obey you.

Heb 11.6 – But without faith it is impossible to please Him, for
he who comes to God must believe that He is, and that He is a rewarder of those
who diligently seek Him.

James 4.2b-3 – You do not have because you do not ask. You ask and do
not receive, because you ask with wrong motives, so that you may spend it on
your pleasures.

Deut 7.9-10 (to
the Israelites)
–  “Therefore know that the Lord your God, He is
God, the faithful God who keeps covenant and mercy for a thousand generations
with those who love Him and keep His commandments; and He repays those who hate
Him to their face, to destroy them. He will not be slack with him who hates
Him; He will repay him to his face.”

This is not to be confused
with a ‘prosperity’ gospel, which at its worse is a focus on the gifts with an
inferior worship of Him.  Instead, His
Gospel is one of ‘know, trust, and obey Me – for I am worthy and willing.  Do this, and you will do well.’

Jesus’ time here was the
perfect example of a life done well, as well as Paul’s life as he followed
Jesus.  It is not a promise of a life of no
wants, no trials, no loss.  It is a
promise of peace in a resting trust of Father God, Who declares/can/will
respond to each individual child as is necessary to preserve and grow our
faith.

Peace, not
Worry

He who has My commandments and keeps them, it is he who
loves Me. And he who loves Me will be loved by My Father, and I will love him
and (reveal) Myself to him.  If anyone
loves Me, he will keep My word; and My Father will love him, and We will come
to him and make Our home with him.  (John 14.21, 23)

Peace I leave with you, My peace I give to you; not as
the world gives do I give to you. Let not your heart be troubled, neither let
it be afraid.  (John 14.27)

Peace is the opposite of worry,
and peace overcomes worry as surely as light makes the darkness flee.  A child of God who is growing in peace is
doing so because he is on that ancient Path of a corrected understanding of Who
God Is, deciding what is true, and proceeding through life in faith, under His
care as we know Him.

We lack peace if we are afraid
of the outcome under the Sovereign God – be it that we don’t know what to
expect from Him, or are afraid of His response, or believe that He isn’t paying
attention.  However, if we are firm in
our Biblical faith of His character, ability, and intent – that He is good and
loving, presides over all things, and seeks to preserve and grow our faith in
Him – then the only logical conclusion is not to worry but to have peace in our
faith.

This, of course, challenges us
all.  It is in direct conflict with our
Human nature.  Yet, without a correction
of our understanding of His character, ability, and intent, we remain
helplessly enslaved to our warped and broken understanding and respond
accordingly.  And so, in this seemingly
insurmountable mess, we find our Lord Jesus, Who says “Follow Me.”

Take my yoke upon you, and learn from me, for I am gentle
and lowly in heart, and you will find rest for your souls. (Matt 11.29)

His is the work of growing and
protecting our faith, of leading us to grow in our following God, of tasting and
seeing that He is good.  Jesus is the
Bridge, the High Priest Who has sympathy for us, Who has assured our adoption
into the Family and has relieved us of the costs of the sins we commit as we steadily
learn to trust and obey.




God is Holy

God Is Holy           09-23-18

Summary

God’s Holiness cannot be underestimated or underemphasized.  This (RE)Cap installment will not be an
attempt to consider God’s Holiness, but instead thoughts on why reconsidering
His Holiness is imperative.

It is a mistake to see God’s love as the foundation of Who He is, for
God’s Holiness is the foundation. 
Misplacing these two results in a theology very different than His.  Compare these two viewpoints:

God’s Foundational attribute is love, followed by His Holiness:  God intends me to worship Him for His love, to become increasingly loving, and I will escape Hell as a receiver of Christ’s standing in love before God.  It is through His Holiness that He will bring me to this outcome.

God’s Foundational attribute is Holiness, followed by His love:  God intends me to worship Him for His Holiness, to become increasingly holy, and I will escape Hell as a receiver of Christ’s standing in Holiness before God.  It is through His love that He will bring me to this outcome.

At our last meeting, we discussed the Author’s approach to God’s
Holiness, and found his treatment lacking. 
This month, rather than backfilling his thoughts, let’s consider this
Bedrock Issue of God and His Person.

Key points

A thought about God’s Glory

If on a warm summer’s day, perhaps we could consider that the searing nuclear source of the Sun is like Father God, and the warmth and the Sun’s effect is like the Holy Ghost.  The One who offers sunscreen, sunglasses through which we may look safely into the Sun, Who explains the Sun to us and shields us from the destroying radiation if we were to stand right in front of it – is Jesus.

We rightly enjoy the warmth of the Sun and the good it brings.  We rightly embrace the loving offer of Jesus
and all of the priceless and incredible benefits He offers.  What of our pursuit, recognition, worship of
God’s Holiness?   God’s Glory, His Holiness,
is the consuming force behind
all things seen and unseen, proceeding and outlasting Creation.  If Holiness is central to His Person, how do
our priorities compare?  What if we ask
to enjoy the warmth but not the Sun? 
What if we focus on the sunglasses or the benefits, but not the
Sun?  The warming effect, our Friend
Jesus, the Sun in the sky – all are to be taken together.  Fixating on one at the expense of the Whole
is our loss, and it is not what He expects from us.

God is Holy

How much human effort has gone into considering and writing about God’s
Holiness?  Any honest treatment on an
attribute of God demands volumes of thought. 
In fact, as vast as God is, it can be argued that our efforts to capture
a full understanding will fail, as we are mere dust, mere fallen creatures
veiled from seeing Him.

“For now we see
in a mirror, dimly, but then face to face. Now I know in part, but
then I shall know just as I also am known.” 
(1 Cor 13.12)

Yet in an effort to understand – which He endorses us to undertake –
consider John Piper’s definition:

God’s holiness is His infinite value as the absolutely unique, morally
perfect, permanent Person that He is and Who by grace made Himself accessible —
His infinite value as the absolutely unique, morally perfect, permanent Person
that He is
.

Jesus was sent to us as one of us, that we might grasp the enormity of
God through a Person Who took on our form. 
Yet even the God-Human Jesus revealed the brilliance of His Holiness on
the Mount as Peter, John and James looked on:

As He prayed,
the appearance of His face was altered, and His robe became white and
glistening. // But Peter and those with him were heavy with sleep; and
when they were fully awake, they saw His glory and the two men who stood with
Him.  (Luke 29.29, 32)

God’s greatest Attribute

God’s expression of love is the greatest aspect we currently see, in
Christ.  According to His Word however,
this is not His greatest attribute, but it must be His Holiness – the ultimate seat
of His Person.  Consider John’s reaction
to Christ’s revealing Himself in John’s vision.

And when I
saw Him, I fell at His feet as dead. But He laid His right hand on me,
sayingto me, “Do not be afraid; I am the First and the
Last. I am He who lives, and was
dead, and behold, I am alive forevermore. Amen. And I have the keys
ofHades and of Death.  Write the things which you
have seen, and the things which are, and the things which will
take place after this.” (Rev 1.17-19)

John’s reaction is not to Jesus’ love, but to His Holiness.  Also, consider the four living creatures attending
to Father’s Throne, who say “Holy, holy, holy, Lord God Almighty, Who was and is and is
to come!”  (Rev 4.8), and, the twenty-four Elders seated around His
Throne, who John observed “And the twenty-four elders who sat before God on
their thrones fell on their faces and worshiped God”.  (Rev 11.16)    Jesus
shows us the God Who is Love, but this Message of love is built upon the truth
that His Love could not be perfect without His underlying Holiness.

Yes, His love is most excellent. 
Yet, we err if we conclude His love is the center of the God we are to
pursue.

Or do you
presume upon the riches of His kindness and forbearance and patience? Do you
not know that God’s kindness is meant to lead you to repentance?  (Rom
2.4)

He calls us to repentance to His Holiness.  The reason to trust His Person is His Holiness.  His intent, His ability, His guidance, His
grace, His Son, His Salvation, His promises, even His love – all of these rely
and rest upon His Holiness.

We are His Workmanship.  He trains us into Holiness.

As God values the prayers of the Saints, Peter tells us our adherence to
His command to be Holy effects His hearing of our prayers.  And what of our growth in submission to His
Holiness?  When do we often find
ourselves calling out the most to Him?  Christians
are pitched into learning to navigate a relentless struggle between our nature
of sin and His demand of holiness.  Don’t
we each soon forget God when we are at ease, then cry to Him again when need
arises again? 

Remove falsehood
and lies far from me; Give me neither poverty nor riches – Feed me with the
food allotted to me; lest I be full and deny You, and say, “Who is the
Lord?”  Or lest I be poor and steal, and
profane the name of my God.  (Prov 30.8-10)

If this is true – that we forget God, and that He intends to continue
our training in holiness until our time here is done – can we deny His
allowance of a steady diet of new challenges specifically tailored to address
where He sees we need to grow in Holiness? 
We have an endless need to grow in holiness and reverence.  Yet our pride, our misconceptions of Him, our
fears, our wrong use of reliance upon ourselves and others and objects – all of
these He commands against.  Our better
grasp of His Holiness offers answers to all of these sins.  As He sees fit, He crushes and He uplifts –
all under His Holy Throttle – to press out our sin and extract the wine of Holy
Worship.  We cannot afford to not grasp
His Holiness, and fortunately, He will not allow it.

We tend to learn more of God’s Character when we are pressed into trials
that compel us to turn to Him for relief. 
Our desire for rescue brings us to consider our sin and His
response.  His response deepens our
understanding of His Character and value. 
This better understanding drives our worship further as we realize His
Holiness, love and care.

And what is promised to those who overcome, who succumb to the training
and overcome sin, embracing holiness?

To him who overcomes I will give to eat from the tree of life, which is
in the midst of the Paradise of God. 
(Rev 2.7)

He who overcomes
shall not be hurt by the second death. 
(Rev 2.11)

To him who
overcomes I will give some of the hidden manna to eat. And I will give him a
white stone, and on the stone a new name written which no one knows except him
who receives it.  (Rev 2.17)

And he who
overcomes, and keeps My works until the end, to him I will give power over the
nations  (Rev 2.26)

He who overcomes
shall be clothed in white garments, and I will not blot out his name from the
Book of Life; but I will confess his name before My Father and before His
angels.  (Rev 3.5)

He who
overcomes, I will make him a pillar in the temple of My God, and he shall go
out no more. I will write on him the name of My God and the name of the city of
My God, the New Jerusalem, which comes down out of heaven from My God. And I
will write on him My new name.  (Rev
3.12)

He who overcomes
shall inherit all things, and I will be his God and he shall be My son.  (Rev 21.7)

And this is rooted in pursuing Him and learning holiness through the
direction of His Word.

Behold, I set
before you today a blessing and a curse: the blessing, if you obey the
commandments of the Lord your God which I command you today; and the curse, if
you do not obey the commandments of the Lord your God, but turn aside from the
way which I command you today, to go after other gods which you have not
known.  (Duet 11.26-28)

Shall we sin, neglecting Holiness, so that grace
and love abounds?

God loves us, and we are invited to flee to Him and His rescue through
Jesus.  Jesus’ offer and Work is the
means to the end – our journey does not end at the Cross, but instead begins
the road to holiness, the road to overcoming sin, free of condemnation for our
mistakes and disobedience.  He beckons us
first to the Cross, and next He says ‘Follow Me.’

To loosely quote Spurgeon: Are we no longer accountable to His Standards
of Holiness?  We under Christ are no
longer under His Law, but under grace (Rom 6.13).  Jesus said not a jot or tittle would pass
away, so the Law remains – but for what? 
Under the Blood, the punishment for disobedience – death – is quenched,
but not the command to follow it, nor the benefits that obedience to Holiness
brings.  The Law reflecting His Holiness
has been shifted from the outside of our rebellious hearts and moved, written
on a new heart of flesh desiring to follow Him. 
The Law is there to become instilled, soaked through, to increasingly
become the controlling factor in the believer’s heart.  It is His living command, the right road to a
Holy life.  The promise from our Holy
Guide ‘involves lifelong security: Salvation at once, guidance unto our last
hour, and then endless blessedness’.

This affects how we view, approach, respond to, and
pursue God

Beware of simply making God’s kindness to us as the seat of our Worship,
for this aspect of Him is not the source of Who He is.  True, this is an essential part of Him, but
it is fully and absolutely His Holiness that exceeds all else.  The Apostle John, who dwells on God’s love
extensively, first confirmed of His Holiness, upon which he built his
Epistles.  For if we rest finally on
God’s love, and mistake it for His final and defining thought towards us, where
will we be when He rightly decides to correct us?  Will we, in the worst of experience, question
Him and Who He is?  Will we question His
love, even His existence, if we conclude the outcome He conducts is not
loving?  Yet, if we conclude His outcome
is Holy, we stand on firm ground. 
Consider Job and how he settled this issue, following his great loss –
he praised God for His Holiness, and as that was the unquestionable basis of
his worship, Job was clear to give thanks to God for both giving and for taking
away.  Job valued His Holiness.

“The Lord gave,
and the Lord has taken away; Blessed be the name of the Lord.”  In all this Job did not sin nor charge God
with wrong. (Job 1.21a-22)

This also affects our stance on the teachings and Worship music we sit
under.  Are we fed a constant diet of His
kind treatment towards us, or are we exposed to a Biblical proportion of the
High Church sort, of His Glory, Honor, Holiness?  Singing week after week about our woes and
how He loves us is a poor nutrient by itself. 
But including the right portion of His unquestionable worth, glory,
majesty keeps us in a right posture towards the unseeable, otherwise
unapproachable God.  It is then, knowing
more of our utter lowliness, that we can rightly value Christ in His bridging
this incredible gap.

Jesus left a greater position to stoop down and become flesh.  Yes, His Labor at Calvary was magnificent,
His Work pure and sufficient.  It was out
of the vault of Father’s Love and Glory that Jesus was sent to us on loan.

Consider too, Jesus’ appearance was normal and typical, “He had no form
or majesty that we should look at Him, and no beauty that we should desire Him.”  (Isa
53.2a
)  Yet at the
Transfiguration on the Mount, he allowed His burning Glory – His Holiness as
God – to be seen.  Jesus revealed the
core of the true God, a Holy Glory otherwise unbearable without Jesus as our
Shield and Reconciliation to the Holy God.

He certainly accomplished the utmost more than any son of man could, because
none of us could ever qualify as the sinless Lamb nor bear the burden of the
Cross.  However, this gargantuan Love cannot
be God’s greatest attribute.  It must be
what undergirded His ability to carry out this Task – it must be first His
Holiness.

God shows us a Holy God first, followed by holy Love:

“Teacher, which
is the great commandment in the Law?” 37 And he
said to him, “You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart and
with all your soul and with all your mind. 38 This
is the great and first commandment. 39 And a
second is like it: You shall love your neighbor as yourself. 40 On
these two commandments depend all the Law and the Prophets.” – Matt 22.36-40

I am
the Lord your God, who brought you out of the land of Egypt, out of
the house of slavery.  You shall have no
other gods before Me. – Exod 20.2-3

Honor your
father and your mother, that your days may be long in the land that
the Lord your God is giving you. – Exod 20.12

Both passages demonstrate the order of Holiness first, followed next by
love.  In the Ten Commandments, the first
half are of the Holiness of God, the second half of loving others.

The Pendulum Swings?

Many of us have been exposed to ‘Fire and Brimstone’ ministers who
almost exclusively focus on God’s Wrath (attached to His Holiness) and the need
to repent.  Perhaps we’ve also been
exposed to the ‘Love and Grace’ ministers who almost exclusively focus on
forgiveness and peace (attached to His Love). 
For those who have experienced a lopsided diet of either, predictable
problems arise – that God is impossible to satisfy and I will likely be lost
(heavy on Holiness), or, God winks at my sin and has no expectations whatsoever
(heavy on Love).  In fact, both halves
have truth in God’s character, actions and intent.  But of course, one half of the ingredients
won’t make a cake.  A Biblically
proportioned view of His Holiness – expressed in Love – underlies the entirety
of His Word to us.

The obvious solution is a clear representation of the whole truth, as
God tells it.  Ministries that have taken
this tact have predictably flourished. 
Sounds simple, doesn’t it?

But it’s not.  The Heart is tricky
(The
heart is deceitful above all things, and desperately wicked; Who can know it?– Jer 17.9); Accordingly, our motives
and understanding are flawed (Trust in the Lord with all your heart, and do not lean on
your own understanding.  – Prov 3.5); It is therefore easy
to misrepresent God, Who holds leaders to a high standard (Not many of you
should become teachers, my brothers, for you know that we who teach will be
judged with greater strictness.  For we
all stumble in many ways. And if anyone does not stumble in what he says, he is
a perfect man, able also to bridle his whole body. – Jas 3.1-2), and Who takes the issue very seriously (For I testify
to everyone who hears the words of the prophecy of this book: If anyone adds to
these things, God will add to him the plagues that are written in this book;
and if anyone takes away from the words of the book of this prophecy, God shall
take away his part from the Book of Life, from the holy city, and from the
things which are written in this book. – Rev
21.18-19
)

Coming off of the recent swing of ‘Fire and Brimstone’, it is argued
that we’ve fled to the ‘Love and Grace’ side to appeal to an injured or perhaps
more stiff-necked public.  Yet, in
considering how Jesus would approach this question, we can conclude He would
take it on the whole, straight down the middle. 
As we read the Gospels, we see that is exactly what He did.  Yes, He was killed for it, but none the less,
He accepted Father’s driving Holiness to be tantamount, and refused to swerve
to the left or the right.  Father called
this good and accepted His Work.

Thanks and praise to a Holy God, Who loves us relentlessly.




God is Love

God Is Love
                                                                                                                                                          06-15-18

Summary

It is true.  God’s love is central
and core to His Person – we cannot read His Word and conclude otherwise.

We’ve all been schooled on the problems of ‘romantic love’, the idea
that love centers around often blind, warm feelings.  Is this a true basis of love?  Perhaps not, if we look to the essential
issue behind love – a willful commitment, per God’s law, to another who we have
no expectation to repay us.  Consider
Jesus’ discourse in Lk 6.32-36.  It ends with the commandment to “be merciful,
just as your Father also is merciful.”

The last time we met, John walked us through the problem of assuming
that Father’s love is as performance-based as the fallen-Human love around us, expressed
in the way our world teaches us to expect to be treated.

In this (RE)Cap, let’s look at an aspect of our Father’s willful
commitment and mercy towards us.  Let’s
look at how a devoted love is expressed to a people who can’t but fail to show
Him a worthy response, and who by our very nature, often begin our trek to the
Cross kicking and screaming against Him. 
We go to the Cross for the first time, even as His enemy.  Against all of this, He demonstrates how His
devoted and merciful love overcomes the worst we have to offer.

Spoiler alert: God’s Offer, in love, has conditions.

Key points

Conditional love is usually cruel – but why?

Life, and our peers, both teach us about the often conditional use of what
is called love and acceptance.  This is
no secret.  But, let’s also recall Paul’s
words – he knew of God better than most anyone – that we see through a glass
dimly (1 Cor 13.12, Job 36.26).  Let’s recognize that starting even now, the
remainder of our existence in Christ will be spent pondering our God and
shedding our misconceptions about Him. 
We grow to see His worth.

We could likely agree that conditions for acceptance can be distasteful
to us.  But why?  It’s likely due to fickle or unfair terms, or
perhaps a person’s disingenuous motives that result in our being rejected.  But, are conditions and their use the problem,
or could it be that the one in charge of the conditions misuses them?

We approve of conditions with those we call friends, those we invite
into our home, or share personal information with, or give help, money, care,
love.  God Himself prescribed conditions
for guests to join His people Israel in worship and even nationhood.

While God’s Offer is conditional, His resultant relationship-Love is
unconditional.  This flawless,
God-branded love is possible through Christ’s fulfilling those conditions and sharing
(imparting) Father’s satisfaction of those conditions, to us who accept the
Offer.

The conditions of Father’s Offer cannot be cruel,
because He’s not cruel.

We might recognize the conditional nature of the relationships around
us, and see inconsistency and inequity. 
The chain of relationship between us and Father is also conditional, but
with an important difference – the conditions required for our relationship
with God have been borne by Jesus.  The
conditions were God’s intent even before Creation, before we existed.  As God unilaterally carries His Covenant with
Abraham (Gen 15.9-11, 17-18a),
Jesus also is the sole Author of our Salvation once we have answered His
irresistible Call.  We who will accept
the Offer were already intended to be included without a chance of
failure.  Father ensured we could not
escape, that His Goal would be met, by His assuming responsibility for His
Conditions.  Father’s demand for sin’s
payment, and the sinless Man-Vessel Who would satisfy Him, are non-negotiable
to us.  To answer that Condition, He
specifically gave Jesus to accomplish the job of Sacrifice.  Father’s terms being ‘finished’, Jesus revealed
the New Covenant allowing us forgiveness, and so satisfaction of God’s Wrath
against us who accept.  Father intended
the overall plan before anything began. 
Jesus alone would perfectly satisfy Father’s Wrath and impart the
benefitting result to us.  Jesus, as our High
Priest, will protect and keep us safe us in that Covenant.  It is God’s to Offer – but He will never,
never take it away from His children, once received and cemented in His holy
Salvation.

So, yes, conditions exist in all relationships.  The difference between the relationships we
know with our peers and the one we know with God are that God is perfectly
wise, righteous, loving, and without sin. 
Our peers, fellow sinners like us, are not.  Therefore, we cannot rightly project our
peer-relationship expectations upon God. 
We must shed what we think we understand of relationship, embrace the
truth of His Conditions, and believe Him – even when we fail Him, even when the
Enemy tempts with “Did God actually say..?”.

Conditions from God can’t be confused with conditions
between peers.  We are not God’s peers.

Does Father have Conditions over our eternal life with Him?  Yes: We would choose Jesus, else we will
suffer Judgment and endless torment in Hell.

Are a Fireman’s conditions of “Climb down the ladder from the burning
building – only the ladder, there’s no other choice available” – cruel?

Does Father have Conditions over His children adopted under the Blood of
Jesus? Yes: He fully accepts us into His family and loves us no matter
what.  Bound tight under His love and
life’s Sovereign circumstances, is escape from the call to trust and obey
possible?  We are, as glad bondservants
of Christ (Eph 6.6b), conscripted
into learning obedience to His ways as His Law is written on our new heart.

There are no conditions excluding us from God, once
we’ve met The Condition of confessing Christ.

Will He swivel from us and turn away? He cannot, because He adheres to
the Conditions met by the Son He gave, into Whom we can be grafted.  Does He tend to us, watch us, correct us?  Does He sit with us as we mend from the hurt
of life, either anonymously at the hands of a fallen world or from
self-inflicted pains as we went the way He didn’t hope for us? Yes: He is our
Father, He loves us, He won’t quit us.  (2 Sam 7.14-15, Heb 12.5-11)

Disappointed with His children?  Apparently, not possible.

Devoted to His reputation and to seeing His designs
through?  Absolutely.

Is God ever disappointed with us? 
Perhaps a strong argument could be made that the answer is no.  Consider Webster’s definition of ‘disappointment’: The feeling of dissatisfaction that follows
the failure of expectations or hopes to manifest.

Disappointment happens when the expected, doesn’t.

Note:  Disappointment is different
than yearning or longing.  Consider
Jesus’ appeal in Matt 23.37 – “O
Jerusalem, Jerusalem, the one who kills the prophets and stones those who are
sent to her! How often I wanted to gather your children together, as a hen
gathers her chicks under her wings, but you were not willing!  See! 
Your house is left to you desolate; for I say to you, you shall see Me
no more till you say, ‘Blessed is He who comes in the name of the Lord!’ ”  Jesus demonstrates His knowing the future in
saying ‘you
shall see Me no more till you say, ‘Blessed is He who comes in the name of the
Lord!’.  He also states His desire
to see this sure end brought forth in ‘How often I wanted to’.  This is not disappointment, but His urging
the people forward in a knowing, patient concern.

Is disappointment possible for a God of Omniscience – all knowing, including of future
events – Who knows the end from the beginning? 
If God cannot be surprised, that would mean His hopes cannot be dashed
when something doesn’t happen.  He
already knew that would be the case. 
And, no, this doesn’t give us license to do nothing – we’re here under
His sanctified training for our benefit, not God’s.  He needs nothing from us, but intends to use
life and opportunities to teach us obedience and peace.

If He cannot be surprised, then God is not disappointed when His child
fails, due both to Christ’s Blood and His seeing it prior.  Our sin elicits His dissatisfaction, and
moves Him to correct us.  But, the Gift
of Christ’s Atonement has freed us from Father’s Wrath, and in exchange, we
have been bought into a relentless, loving path of Sanctification.  Our job is to pursue Him, repent and cooperate
with Him, learn to know and to trust Him, to live in the Spirit and not the
flesh – “I
thank God—through Jesus Christ our Lord! 
So then, with the mind I myself serve the law of God, but with the flesh
the law of sin.  There is therefore now no condemnation to those who are in
Christ Jesus, who do not walk according to the flesh, but according to the
Spirit.  For the law of the
Spirit of life in Christ Jesus has made me free from the law of sin and
death.” Rom 7.25-8.3

Never surprised, but knowingly patient and diligent
in making us better Worshippers.

Jesus our High Priest has compassion for us and our failures.  Father intimately knows who we are, and we
never surprise Him.  This ‘program’ of
Salvation is not capable of nor is designed to put us under God’s
disappointment, (For God did not send His Son into the world to condemn the world, but that the world
through Him might be saved.  Jn 3.17) but to allow boundless
room for us to maneuver under God’s instructive care (For we are His workmanship, created
in Christ Jesus for good works, which God prepared beforehand that we should
walk in them. Eph 2.10) and
learn how to see Him, ourselves, and Creation as He does.  We are granted time to learn what it means to
be a child of the King, and to grow in our capacity to love and Worship Him for
it. (But
you are a chosen generation, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, His own special
people, that you may proclaim the praises of Him who called you out of darkness
into His marvelous light. 1 Pet 2.9)

Therefore, as we will certainly discover ourselves opposing God
(sinning), let us believe Him and not the Enemy who lies and accuses.  Instead, we must search His Word for the
truth, reform our thinking to His, confess our fault, and move ahead in
already-assured love and forgiveness through our Brother and Friend Jesus.

A hard life, but not a hardened Father.

The Fallen world is a hard place to reside, but the difficulties
suffered by a child under his Sovereign God cannot be attributed to His turning
away.  Instead, ask:

Do I belong to Him through faith alone in Christ?

     If so, is this hardship the natural
outcome of not following Him?

         If so, He loves me and I
must still repent, obeying His Word.

If not of my own consequence, shall the clay question the Potter?  Shall we accept only the good and bemoan the
bad?  Instead, follow the Rabbi Who was
blameless and remember “though He was a Son, yet He learned obedience by the things
which He suffered.” (Heb 5.8),
learning of the Spirit’s Fruit, bearing instruction as He did, and asking Him
for the necessary peace and strength He promises to complete the task. (And He said to
me, “My grace is sufficient for you, for My strength is made perfect in
weakness.”    2 Cor 12.9a)

Either way, I will not call Him a liar and question His devotion to His
child, and I will ask for and expect His sure help (Joshua
1.9, Matt 6.25.33, Phil 4.11-13, Heb 5b-6, Rom 8.28
).  All the while, I know my God loves and cares
for me, working as the author and perfecter of my faith (Heb
12.1-2
).

So, Christ follower – have you too skinned your knee (or broken your
leg) on Life, even crashed and burned, even found yourself opposing the God Who
loves you?  Seek Him and His directions,
know yourself, repent and ask forgiveness – and move ahead in the unconditional
love of the Father Who delights in the contrite heart of His child, Who He
intends to see succeed.  Let’s revel in
His generous conditions, and His boundless love.

Final thoughts to consider.

The above might read like a Calvinist’s TULIP tract.  Whether it does or not, let’s be faithful to
the plain reading of His Word and let the labels fall where they will.  In fact, Scripture threads together the
Effectual Call to the predestined soul, yet of a person who has
responsibilities as a free moral agent (who cannot escape God’s Sovereign
influence).  Our ‘heart’ is the only thing
in Creation that God allows to oppose Him. 
Perhaps, we have our choice of ‘will’, yet it is never outside of a God
Who steers it sovereignly: “The king’s heart is in the hand of the
Lord, like the rivers of water; He turns it wherever
He wishes.” Prov 21.1.  I suspect His joy is in capturing and winning
the affection of that otherwise hopeless, hateful heart.  In the end, God’s love conquers all.

His willingness and sure ability to suffer our rejection, even under
forgiveness in the Blood, is held in place by the Conditions He has offered, fulfilled,
and abides by.  Is that not the greatest
love, worthy of Worship?

Finally, if how our Father deals with us is true, then how might this
teach us to treat others – especially those who we are to love (everyone), yet
who disappoint us (everyone, given enough time and opportunity)?  The
parable of the ‘unforgiving servant’ is one good illustration (Matt 18.23-35).  I know I have (decreasingly?) been that
servant, and I praise God that He continues in loving patience to train, even
discipline, me to be like Him instead. 
Praise to Him whose love will never quit His children.




God is Generous

God Is
Generous                                                                                                                                       05.04.18

A forward note

This chapter’s (Re)Cap is a bit different, in that we’ve considered a
scope of thought and Scripture beyond what the chapter addresses.  The chapter addresses God’s Generosity; the
(RE)Cap addresses God’s Wrath and His Generosity.  In one way, we might question having more
than a summary of filler thoughts to expand on this month’s discussion.  On the other hand, this subject as a whole
should burn in our souls, and it seems right to discuss it.  Many have observed that we suffer a
Post-Christian environment that threatens to strip us of our worship and joy in
God, because it’s easy to gravitate to the more attractive parts of His story
that this environment selectively promotes.

If we’re not very careful, every one of us, as mere humans, is prone to
settle into the parts of His story that bring us a false ease in a
grandfather-god – or an incorrect slavery to malicious-god.  He is neither of these, but He is instead a
Righteous God Who demands perfection, and Who offers incredible Love and Grace
beyond measure to answer His demand of perfection.

And so, He offers His Son.

I perceive our group is rather rounded in the Wrath/Grace mix.  This chapter (and perhaps this book) assumes the
reader has been overexposed to Wrath, and so promotes the Grace.  In this (Re)Cap we don’t take either part for
granted, but gaze beyond the Chapter’s focus, looking to include the balance of
Scripture’s mix in an effort to consider how Gracious God Is.  Proportions of anything that differs from
God’s Word only brings loss.  My hope is
that through considering this topic, we can grow in our reverence, hope, joy,
faith, love and trust in God.

Summary

I admire this book we are pondering. 
The author’s works have brought relief to many people as he reveals
topics on God.  However, his book is not
intended to be a complete work, but actually a nudge to awaken us to the basics
of knowing, understanding, and trusting Father. 
This is a book bringing some core topics to study, engage, and pursue in
the Word given to us.  In today’s Church,
the problem of Biblical illiteracy is often woeful, and the Body suffers
incredibly for it.  This book is not
intended to instruct on the Whole of God, but instead is a sampler platter to
whet the appetite.  Father wants us to
dig deep, Jesus made the way, and the Spirit stands ready to teach.   (Psalm 27:4)
“One thing have I asked of the Lord, that will I seek after: that I may dwell
in the house of the Lord all the days of my life, to gaze upon the beauty of the Lord and to inquire in his temple”.  The issue rests on our willingness to engage
Him.

Key points

God is indeed Generous

A sense of His generosity through too narrow a view including only ‘He
loves me’, or simply ‘Jesus died for me’ – without acknowledging the whole
range of Truth He gives us in His Word – is a weak and incomplete foundation to
build an appreciation of His generosity. 
How much more is a cup of water to a man who knows he is dying of thirst
than to another who is just a bit parched? 
To have a better appreciation of His Generosity, we need to step back
and seek full sight of His care, beyond a view of only our personal concerns
that naturally occupies the majority of our thoughts.  We are rightly concerned about our life and
circumstances, but it is easy to make this the center and whole of our
attention.  Yet we are not the majority
and center of God’s Goals – there is far more at play.

Immutably Holy, God’s Wrath towards sinners rightly burns, demands to be
satisfied.  His Wrath is inescapable,
inevitable, necessary.  As God cannot
change – and as there is no reason to do so (great news) for He is complete and
flawlessly Perfect, and as He is the Source and Basis for everything because
nothing is above Him – everything under Him must be brought into agreement with
Him.  Sin must be purged, the sinner’s
right wage must be paid through death, His Realm must be purified, and
everything out of His Perfect alignment, removed.

Hinge Verse: Rom 2:4 – Or do
you presume upon the riches of his kindness and forbearance and patience? Do
you not know that God’s kindness is meant to lead you to repentance?

It’s easy to miss what lies below the surface

Ice – both bergs and cubes – show only 1/7 of the whole in plain
view.  The majority of the reality lies
hidden under the surface.

God’s Word reveals the whole of reality He would have us understand,
including that beyond what we would otherwise perceive.  For this we are given His Word, reliable and
true.  It is not completely everything
about God, but completely everything God would reveal to us.

His Word is reliable

So how can we hope to know the truth about God’s Realm and His
involvement, about the whole of what’s in play, in Creation and beyond?  God graciously has provided us with
everything He knows we need to have, to understand His views, expectations and
promises.  Is the Word reliable?  While there is an exhaustive number of
reasons we can say ‘yes’, consider:

Of everything recorded during Mankind’s history, Scripture is uniquely
reliable:

–     No
parts of the Bible are found to be contradictory to the Whole

–     It
continues to be supported, not disproven, by history and archeology

–     Later
duplicates of original Scripture are found to be true to more ancient editions

–     The
Hebrew duplication processes was exhaustive, ensuring true accuracy

–     The
number of prophesies made prior to their fulfillment are numerous

–     Mankind
has realized a high degree of universal agreement, in accord with the effort and
faith invested, of wisdom/guidance/peace/relationship.  This is called Orthodoxy.

Another good starting point is Moody’s Erwin Lutzer, who is one skilled
scholar addressing this in ‘7 Reasons Why You Can Trust The Bible’.

Biblical unawareness and its consequences

We willingly live with Biblical unawareness and disregard for God.  This doesn’t have as much to do with one’s
capacity to understand, but instead an unwillingness to strive to understand
all one can in his capacity.  God offers
to teach and enlighten us, and the Holy Ghost is promised to always help us
when we seek Father’s Wisdom – If any of you lacks wisdom, let him ask of God, who gives
to all liberally and without reproach, and it will be given to him. (Jas 1.5), and  But the Helper, the Holy Spirit, whom the Father
will send in My name, He will teach you all things, and bring to your
remembrance all things that I said to you. (Jn
14.26)
, and Show me Your ways, O Lord; Teach me Your paths.  Lead me in Your truth and teach me, For You
are the God of my salvation; On You I wait all the day. (Psalm 25.4-5).  Our
Enemy encourages disregard and unawareness, tempting on all fronts.  Trials in our lives give opportunity to
withdraw from God, to seek substitutes, to stoke our disregard.

We can agree that God is perfect, with no speck or blot.  We can also find agreement He loves us in
Christ, reconciled to Him.  But what fills
our understanding between Him and us?  The
more narrow our understanding His Word, the more unproportioned we see
ourselves.

Filling out the reality of God’s perspective with
Scripture

Does God possess anger?  Is He
right in having it?  Who will receive it?

Directed
towards His People, Israel:

Deut 32:22  For a fire is
kindled in My anger, And burns to the lowest part of Sheol, And consumes the
earth with its yield, And sets on fire the foundations of the mountains.

Isaiah 33:14 
Sinners in Zion are terrified; Trembling has seized the godless “Who
among us can live with the consuming fire? Who among us can live with continual
burning?

Deut 9:7-8  Remember! Do not
forget how you provoked the Lord your God to wrath in the wilderness. From the
day that you departed from the land of Egypt until you came to this place, you
have been rebellious against the Lord.   Also
in Horeb you provoked the Lord to wrath, so that the Lord was angry enough with
you to have destroyed you.

Warned of after
the Cross:

Matthew 3:12 
“His winnowing fork is in His hand, and He will thoroughly clear His
threshing floor; and He will gather His wheat into the barn, but He will burn
up the chaff with unquenchable fire.”

Matthew 10:28  “Do not fear those who kill the body but are unable to kill the soul;
but rather fear Him who is able to destroy both soul and body in hell.

2 Thessalonians 1:8-9  …dealing out retribution to those
who do not know God and to those who do not obey the gospel of our Lord Jesus.
These will pay the penalty of eternal destruction, away from the presence of
the Lord and from the glory of His power…

Shown to John,
in the Revelation of Jesus:

Revelation 14:9-11a 
Then a third angel followed them, saying with a loud voice, “If anyone
worships the beast and his image, and receives his mark on his forehead or on
his hand, he himself shall also drink of the wine of the wrath of God, which is
poured out full strength into the cup of His indignation. He shall be tormented
with fire and brimstone in the presence of the holy angels and in the presence
of the Lamb.  And the smoke of their
torment ascends forever and ever; and they have no rest day or night….

Revelation 20:10 
And the devil who deceived them was thrown into the lake of fire and
brimstone, where the beast and the false prophet are also; and they will be
tormented day and night forever and ever.

Revelation 20:11,13-15  Then I saw a great white throne and
Him who sat on it, from whose face the earth and the heaven fled away. And
there was found no place for them…The sea gave up the dead who were in it, and
Death and Hades delivered up the dead who were in them. And they were judged,
each one according to his works.  Then
Death and Hades were cast into the lake of fire. This is the second death.  And anyone not found written in the Book of
Life was cast into the lake of fire.

Does God offer Grace?  Is He generous
in giving it?  Who will receive it?

Conversely,
consider Scripture of God’s Realm and Grace:

Ephesians 6:10-13 
Finally, my brethren, be strong in the Lord and in the power of His
might.  Put on the whole armor of God,
that you may be able to stand against the wiles of the devil.  For we do not wrestle against flesh and
blood, but against principalities, against powers, against the rulers of the
darkness of this age, against spiritual hosts of wickedness in the heavenly
places.  Therefore take up the whole
armor of God, that you may be able to withstand in the evil day, and having
done all, to stand.

Eph 1:13-14  In Him you also
trusted, after you heard the word of truth, the gospel of your salvation; in
whom also, having believed, you were sealed with the Holy Spirit of promise,
Who is the guarantee of our inheritance until the redemption of the purchased
possession, to the praise of His glory.

Revelation 21:1-5 
Then I saw a new heaven and a new earth, for the first heaven and the
first earth had passed away, and the sea was no more. And I saw the holy city,
new Jerusalem, coming down out of heaven from God, prepared as a bride adorned
for her husband. And I heard a loud voice from the throne saying, “Behold, the
dwelling place of God is with man. He will dwell with them, and they will be
his people, and God himself will be with them as their God. He will wipe away every tear from their
eyes, and death shall be no more, neither shall there be mourning, nor crying,
nor pain anymore, for the former things have passed away.
” And he who was
seated on the throne said, “Behold, I am
making all things new.
” Also he said, “Write this down, for these words are
trustworthy and true.”

John 3:16  “For God so
loved the world, that he gave his only Son, that whoever believes in him should
not perish but have eternal life.

We all face inescapable Realities where God is concerned – and this is
everywhere, because He is Sovereign.  The
great news is Jesus’ offer to bring us into Father’s family, fully recognized
as His Children, with Christ not only as our Savior, but as our Brother.

God’s patience and Jesus’ forgiveness are the key
issues, but we make a mistake when we view them as the sole issues

Paul explains through Scripture that the New Covenant replaced Moses’
Law, providing the Pathway to reconciliation – yet remember, it does not make
God wink at sin, but satisfies His Wrath. 
His intent – to cast out sinners, unrepentant – remains, and will
happen.

Jonathan
Edwards, on the unbelieving Israelites

In Jonathan Edwards’ notable 1741 sermon on the Passage ‘Their foot shall slip in due time’, “Sinners
in the Hands of an Angry God” observes that the Hebrews were the people chosen
by God, protected by Him, sustained by Him, and under miraculous display.  Edwards illustrates the reality of their
precarious situation, if not for God’s generosity:

  • They were always exposed to destruction; as one
    that stands or walks in slippery places is always exposed to fall.
  • As he that walks in slippery places is every
    moment liable to fall, he cannot foresee one moment whether he shall stand or
    fall the next; and when he does fall, he falls at once without warning.
  • They are liable to fall of themselves, without
    being thrown down by the hand of another.
  • The reason why they are not fallen already and
    do not fall now is only that God has graciously upheld them.

One takeaway from Edwards sermon is this:  Unsaved sinners are in a precarious,
dangerous position.  But, God graciously
cares for us out of His Love and His commitment to His promise to do so through
Salvation in Christ.  We have a hard time
seeing the true risk we face, but an easier time enjoying the general and
specific results of His care – even to the point that we see the results but
fail to recognize how much from God takes place behind the scenes.  And even if Saved through Christ yet not understanding
this, we risk becoming glad receivers of Grace who can fail to appreciate and
worship the God Who is responsible – even contributing to Spiritual Idolatry
and disregard.  It is available to read, or on audio.

One final thought on His Generosity – Inclusion at
someone else’s party

The Jews, The
Church, and our Jewish Savior

Finally, consider that the Church has not replaced Israel, but the
Church instead benefits from God’s Covenant with Abraham:  Gen 22.18 – In your seed
all the nations of the earth shall be blessed, because you have obeyed My
voice.

Paul states in Romans 11:11
& 14
– I say then, have they (Israel) stumbled that they should
fall? Certainly not! But through their fall, to provoke them to jealousy,
salvation has come to the Gentiles.  For
I speak to you Gentiles; inasmuch as I am an apostle to the Gentiles, I magnify
my ministry, if by any means I may provoke to jealousy those who are my flesh
and save some of them.

We are the grafted branch, not the host tree, per Romans
11:17
:  …you, being a wild olive tree,
were grafted in among them, and with them became a partaker of the root and
fatness of the olive tree…  Verse
24 demonstrates that we, while equal in Christ, are subordinate to Jews per the
Covenant with Abraham:  Romans 11:24 For if you were cut out of the
olive tree which is wild by nature, and were grafted contrary to nature into a
cultivated olive tree, how much more will these, who are natural branches, be
grafted into their own olive tree? 
All who receive Christ will have Salvation.  The Gentile Church is a big part of His
Plan.  Yet, the Jews have the first seat,
not the Church; they alone are the chosen people, saved by a Jewish Messiah (Jn 4:22b – (Jesus to the Samaritan
woman) …we
know what we worship, for salvation is
of the Jews.)  With incredible generosity, He has included us
to their ‘party’.

God IS indeed Generous!

Can we grow to see the larger scope of what’s in play, and how His
generosity is full from top to bottom – not just within a narrow view of the
life we live and see?  Knowing,
understanding, and trusting God to our fullest ability stokes our Worship, and
rightly belongs to such a loving and generous Father.




What is Your Cup?

What is
your Cup?                                                                                                                                  03.02.18

Summary

The topic of trials and sanctification is core to the human experience
under Father God – and is perhaps only second in importance and difficulty to
the understanding His Theology.  Our
difficulty comes from many directions, including an inability to understand His
mind (“For My thoughts are not your thoughts, neither are your ways My ways,” declares the Lord. Isa 55.8), that our perceptions and affections are directed
towards us and not Him (Haughty eyes and a proud heart – the unplowed field of the
wicked – produce sin. Prov 21.4),
and we fall short if we do not progress in learning surrender and trust to Him
in the circumstances He allows (…you know that the testing of your faith produces
perseverance. Let perseverance finish its work so that you may be mature and
complete, not lacking anything. Jas
1.3-4
).  The question ‘What is
your cup?’ can illuminate our understanding of God and our alignment with Him.  Yet, we can learn faith and peace in it all,
because ‘we are all God’s handiwork’, and He loves us recklessly.

Key points

Two perspectives, yet only one must prevail.

It is very understandable that we as fallen people favor our view from
our perspective.  In the moment that ushered
in the Fall, mankind’s gaze swung from God to ourselves – and every human since
then born of an earthly father has suffered the consequences brought upon us by
Adam – The seeing of ourselves as more important than God.  This is a Theological fact, demonstrated
through billions of life experiences throughout history.  The only Human to escape the consequence had
to be “born
of a woman, born under the law, to redeem those under the law, that we might
receive adoption to sonship.” (Gal
4.4b-5)
.  Jesus was born of
God the Father: “And the angel answered her, “The Holy Spirit will come upon you, and the
power of the Most High will overshadow you; therefore the child to be born will
be called holy—the Son of God.” (Luke
1.35
).  Coming from a lineage
outside of our ‘sin-infection’, Jesus arrived Holy.  This Holy Jesus, being and knowing God
personally, explained to us the reality of our situation and how we can be
rescued.  “For God sent not his Son into the
world to condemn the world; but that the world through Him might be saved.” (John 3.17)  Our perspective – self focused and incorrect
– may be countered with His perspective – God focused and true.  And as God is Sovereign, His perspective will
prevail.  The question is, will we strive
to understand and cooperate?

Head and Heart Knowledge

A ‘head knowledge’ is inferior to a ‘heart knowledge’.  A reformed heart is His goal because the
‘heart’ is the root and seat of character, not the head.  Consider:

For where your
treasure is, there your heart will be also. (Matt 6.21)

And He said to
him, “You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your
soul and with all your mind. (Matt 22.37)

But what comes
out of the mouth proceeds from the heart, and this defiles a person. (Matt 15.18)

And I will give
you a new heart, and a new spirit I will put within you. And I will remove the
heart of stone from your flesh and give you a heart of flesh. (Ezek 36.26)

Head knowledge is necessary to advance towards a faith in what is true,
but unless that knowledge lands on a contrite and willing heart by faith,
knowledge does no good.

“Then Jesus said
to the crowds and to his disciples, “The scribes and the Pharisees sit on
Moses’ seat, so do and observe whatever they tell you, but not the works they
do. For they preach, but do not practice.” (Matt 23.1)

“…but that
Israel who pursued a law that would lead to righteousness did not succeed in
reaching that law. Why? Because they did not pursue it by faith, but as if it
were based on works.” (Rom 9.31-32a)

The (otherwise) incorrigible heart

And so, our otherwise irredeemable problem.  Contrary to current and popular opinion, we
are not a race that is inwardly good, and can choose wrongly.  Rather, we are inwardly wrong and, save
godliness, will also choose wrongly. 
Corrective glasses are of no use to a blind man.  And as the eye must first be repaired, so too
our heart.

This is, aside from the work of God, an impossible task to us. “Can the
Ethiopian change his skin or the leopard his spots?  Then also you can do good who are accustomed
to do evil.” (Jeremiah 13.23, sarcasm by
God intended
)

Faith comes from God alone (Jas 1.17),
through our hearing His Word (Rom 10.17),
asking His understanding (Jas 1.5),
and stepping forward on His statements before we would see the results
appear (Jas 2.17).  Consider: The moment before you found an
assurance of Salvation, had you ever tasted it beforehand?  No, each of us learned we needed it, heard
and understood His promise of it, and asked Him in faith believing He would
answer as He said He would.  This would
have been your first taste of His reforming an otherwise irredeemable
heart.  And so the boot camp of the rest
of our lives in Christ began.

Sweating it out of us

Now faith is the
assurance of things hoped for, the conviction of things not seen. (Heb 11.1)

By faith Noah,
being warned by God concerning events as yet unseen, in reverent fear
constructed an ark for the saving of his household. (Heb 11.7a)

And whatever you
ask in prayer, you will receive, if you have faith. (Jesus, Matt 21.22)

The faith God intends to increasingly forge in us will always focus on
Him (Mk 11.22), fully grounded
in His Character which is explained to us in His Word (Ps
119.142
), and affirmed in His response (John
14.21
).  God and the faith He
intends is not the problem, our blind and stubborn hearts are.

So, how would He inform a heart that can’t understand Him, or penetrate
the callouses on a heart that is free to defy Him?  Ask any parent, and hear that a child’s error
might be from either ignorance or from disobedience.  Do we use the same correction for both
cases?  Both cases are to be instructed
to the degree they can, and grace tempers the response.

Father holds unquestionable love, the gift of faith, the sovereignty
over circumstance, and the wisdom to instruct. 
All of these He employs in our training. 
We commonly call them trials.  And
so, knowing what He is achieving, why He does it, that He loves and protects
us, and that He intends us to know/understand/trust Him – we can embrace James’
command:

Count it all
joy, my brothers, when you meet trials of various kinds, for you know that the
testing of your faith produces steadfastness. And let steadfastness have its
full effect, that you may be perfect and complete, lacking in nothing. (Jas 1.2-8)

Is James alone in this admonition? 
Consider:

Peter – “Therefore let those who suffer according to God’s will entrust their
souls to a faithful Creator while doing good.” (1 Pet 4.19)

and, “Humble yourselves, therefore, under the mighty hand of God so that at the
proper time He may exalt you, casting all your anxieties on Him, because He
cares for you. (1 Pet 5.6-7)

Paul – “Indeed, I count everything as loss because of the surpassing worth of
knowing Christ Jesus my Lord. For His sake I have suffered the loss of all
things and count them as rubbish, in order that I may gain Christ…” (Phil 3.7-9)

and, “Not that I am speaking of being in need, for I have learned in whatever
situation I am to be content. I know how to be brought low, and I know how to
abound. In any and every circumstance, I have learned the secret of facing
plenty and hunger, abundance and need.” (Phil
4.11-12
)

and, “So to keep me from becoming conceited because of the surpassing greatness
of the revelations, a thorn was given me in the flesh, a messenger of Satan to
harass me, to keep me from becoming conceited. 
Three times I pleaded with the Lord about this, that it should leave
me.  But He said to me, “My grace is
sufficient for you, for My power is made perfect in weakness.” Therefore I will
boast all the more gladly of my weaknesses, so that the power of Christ may rest
upon me.  For the sake of Christ, then, I
am content with weaknesses, insults, hardships, persecutions, and calamities.
For when I am weak, then I am strong. (2
Cor 12.7-10
)

As Creator, Father has a right over us and an obligation to us.  This is the consequence of coming into His
family, of becoming His child.  “Whoever spares
the rod hates his son, but he who loves him is diligent to discipline him.” (Prov 13.24).  This is a corrective rod of love, one that
refuses to see His child turn back to the slop (Lk
15.16
) and to protect your faith (2
Thes 3.3, Heb 12.2
).  And so,
does the Potter have no right over the clay? 
(Rom 9.21)  Doesn’t Jesus offer us a yoke? (Matt 11.30)

This is why it is imperative to learn the Character of God, because He surely
will prevail over you, His child.  The
excellent news is that He is loving, patient, merciful, kind, wise, and righteous.  True, our trials are often utterly painful,
but should we expect it to be an easy exercise to dislodge the opinions and
beliefs of a blind or stubborn heart that conflict with a holy understanding
and trust in Him, an understanding and faith He insists upon?  To this point Peter points out that it is
surely a difficult task for us and for God – “If the righteous is scarcely saved,
what will become of the ungodly and the sinner?” (1 Pet 4.18)

But more so, we have assurance of His intent and love for us through
these difficulties, which glorify Him and benefit us: “And we know that for those who love
God all things work together for good, for those who are called according to
his purpose.” (Rom 8.28), and
that we “might
obtain a better resurrection”.

Praying for help

Shall we pray for relief, peace, or faith in deliverance through the One
behind it all?  The Word tells us to pray
for all of these.  However, praying only for
the parts we want instead of what Father intends will not get us very far.  True, Scripture reports many, many times
where removal of the problem occurs. 
However, is there in any of Scripture this response without the
inclusion of faith in the Deliverer?  It
is easy for us to go right to the pain and ask that it goes away, but if it is
not faith building, can we expect God to do it? 
He wants peace for us, but never at the expense of faith in Him (remember Paul,
2 Cor 12.7-10).  Father intends us
to learn and rely upon and expect peace through faith in Him, as a child.  An early removal of the circumstance He
superintends is counter to what He tells us to expect, if it removes His
opportunity for us to grow.  So, we pray
for relief, faith, and peace in Him.

He knows each of His children intimately and crafts life to fit each one
of us unto His end goal.  Learning to
trust Him can truly only come through experience, else it would only be head
knowledge.  He loves us and perfectly
protects our faith.  His purpose will be
realized for each one of us.  In all of
this He calls us to learn Him, to trust Him, to find real peace.

A Personal Note

Several years ago, I found myself deep in the weeds in trials – it was
heading into the hardest point in my life and I felt almost hopeless.  Struggling towards Father, I asked Him for a
lifeline, and He gave me a reprieve I hope to always remember.

Our family went to the theater see a movie, and before the show they
played the following Pixar short film. 
As I watched it, I thanked God for His care, and wept.  He graciously helped me begin putting things
into His perspective.  God answers, and
He can show up wherever He pleases.  He
encouraged me to be still and know He had everything covered.

Hint:  Father God drives the
truck, the Jackalope is a Jesus figure J




Father’s Character

Father’s Character                                                                                                                          02.02.18

Summary

What is more useful to understand about a person – his past actions in a
given set of circumstances, or his overall character that resides behind his
actions?  The record of a person’s
actions might be an indicator of his character, but knowing his actual
character is far superior in predicting what he might do in circumstances that
have not yet happened.  Given endless
possibilities, a universe of circumstances we might face, the best way we’d be
able to have reason to trust him would be based upon his character – the fiber
of his personality and from which his responses would come.

Key points

Nature and Nurture

In our previous discussion, we considered the influencers in our
lives.  We asked whether these people had
helped, hindered, or left neutral our knowing, understanding, and trusting Father
God.

In the debate of nature versus nurture, we are born with dispositions (nature),
yet must learn command over our actions. 
Actions are filtered through our beliefs, our Narrative, shaped by our
influencers (nurture).  We cannot escape
the truth that our interactions with persons who play a role in our life make
impressions that color and steer our viewpoint. 
Yes, we alone are responsible for our actions.  Yet, the basis of who we are that informs our
actions are shaped much by these influencing people in our lives.

Sizing up our influencers

So, consider your influencers, the people who have closely interacted
with you, those who have helped shape you.

How would your influencer compare to the following description?

(S)he is someone who I believed had a clear view of the truth, conducted
their life very well without mistakes, had a steady hand and never failed in
responsibilities, always put my interests first regardless of mood or
circumstance, never failed to seek reconciliation nor held a grudge, could
always be trusted to be near to respond, and always protected me despite the
cost.

This would be an amazing person. 
And, if an influencer, would be a priceless and mighty force in your
life.  Yet, the truth is that a person of
this sort is rare, and by strict definition, impossible.  Placing the measuring stick next to the best
person you have ever known, experience shows us that real people traverse the
scale, all the way down to the despicable.

Sizing up Father

Now, carefully consider that statement again, and rather than a view towards
your human influencer, look through it towards Father God:

Father is someone who I believe has a clear view of the truth, conducts
His life very well without mistakes, has a steady hand and never fails in
responsibilities, always puts my interests first regardless of mood or
circumstance, has never failed to seek reconciliation nor held a grudge, can
always be trusted to be near to respond, and always protects me despite the
cost.

The statement reflects this month’s study which included restatements of
the Lord’s Prayer:

God is near, present

God is pure, Holy

God is powerful and the King Who rules His realm

God cares, provides for us

God pardons our sins against Him

God protects, rescues us from trials and evil

Our Father in
heaven, hallowed be Your name,

Your kingdom
come, Your will be done, on earth as it is in heaven.

Give us today
our daily bread.

And forgive us
our debts, as we also have forgiven our debtors.

And lead us not
into temptation, but deliver us from the evil one.

Matthew 6:9-13

Who He Is; Who we believe He Is

Do you sense any hesitance in seeing Him that way?  If so, you’re a fellow, fallen human.

The goal of this exercise, and more so the Goal of the Lord Jesus
Himself, is to help us see the inconsistencies of our heart in relation to the
truth He tells us about the Father He knows. 
This is the Father Who strives to rescue us, to bring us back to our
intended place before Him.

Last month, we read that the models (influencers) in our lives, good or
bad, can be a blessing – if we take care to test our narrative and weigh it
against the true Model.  Jesus taught the
Prayer to reveal Father to us, and also to help us see the inconsistencies
between our views and Reality.  His Goal
is to help us know, understand, and trust the Father He trusts.  This long transformation is our
Sanctification.

Can we believe Jesus’ explanation of Father?  Can we realize the contrast between His (and
our) Father and the influencers who have shaped our expectations of God?  Here, we are to see the truth about Father,
and repent of the notions that might stand in our way:

God’s fatherhood
must define what human fatherhood ought to look like, and not the reverse.
(James Bryan Smith)




God is Trustworthy

God is
Trustworthy                                                                                                                               1.05.18

Summary

Just because someone has attributes, it does not automatically equate to
their intent and treatment toward you.  A
wise man might give his thoughts or keep them to himself, a wealthy man could
give or keep money, a violent man may choose or not to rob you.  Knowing God’s Character is foundational, but
trusting Him and His response is another issue.

Beginning Chapter 3, we start to have a look at how trust works, why it
develops, where it can fall off of the rails, and why it is important to
consider our stance before Father.  His
intent is to show and convince us that He is Trustworthy.

Key points

Understanding someone’s character is an important
issue.  Knowing what to expect from that
character and trusting it is a whole other issue.

Perhaps one of the main, universal drivers shared by every human is a
desire for the avoidance of pain. 
Beginning at that premise, we can possibly trace the beginnings of every
behavior, decision and hope.  And perhaps
this is because the existence we experience in life is the polar opposite of
the state of existence for which we were intended – one of peace surrounding a
perfect God Who knows no deficiency.  We
just weren’t made for this falleness.

Found both in Scripture and the hopeful tales spun by mankind, in
‘Heaven’ there is no need, pain, loss – only joy, gladness, provision,
peace.  It seems in the end, we are all
drawn to this.  Even the Lost hope for
the dead to be ‘in a better place’.

A correct understanding of Scripture will repair the fallacies we
attribute to God.  Yet, the Goal of God
and His Word are not simply to rescue us from Hell – it is to move us
increasingly into relationship with the God with Whom we will reside, once the
wrath we’re due has been addressed.

The report of Creation heralds perfection.  Everything began “very good” (Gen 1.31).  Scripture is replete with assurances of God’s
goodness.  We are told He is right, fair,
full of mercy, even good intent.  There
is little room for argument concerning His Character.  However, to varying degrees we are faced with
a disconnect between God’s Character and how we trust He will respond to us.  Now, ‘varying degrees’ is an enormous
understatement.   As we consider Jesus’
trust of Father and learn to compare it to our own warped state and outlook, we
face a seemingly bottomless chasm of mistrust. 
Father understands this, and His work is to continually invite us to bridge
that ravine with Truth and confirmation. 
We are His workmanship (Eph 2.10), and the works He brings us to walk in
only succeed as we engage these works trusting Him (Jn 15.5).  These exercises build our trust in His
Character and response.

For we are His
workmanship, created in Christ Jesus for good works, which God prepared
beforehand, that we should walk in them. Eph
2.10

I am the vine;
you are the branches.  Whoever abides in
Me and I in him, he it is that bears much fruit, for apart from Me you can do
nothing. Jn 15.5

Father calls each and every human towards a primary
Goal, and every Believer participates in their progress towards that Goal.

Father of course understands this, and goes to endless lengths to help
and to accommodate us towards the Goal. 
Laying a foundation of Who He Is through Scripture, the next course of
bricks begins.  He teaches us to trust
that He will not keep these attributes to Himself, but instead work to in us to
“taste and see that the Lord is good”.

Oh, taste and
see that the Lord is good!  Blessed is
the man who takes refuge in Him! Ps 34.8

God’s goodness is a given, yet not until we would taste and take refuge
are we blessed.  Why?  Because knowing of His Character is one
issue, while trusting His Character as directed towards us is a whole other
issue.

In the same way that an expert in a field who doesn’t have hands-on
experience is incomplete, so too are we if we thoroughly know the reports of
God in Scripture yet lack a trust borne out of an engaging experience with Him.

How will we grow to know what to expect from
Someone Who is unseen?

So herein lays the problem: How would we hope to grow in our
understanding of and trust in an invisible Person?  Without reservation, we can agree that a knowledge
of Him through the Scriptures is essential, lest we would know of and believe
in a God other than the One written of.  But
remember, we all begin this Walk ignorant of Him, and ignorant of the
Scriptures.

Consider the universal progression every human is called to tread:

  • Recognize there is a God
  • See the Scope of His presence and involvement
  • See our core opposition to Him and His ways
  • Hear His call and His demand to repent and
    return to Him
  • Acknowledge our need for Him
  • Ask for Rescue from our fallen state
  • Recognize this newly reconciled relationship
  • Cooperate towards a progressively changed
    ‘heart’
  • Patiently help others to realize the same you’ve
    learned
  • Prepare to meet Him

Notice that this cycle applies to us across the spectrum – whether we’re
not yet Saved, or if we’ve followed Him all of our life since Salvation.  The Lost finds rescue in the cycle; the Saved
finds progressing Sanctification.  In
both scenarios, the participant is called to and learns to trust Him.

The cycle of knowing, understanding and trusting Him is an upward
ascending and increasing spiral, like a spring small at the bottom growing
larger at the top.  As He nurtures us, all
steps of this cycle are played over and over again in an expanding
success.  We can even locate ourselves in
this progression before or after receiving Salvation – the cycle number you’re
on might be different, but the process repeats and remains the same because the
Goal remains the same.  It is a lifetime-long
road, but He is caring and patient.

To increasingly engage in the above requires trust in God, yet a God we
are to progressively know better.  And so
the question was posed:  Consider other
people in your life who represented an influence over you.  For instance, what characteristics did
(presumably) your Dad have, and how do you recognize the effects your view of
God the Father?  Why?  Because we begin life ignorant of God,
perhaps first learning about influencing characteristics from our Dads.  In traditional families, we will first know
more of our Dad’s/Influencer’s character before learning Father’s.  This foundation preemptively colors our
understanding and attitude about authority, grace, God, and how we can expect Him
to respond.  Not intended in the least to
be psyco-babble, nor an excuse for our choices, we cannot seem to escape what
even Sesame Street teaches toddlers – to know something new, build upon
something similar you already understand.

From Scripture, we are also instructed to learn from parallels in the
same way – Moses’ instructions of the Tabernacle and Laws were a shadow (Heb 8.4-5),
sound leaders are to be imitated (Heb 13.17), and we have Jesus’ example to
follow (1
Pet 2.21).

Now if He were
on earth, He would not be a priest at all, since there are priests who offer
gifts according to the law. 5 They serve a copy and shadow of the heavenly
things. For when Moses was about to erect the tent, he was instructed by God,
saying, “See that you make everything according to the pattern that was shown
you on the mountain.” Heb 8.4-5

Remember your
leaders, those who spoke to you the word of God. Consider the outcome of their
way of life, and imitate their faith. Heb
13.17

For to this you
have been called, because Christ also suffered for you, leaving you an example,
so that you might follow in His steps. 1
Pet 2.21

The Influencers in our lives, good or bad, can be a
blessing – take care to test your narrative and weigh it against the true
Model.

We trotted out the question concerning our Dads’ influence on our view
of Father, and got answers across the spectrum – good characteristics leading
us to God, bad traits informing us of a problem in contrast to His traits, and even
a neutral influence neither good nor bad. 
In our group’s case, they all influenced our path to God.  Perhaps we all know of someone whose Influencers
have helped to spin them off into destruction, or even a very good person who
has still failed to embrace God.

If we agree that the universal progression every person is called to
tread listed above is true, and that our view of God is effected by our Influencers,
then we can acknowledge it is imperative to run all influences – what we read,
hear, associate with, believe – through the sieve of Scripture.  We must derive what is called right by the
Truth, and repair our perceptions.  On
the topic of trusting Father, what things are snagging you?

A personal experience.

I was gently asked, “I notice you refer to God the Father as
“Father”.  Would you please explain
that?”

After more thought, my answer is that I conclude it is Scriptural (Rom 8.14-17),
a term of glad submission and endearment, and an expression of a personal
relationship He beckons me to.

For all who are
led by the Spirit of God are sons of God. 
For you did not receive the spirit of slavery to fall back into fear,
but you have received the Spirit of adoption as sons, by whom we cry, “Abba!
Father!”  The Spirit himself bears
witness with our spirit that we are children of God, and if children, then
heirs—heirs of God and fellow heirs with Christ, provided we suffer with Him in
order that we may also be glorified with Him. 
Rom 8.14-17

I perceive a godly Dad as one who strives to be wise, provides
instruction and direction, protects, and insists on God’s way in patience and
love.  Imitating Jesus, he would do
everything he could to live up to his role in the world (not just in the home, and
beyond being only a ‘spiritual leader’) as prophet, priest, and king.  All of these attributes and responses are
perfectly declared and demonstrated by Father God.  I love His Pure dealings with me, and His
forging of these same attributes in me as His child.

Those who have influenced me throughout my life have not been many of
these things – both persons of bad character overall, and even fellow fallen
Believers who are learning holiness like I am. 
But in a clear and absolute way, I recount how God has increasingly been
that perfect Father for me.  It is not
that He has increased, but instead He has helped me increasingly embrace Who He
fully Is and recognize His dealings with me. 
The outcome of any progressively Sanctified heart includes a repaired
understanding of Him, and with repentance, an ever wider lens that sees
Him.  Father, our Heavenly Father, works
towards fulfilling His intent to grow each of us this way.  He has been consistent and true to me, and
this is why I choose to reverently call Him Father.

Consider early Church father Polycarp’s response to those who would have
him deny Christ.  There stood a man who
had learned to trust God, and I want to know Him in the same way.

The proconsul then urged him, saying, “Swear, and I will release thee; —
reproach Christ.” Polycarp answered, “Eighty and six years have I served Him,
and He never once wronged me; how then shall I blaspheme my King, Who hath
saved me?” At the stake, to which he was only tied, but not nailed as usual, as
he assured them he should stand immovable, the flames, on their kindling the
fagots, encircled his body, like an arch, without touching him, and the
executioner, on seeing this, was ordered to pierce him with a sword when so
great a quantity of blood flowed out as extinguished the fire.

My privilege of a growing closeness to Father cannot be special or
unique – I read in the Word that this relationship is intended for every human
being who would embrace Christ, obey the Spirit, and trust Father.




God is Good

God is Good
                                                                                                                                                        12.01.17

Summary

Most any Christian you ask will agree (confess) that God loves us, that
He is Love, that love showed itself on the Cross.  In the midst of good fortune, we often hear
about His blessings.  During the hard
times the common anthem is “He has a plan”.

While all of the above is very true, we have an opportunity to discover
that these statements are actually topical – just the tip of the iceberg – if
we’ll take time to further consider His Word, His explanation and demonstration
of His Character.  Chapter 2 introduces
us to a bit more of the topic “God is Good”.

Key points

Prelude

Our Author Smith began his walk no different than any of us.  He recognized God as Ultimate, confessed his
own sin and need, and called on Jesus for His offer.  He also, until one day, had little direct
experience with God outside of a quiet Christian life.  To this point in his walk, he
agreed/confessed of His love.  But, when
real trial was visited upon him and his family, the next leg of his walk began
as the Lord helped him understand a bit more of His Character and Intent. Early
on, Smith discovered that there are many degrees of depth – as well as a range
of opinions – on how God deals with us. 
But most importantly, he came away with a personal report, an
experience, of God’s care for him.

This is uncomfortable, what do I need to do to make
it go away?

Removing ourselves from uncomfortable situations (or placing ourselves
into pleasurable ones) isn’t difficult to appreciate.  Our world, from day one, is a constant
reinforcement of cause and effect: If it burns my hand, move it away; If I’m
cold, put on a jacket; If I’m hungry, eat; If I don’t want a ticket, don’t
speed; If I don’t want to be struck in the nose, show respect.  Conversely: if I don’t want to be fat, eat
less; if I want to get there faster, speed; If I am in jeopardy, take
preemptive measures.  Our lives are
replete with taking care of business and responding in some sort of action.

So, when difficulty visits us, it is natural to seek a way to avoid, or solve,
or endure the situation.  Pain, fear,
loss, death – all of these are not what God left us with on Day Six of
Creation.  It’s also not what we can
expect once everything is straightened out in the End. He will wipe away every
tear from their eyes, and death shall be no more, neither shall there be
mourning, nor crying, nor pain anymore, for the former things have passed away. (Rev 21.4)

But for now, in this Age before the Gathering occurs, we are in a place
of tension.  Somehow we have to reconcile
a natural desire for peace and comfort v/s understanding God’s Character and
Intent towards us v/s how we are to respond to trails and heartache.

Who sinned? 
Or, How does God see things and how should I respond?

This Chapter shares the Smith’s experience following the diagnosis and
the ultimate death of their daughter.  He
shares the responses of other Jesus followers, and the range of theology about
God is sadly lacking.  We also shared
around the table our own experiences with responses given to us like this.

Ask 10 people to explain something abstract (as opposed to the answer to
a math equation) and we can expect 10 different viewpoints.  And, the more complicated the topic, the
wider ranging (read: the farther from the truth) the answers might be.

Now, ask 10 people, even Christians, about an aspect of Almighty
God.  But wait, in His case it doesn’t
mean there are no definitive answers – this is why He has given and protected the
Scriptures, and has given the Spirit, and deals directly with each of us
personally.  The answers from those 10
people will directly correlate to their exposure and experience with Scripture,
Spirit and personal experience.  Perhaps
it is even safe to say that any number of people, if thoroughly experienced in
these three things, will come to much the same conclusions about that aspect of
God we’ve asked them about.  Why?  Because He is seamless, pure and consistent
in His expression of Who He is.  Yes, the
ways He demonstrates it to us as individuals might be different, but the Truth
behind the demonstrations run true to His Character.

God is Good and He loves me.  This situation is terrible.  Can this be reconciled?

Sink low enough into a difficulty, or spend enough time suffering an
injustice, and we might likely find that our comfort in ‘God loves me/He has a
plan’ is challenged.  Have any of us ever
found ourselves boxed into this problem?

1. God loves me

2. God is Sovereign and all powerful

3. This is a horrible pain/injustice/your need here

Is it possible that even the most devout Follower could come to a place
where he would ask God “Why haven’t you fixed this for me?”  After all, He has the means to, and He says
He loves me, right?

What is God working to accomplish?

At the most basic and simple human level, if I will show my love to
someone it will probably revolve around their comfort and pleasure.  This is the stuff of romance novels, the
sweeping off of feet.  But what of a love
with a deeper view, perhaps something like wanting our children to learn how to
handle a budget?  In this case the result
might sometimes be they can’t immediately have what they want.  Parents would likely see the degree of pain
the children experience as reasonable and necessary.  This parent would be loving, yet there is
pain.

What is God’s main, bottom line goal in Creation?  That He would be acknowledged, praised,
glorified, worshipped as the One and True God. 
What is Father’s main, bottom line goal for us and Creation?  In the Westminster Catechism, the answer to Question
One is a common – and excellent – answer: That we would glorify God and enjoy
Him forever.

Both cases contribute to His goal. 
As we are involved in this, and as we are lacking as fallen people, and
as He loves Himself and loves us, we enter Salvation to begin our training out
of our wrong beliefs/actions, and into our understanding, faith and trust of
Him.  As a child learning to budget
experiences pain (followed perhaps by financial peace through godly obedience),
should we not expect pain as Father teaches us through difficulty while keeping
the End Goal in view?  If so, our list
might now look like this:

1. God loves me

2. God is Sovereign and all powerful

3. This is a horrible pain/injustice/your need here

4. I know and am learning He is Good and Trustworthy

5. He will even provide me comfort as I suffer His teaching trial

6. As I learn to trust Him, I too can learn to say I ‘Count it all joy’ (Jas 1.2-4)

This is why we have Jesus to lead the way, even when we would ask God
“Why haven’t you fixed this for me?”  For
He too asked Father this same question:  “Father, if you
are willing, remove this cup from me. Nevertheless, not my will, but yours, be
done.” (Lk 22.42), and again
in obedience on the Cross “And at the ninth hour Jesus cried with a loud voice,
“Eloi, Eloi, lema sabachthani?” which means, “My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?” (Mk 15.34)

Even Jesus, perfect, learned as a Man to trust and obey Father: “Although he
was a son, he learned obedience through what he
suffered.” (Heb 5.8).  Can we expect that our course would be any
different than that of the Second Adam, Who we follow and have Salvation
through?  If Father loved Jesus, and He
also loves us, then we have hope of reconciling the ‘God is Good and He loves
me / This situation is terrible’ issue. 
Because, remember He also tells us:

The eternal God
is your refuge, and underneath are the everlasting arms;

Deut 33:27

The steps of a
good man are ordered by the Lord, And He delights in his way. Though he fall,
he shall not be utterly cast down; For the Lord upholds him with His hand.

Ps 37:23-34

If I say, “My
foot slips,” Your mercy, O Lord, will hold me up. In the multitude of my
anxieties within me, Your comforts delight my soul.

Ps 94:18-19

My help comes
from the Lord, Who made heaven and earth.

Ps 121:2

He heals the
brokenhearted and binds up their wounds.

Ps 147:3

Fear not, for I
am with you; Be not dismayed, for I am your God. I will strengthen you, Yes, I
will help you, I will uphold you with My righteous right hand.’

Isa 41:10

When you pass
through the waters, I will be with you; And through the rivers, they shall not
overflow you. When you walk through the fire, you shall not be burned, Nor
shall the flame scorch you.

Isa 43:2

And we know that
all things work together for good to those who love God, to those who are the
called according to His purpose.

Rom 8:28

And,

Do not be afraid, little flock, for your Father has been pleased to give
you the kingdom.

Lk 12.32

The list goes on and on.

Some final thoughts.

And so, we can find reconciliation with His love and our suffering.  We can say “This happened because God had a
plan”, while also saying “Though this happened, God has a plan on what to do
about it”.

There is much more to consider on this topic.  John Piper, on the eve of his cancer surgery,
scribbled out his booklet “Don’t Let Your Cancer Go To Waste”.  In it, Piper makes a good argument that even
‘bad’ things are a gift from God.  He
reasons that as Sovereign, it isn’t possible for anything to pass Father’s
notice – He can stop an event, cause an event, or let an event proceed that
comes out of the fallen world.  Was
Piper’s cancer caused by God, or allowed by God, or not stopped by God?  Piper chooses to anchor his opinion in
Father’s Sovereignty and love, concluding that whatever reason He chose, He did
indeed choose it.  And on that, Piper
thanked God for His gift of cancer. 
Piper saw it as deemed proper and necessary for His child John, in
pursuit of God’s main goal of glorifying Himself and in helping John to see
things increasingly His way.  Piper
counted it all joy, and we can too.




How we Change

How We
Change                                                                                                                                           11.03.17

Summary

Jesus offers a new life, one that is full.  One that is close to our intimate Father and
all that entails.  Stepping into the
Family is the beginning, but we begin a long walk of realization, of His
progressively showing us the things in us that interfere with this close
relationship He intends for us to have with our Holy Father.  This requires change in us, not on the
surface but at the ‘heart’ level.  But
how?  Who can change one’s ‘heart’?  The answer is God alone, and this chapter
explains the mechanics of who we are and how we might cooperate with God, find
true change, and begin actively growing closer to the One Who loves us best.

Key points

Prelude  God mercifully explains to us what mankind has strived to understand for
millennia – how are we made?  What makes
us tick?  Why do we do the things we do?  And Who better to explain, than the One Who
made us?

A multitude of philosophies and approaches have developed through our
history on the topic of our behavior and how to see it change.  Questions have to be answered concerning how
we work before anything can be said of how to bring about change.  Consider the options:  Are people innately ‘good’ or ‘bad’ on the
inside?  Are we solely responsible, or
can ‘the Devil make me do it’?  Is change
a matter of shaping habit and behavior alone? 
Does God change and grow us, regardless of our participation (or lack
thereof)?  Our Creator provides us with
answers to these questions in His Word to us, his children.

Tossed about the sea of these questions, life can be miserable –
especially to the person who is aware of his faults, the outcomes of his
behavior, and the need to change. 
Misunderstanding how we are made leads to ineffective attempts to change
– and the misery of desperation, perhaps even disenchantment with God.  To be stuck in an awareness of need – and a
longing need for help and answers – leaves one with a miserable resignation to
a sad existence.  But it doesn’t need to
be this way, if we will follow our Lord’s instruction and position ourselves to
receive His help.

The Mechanics of the Human ‘Heart’  Jesus stated that “what comes out
of the mouth proceeds from the heart” (Matt
15.18a).  The ‘heart’ is described
as responsible as the seat of who we are, and what God is primarily concerned
about in us. Consider that a search for the word ‘heart’ through the Bible
produces 862 instances.  A few that are
relevant to Father’s concern of our heart condition include:

(Before the
Flood) Gen 6.5 “The Lord saw
that the wickedness of man was great in the earth, and that every intention of
the thoughts of his heart was only
evil continually.”

(To the king
Abimelech on not taking Sarah into his bed when warned by God) Gen 20.6a “Then God said to him in the dream, “Yes, I know
that you have done this in the integrity of your heart

(Given from God
by Moses to the Hebrews) Deut 10.12-13 “And now,
Israel, what does the Lord your God require of you, but to fear the Lord your
God, to walk in all his ways, to love Him, to serve the Lord your God with all
your heart and with all your soul,
and to keep the commandments and statutes of the Lord, which I am commanding
you today for your good?”

(Jonathan’s
armor bearer responds to attack the garrison) 1 Sam 14.7 “And his armor-bearer said to him, “Do all that is in your heart. Do as you wish. Behold, I am
with you heart and soul.”

(David’s plea) Psa 139.23 “Search me, O God, and know my heart
Try me and know my thoughts!”

(God states) Jer 17.10 “I the Lord search the heart and test the mind, to give every man according to his ways,
according to the fruit of his deeds.”

And, (Concerning
Father’s Work through the Spirit) Rom
8.27 “And He who searches hearts
knows what is the mind of the Spirit, because the Spirit intercedes for the
saints according to the Will of God.”

Father calls the root of our person the ‘heart’, and shows much
attention to it.  Perhaps the clearest
passage attesting to this is 2 Chron 16.9a, “For the eyes
of the Lord run to and fro throughout the whole earth, to give strong support
to those whose heart is blameless
toward Him.”

The ‘Will’ and its role in our behavior  What role do we think our ‘Will’
plays in our behavior?  Without God’s
explanation of our heart, it would be easy to assume that our Will is
responsible for our actions.  Consider
the terms ‘Will power’, or ‘setting your Will’ to do something, or the ‘Will is
weak’.  These terms seem to indicate that
our Will alone is responsible, but in consideration of the vast passages of the
heart, it cannot be held responsible.

Bending our Will to bring about change results in a short-lived
outcome.  Yes, we can do pretty much
anything for a while – some of us more so than others depending on the
circumstance – but in the end, we all eventually come back to show our true
colors, or the reality of our state of heart.

Our book’s author suggests that the Will is ‘the hinge on which decision
is made’, ‘responding to the impulses’ of the things that influence it.  Maybe a good description, but can we add that
the Will – while it can be strained for a while to affect behavior – is really
the outward-facing outcome we see as a result of the heart behind it?

Isa 50.7 states “But the Lord
God helps me; therefore I have not been disgraced; therefore I have set my face like a flint, and I
know that I shall not be put to shame.” 
Using the Will to support a behavior and hold it in place for the time
being isn’t a bad thing.  Isaiah has a
courageous heart that rests in God’s help, and he sets his Will as a flint to
assist in his intent – but it is not the seat of his intent.

Influencers of the Will – what drives our behavior  Our author
writes that the Will instead responds to 3 primary, underlying influences: The
Mind, the Body, and the Social Context. 
These three things are all warped by our falleness, the result of the
sin of us and in the world.  Mind, Body
and Social Context are all creations of God, and were perfect when
created.  The introduction of sin warped
these things, and we now respond accordingly.

Jesus, too, possesses these three things.  In His sinless case, however, they remain as
the ‘Manufacturer’ intended – and so is the outcome of His actions.  Jesus’ Saving Work is the basis for seeing
these things redeemed back to their correct intent, and thus we can grow into
an increasingly closer awareness of God, and have a full life – “I came that
they may have life and have it abundantly.” (John
10.10b)

Jesus’ goal is that all three things in each follower would be brought
to heel, to increasingly be repaired and changed, back to the way Father
intended.  This change is a cooperative
act of each believer responding to the initiating Grace of God, Who states He
wants us to repent and return to our original purpose of seeing, trusting,
valuing and Worshipping Him.

Understanding the cooperative nature of change is important.  God does not change us without our
participation, and we cannot change ourselves without God’s Work of Grace.  He alone has the means to change the heart of
a cooperating believer of Christ.

Specifically, the Mind
relates to our worldview, our beliefs, our attitudes that drive our
responses.  Our part is to hear his Word
and embrace the challenges to our differing perceptions, then to repent.

God’s Grace = Giving of the Truth, His promise to help us gain wisdom. “If any of you
lacks wisdom, let him ask God, who gives generously to all without reproach,
and it will be given him.” James 1.5

Our cooperation = Read, strive to understand, work to recognize the use
of the Word. “Do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewal of
your mind, that by testing you may discern what is the will of God, what is
good and acceptable and perfect.” Rom 12.2

The Body – be it the flesh, emotions, desires – influences our decisions, often
towards the wrong conclusions.  Aside
from the basic ‘sins of the flesh’ are pain-avoiding and pleasure-seeking
influencers as we seek shortcuts to a false peace, and thus play out through
the Will – Prov 30.7-9 “Two things I
ask of You; deny them not to me before I die: 
Remove far from me falsehood and lying; give me neither poverty nor
riches; feed me with the food that is needful for me, lest I be full and deny
You and say, “Who is the Lord?” or lest I be poor and steal and profane the
name of my God.”, and, Prov 7.21-22 “With much
seductive speech she persuades him; with her smooth talk she compels him.  All at once he follows her, as an ox goes to
the slaughter, or as a stag is caught fast”

God’s Grace = Jesus’ instruction (command) on choosing Him over
ourselves – “And He said to all, “If anyone would come after Me, let him deny himself
and take up his cross daily and follow Me. 
For whoever would save his life will lose it, but whoever loses his life
for My sake will save it.” Lk 9.23-24

Our cooperation = Choose to know Christ as superior to all other things
– “Indeed,
I count everything as loss because of the surpassing worth of knowing Christ
Jesus my Lord. For His sake I have suffered the loss of all things and count
them as rubbish, in order that I may gain Christ and be found in Him, not
having a righteousness of my own that comes from the law, but that which comes
through faith in Christ” Phil 3.8-9

Social Context – We are in large part a product of our nurture, the outcome of the way
we were raised, that we live, and what people and their ideas – contrary to
Father’s – that we embrace – Tim 1.3-4 “As I urged
you when I was going to Macedonia, remain at Ephesus so that you may charge
certain persons not to teach any different doctrine, nor to devote themselves
to myths and endless genealogies, which promote speculations rather than the
stewardship from God that is by faith.”, and, 2
John 6-7 “And this is love, that we walk according to his commandments; this is
the commandment, just as you have heard from the beginning, so that you should
walk in it.  For many deceivers have gone
out into the world, those who do not confess the coming of Jesus Christ in the
flesh. Such a one is the deceiver and the antichrist.”, and, 1 Cor 15.33 “Do not be deceived: “Bad company ruins good
morals.””

God’s Grace = A command that we separate from influences that we hold
more dear than God; that falsely inform us – “Whoever loves father or mother more
than me is not worthy of me, and whoever loves son or daughter more than me is
not worthy of me” Matt 10.37, and, “Whoever walks
with the wise becomes wise, but the companion of fools will suffer harm.” Prov 13.20

Our cooperation = Choose friendship with godly influencers who also fear
and pursue God – “As soon as he had finished speaking to Saul, the soul of Jonathan was
knit to the soul of David, and Jonathan loved him as his own soul.” 1 Sam 18.1, and, “A friend loves at all times, and a
brother is born for adversity.” Prov 17.17,
and including Jesus, “No longer do I call you servants, for the servant does not
know what his master is doing; but I have called you friends, for all that I
have heard from My Father I have made known to you.” John 15.15

Father cares greatly about our Heart, because it is the seat of who we
are.  He seeks those after His own heart
(David, per 1 Sam 13.14a).  Our closeness to Him is in direct proportion
to our holiness.  Yes, we are forgiven
and can stand before Him on Christ’s Work. 
But consider a life of seeing Him now through an active cooperation of
knowing his Word, repenting and being changed, and expecting to see Him.  “Whoever has My commandments and keeps them, he it
is who loves Me. And he who loves Me will be loved by My Father, and I will
love him and manifest Myself to him.” John
14.21




Intimacy with Father

Intimacy
with Father                                                                                                                         10.06.17

Summary

Our new book deals with how we might move into a life of intimacy with
Father.  We acknowledge (read: Millennia
of pondering) that Jesus did this with perfection – but what does this show
us?  His successful navigation as a Human
is a banner for us to learn and follow. 
Perhaps His chief goal, after Salvation, is to help us understand how to
live in the Kingdom of God, now.  His
reliance upon and trust of the Father He knows was His success – and should be
ours as well.

Key points

Prelude  We usually strive to do the ‘right thing’ in the eyes of God, but
why?  The first answer should be to
glorify Him, but who can’t say the notion of peace and success isn’t a
motivator?  Fair enough, because among
the promises in the Word are our peace and success. Matt 6.19-20, Prov 3.3-4, Rom 8.28, Ps 29.11, et al.  As well
is our natural desire to avoid the opposite, pain and difficulty.  And therein lies the issue – we might reason
1. God is good; 2. He is Sovereign; 3. He says He intends to bless us; 4.
Difficulty comes; 5. We scramble to discover what we’ve done wrong, that it
would be corrected, and the pain would go away.

Confliction about God (or at least what He might do
next?)
  If we
see things this way, it is not hard to come away confused and conflicted about
God.  The responses of God of the Old
Testament compared to the Father Jesus tells us about can add to the issue.  How to reconcile this while acknowledging
both reports about God are true and of the same Person?  This is what the author addresses by examing
what Scripture says of Jesus’ understanding of Father, as He knows Him across
the Old and the New Testaments.  Jesus
shows us the full and true realities of the Father He knows, understands and
trusts.

Define failure and success  Aside from the ‘world’ that
doesn’t belong to God, ask a typical follower of Jesus to define success, and
he will rightfully include peace and prosperity.  But is this God’s economy?  Jesus was asked what was most important, and
He answered in Matt 22.36-38: “Teacher, which is
the great commandment in the Law?” And he said to him, “You shall love the
Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind.
This is the great and first commandment.
  We are also told in Eph
2.10: For we are his workmanship, created in Christ
Jesus for good works, which God prepared beforehand, that we
should walk in them.
  Father
intends for us to put Him first, and will bring us to do so as He works on us.

When do we tend to draw unto God; in plenty or in need?  Father intends us good, but will not suffer
being 2nd in our ‘hearts’. 
And, as mentioned at our meeting, we often find we are left more useful
to Him – having a better understanding of Him – after trials test our faith and
turn us to Him.  Therefore, shall we call
our peace success, or is a higher success shown as a deeper reliance upon God
that results in true peace?

Jesus threw in  Jesus fully threw in to the Human condition, except for sin.  He navigated life following/relying upon
Father through the same means available to us. 
His success is the Banner we must follow – but how?  We must come to see, understand, and trust
the Father that Jesus knows.  We must
grow into His Narrative, and thus our perception – and response to life – comes
into line with His.  This is how we are made
like Him.

By all accounts, we are a lost cause. 
Sin has warped us and made our intentions patently against Him.  Our eyesight is incapable of seeing the Truth
without His intervention.  What seems up
is too often down, and vice versa.  Enter,
Jesus.  Our Savior not only won our
forgiveness, but He graciously demonstrated what life looks like in harmony
with and in full reliance upon Father. 
Furthermore, He personally attends to our schooling, making us ready to
be received and stand perfected before Father on that Great Day.

Big difficulties = bigger usefulness  We all know mature Followers,
those who have better expression of the Spirit’s Fruits (Gal 5.22-23) that
show as godliness, wisdom, usefulness to the Body.  How do they come to possess this?  The answer is through a learned familiarity
with His Word and Its application.  It
also hinges on a hands-on history of experience with God Himself, won through
the slow process of seeking Him, drawing close, learning dependence – through
knowing, understanding, and trusting Him. 
And this is all by His design, under His Sovereign care of the very
details and circumstances of our lives.

Can’t lead where you haven’t gone  So, what might be an excellent
use of the life God gives each of us? 
Line one of the common Catechism states our Chief Goal is to ‘glorify
God, and enjoy Him forever’.  The Great
Commission (Matt 28.18-20) includes making disciples and teaching them to observe Christ’s
commands.  Taken together, an excellent
life involves a more experienced soul helping a less experienced one.  Therefore, our job is to cooperate with God’s
teaching of us, growing in maturity, and helping others who have yet to embrace
more of Him.  This is our call to grow,
because who can lead where they haven’t gone?

Narrative is imperative  What we believe – that is,
embrace, not simply acknowledge – resides in the ‘heart’.  It is from here our actions play out, and is
therefore central to who we are. 
Scripture is replete with God’s references to our heart.  Jesus said in Matt
15.18a “But what comes out of the mouth proceeds from the heart”
.  And consider A.W.Tozer’s observation; “Were we able to extract from any man a
complete answer to the question ‘What comes into your mind when you think about
God?’, we might predict with certainty the future of that man.”

If our narrative is key, then it reasons that we must fight for an
improving one.  Who better to inform our
narrative than the One who knows God best? 
Jesus not only went to great lengths to explain Father and the Kingdom,
but He also demonstrated the ties to the Old Testament, lived an example,
provided the Words for the New Testament, and continues to craft and shape us
even today.




Fear and Fortitude

Saturday 2/21/17 notes

‘Fear and Fortitude’

The Big Thing Father gifted me with was the heart change
concerning my fears vs believing His assurance and promise.  This was not
a new concept to me, as I have pounded away at Scripture for years on the subject. 
Looking back through my notes, I see instance after instance of these Texts
about trust, provision, not to fear, care for me, etc.

However, as we discussed, it was finally to my heart that He
added the catalyst only He can add, that caused the seeds of His Word to have
Their effect.  It occurred on the afternoon of the 17th as I
was listening to Weber’s 3rd chapter, concerning his take on the
grueling Army Ranger training.  He said “The point of our (Ranger)
training was to overcome our basest fears.”

Suddenly, everything came into perspective for me, and I
suspect I was healed.  I say suspect, because I will ask myself in a year
if I’m still tethered down in peace.  My prayers are that this is not a
momentary thing, but that a foundational reality has changed in me.

I realized that the contrary views of my whole life and my
actions have been largely based upon (avoiding) the fears of discomfort – loss
of provision, bruised pride, disrespect, harm.  In response, I have looked
to excel at the barriers to the things that cause those discomforts.  The
problem is, aside from being sinful, these preventative barriers are horrible
taskmasters.  Worse yet, because they are employed to circumvent Godly
trust, they are sin and sure to fail.  While He has done much in me to not
retaliate against much of the sources of those discomforts, I still centered my
intentions around keeping the causes at bay through my own efforts.  The
biggest one – loss of provision – is the mountain of the bunch.  Because
of His goal to heal me, it isn’t a surprise to me to see the state of
provisional threat He’s allowed me to be in for the past several years.

The challenge, of course, is His promise to provide, both
while we act and while it’s not our job to act.  The problem of painful
difficulties and the certainty of them could only be answered two ways – excel
in my efforts to stave them off, or do what is truly only my part and trust His
ability, intent, and His sureness to keep His promises.  In short, as I
failed to choose the second answer, life has of course been difficult.

Weber’s statement suddenly shed light on all of my folly,
but more so, at the same time God gave me comfort and faith in the Scriptures
about Him that I’ve strived to embody.  Despite difficulties (as I
perceive them, but are nothing to the God Who governs and provides), I finally
understood this big step in reconciling the discomfort of the difficulties I
face with the Father Who governs them.  Weber’s words, made relevant to me
through Father’s Grace, showed me that the fears that torment are to be removed
by their training, and removes my fear (sin) of God’s actions towards me, and
thus removes my tormenting fear.  And THAT is when I realized my sin, the
sin Father revealed to me, I repented of, He healed me of.  My base fear
has been not resting in Him, as I tread the discomforts I fear, which are
allayed by His care.  Once I understood that, I fled to Him in the hope of
leaving my fear of His not doing what He says He will, which then resolved my
fear of the discomforting things.  By His Grace, it was like He
simultaneously produced the chicken and the egg, taking me out of the spin
cycle by answering both questions.

The joke of this to me (on my humanity) is that all of this
reads soundly.  We all know it.  I’ve spoken on it for a very long
time.  But thus the point I made Saturday, that though we have the truth,
without the catalyst of God, nothing penetrates our heart.  Thus, Eph
2.8-9 “For by grace you have been saved through faith, and that not of
yourselves; it is the gift of God, not
of works, lest anyone should boast.”

I’ve done my best to explain this, and it might seem like a
circular argument.  BUT, that’s the point of anything we attempt in
grasping God.  Miraculously, He alone makes the connection in an otherwise
circular argument.  That seems to be the case in all things relating to
crossing the threshold to Him.  We can read it, understand it, believe it
– but until He and He alone activates it, we can do nothing.  Not in
Salvation, not in Sanctification, not in our endeavors, RE: John 15.5 “I am the
vine, you are the branches. He who abides in Me, and I in him, bears much
fruit; for without Me you can do nothing.”

I used (to have) to say in my futile fortitude, “I refuse to
be afraid, I will trust Him.”  Now I can say, “I don’t need to be afraid,
He’s led me to trust Him.”  Dale, I am truly amazed, but not at all
surprised.

Praise God, praise God.

The thing is, we are to have fortitude. My fortitude is
futile if It’s not striving towards God, or if I don’t understand God must add
His catalyst. If I don’t strive while remembering those two things, it IS
futile. But, if I do then we can be glad when Jesus says “To him who overcomes
I will give some of the hidden manna to eat. And I will give him a white stone,
and on the stone a new name written which no one knows except him who
receives it.

Fortitude is necessary and required. Not understanding why,
it can be conducted in futility.




Lamentation – New Terms For Us Under the Blood

lament /lə-mĕnt′/ – To express grief for or about; mourn.
“lament a death.”

We see David lamenting to God in the Psalms and should ask “Is this how I should lament to God today under Christ?” Nobody escapes difficulties, so how should we address God about this? David’s is a good model, but with a big exception for Believers today.

It seems best to address lamentation against the Biblical line of progression, from an acknowledgement of God, through the end goal of embracing a full trust of Him. This, after all, is His goal in Salvation, and the end goal of coming into His family under the New Covenant:

  1. Beginning in rebellion or ignorance of God, we cannot deny the evidence of His existence and handiwork.
  2. Through general revelation, He broadcasts His reality and expectations to all Creation.
  3. By God’s grace, He reveals Himself to those He chooses, calling them to Himself in an inescapable way.
  4. Providing the means, including the faith to turn to the Christ, the chosen are Saved.
  5. We are assured of His close and direct presence, including His Spirit in us
  6. Thus begins our tutelage, our training into knowing, following, and trusting Him.
  7. The world, broken under sin, continues to be our habitation.
  8. Under His direction and protection, Father superintends our lives and orchestrates all things towards our learning to know and trust Him.
  9. Through this, our lives continuing in a painful world, under His care, we have ample opportunity to learn to choose how we will see things.
  10. As novices, we traverse difficulties through complaint, avoidance, or lashing out.
  11. Increasingly, learning of God through His Word and personal experiences, His children increasingly acknowledge His purpose and care as superior to our self-focused desires and the avoidance of the slaying of the flesh.
  12. In this, we learn obedience to not only His Sovereignty, but to trust His love, intent, ability, and worth.

The path of Salvation begins with animosity towards God, and is designed to end in our animosity towards ourselves. This is the amazing gift He offers, that we be free of what kills us and be given what fulfills us.

Perhaps, any discussion of righteous lamentation – defined as the acknowledgement to God of things that grieve us, without accusing Him – needs to be framed through the above summary. To do so, the whole of Father’s intent for us through Jesus must be conveyed in Biblical proportion.

Is life difficult? Of course it is, more so for some than others. Opportunity for grief due to sin is unavoidable, and lament is therefore a path every believer must travel. The lineage of lament and how it progresses is well seen pre-Cross, but it cannot end there if we acknowledge the results of Christ’s work, even now.

Life during the time of the Psalms and life now under the New Covenant share the same opportunity for pain, and for lament. However, the remedy offered now under the Cross is superior to that available before Jesus was Glorified.

David cannot be called wrong in his writings. The Hebrews were told to obey, lest God would turn from them. David was correct in asking God how long He would turn away, and in finding relief by looking backwards and forward to God’s faithful response to them.

However, a key component of this changed with the work of Christ. He tells us we are no longer under the obligations required for God’s affection, closeness, favor, love, relation. Asking God where He is, why is He doing this, if He no longer cares for us is, by definition, blasphemous. It is contrary to His Word to those in Christ.

In this Age, we are offered the opportunity to be friends of, the children of, Father. His Spirit in us is the guarantee and evidence of His closeness and commitment. The God Who intended good for His chosen then is the same God we have now. However, we no longer have basis to ask, “Where are you?” Taking this position is misrepresentative of Father, His intent, His promises, His actions. It is a lie, is offensive, and is a grievous misrepresentation of Him and all Jesus tells us He stands for.

Do we still tread the path of difficulty? Yes, as long as sin remains. Yet, the path of lament – while appropriate and inescapable – should be an increasingly shorter one into the arms of Father for a child growing into Sanctification.

The path of lament is a narrow one. Acknowledging our grief is honest, and can fork into one of three routes: Denial of grief’s existence; anger and rebellion towards God; or straight to Him in His Truth. The first two are through ignorance or denial of what He has promised us, or in rebellion towards Him in favor of idols rooted in our self-love over Him. The first two are rooted in Biblical ignorance, the third in faith of the Truth.

This path should be expected to grow ever shorter. While sin remains, it will not vanish. But, the remedy is faith in Truth, and running ever quicker to Him.

Jesus promised a new arrangement, a new relationship with Father. James tells us to flee quickly to Him and “count it all joy.” Jesus says He will “never leave nor forsake us.” Those under the New Covenant are brought in to the Family to learn the new realities of this life in Father’s House. Those under the Old Covenant did not have this – they could only look forward to it.

This all said, it is good to look to the Psalms to reveal the workings of the Human experience though grief, towards God. However, and this is imperative, we must recognize that theirs was an inferior position to ours. If so, adopting David’s lament while looking towards God, without emphasizing Jesus’ Solution of being in the Family, threatens to mislead today’s Believers into stalling on the path of lament. Worse yet, not underscoring the fork in the road, versus highlighting Father’s superior answer to rush to Him, threatens the Believer with defaulting to the wrong alternatives.

If lamentation is rightly taught, then the far superior promise and reality of Father’s love and care needs to be held up. If we fail to see the importance of this, and mistakenly emphasize the practice of lament, we mistake the means as an end. Yes, lament – the confession to Father that we hurt – is appropriate. But, take care not to make much of the path, rather than the destination.

Foxe’s Book of Martyrs reports many, many followers of Christ who understood this. There appears not to be one victim of evil who turned to the left or the right on the path of affliction. Did they voice lament to the God they would soon meet? Often, yes. But by and large they comforted themselves in the knowledge of Father’s Truth, His Sovereign love and goals. Without fail, they trusted Him. This is His high goal.

Do we see the superior choice they were reported to make? And do we understand and cling to the Gift of adoption our Lord made available? Do we hold highest how much Father loves us, how immediately close He attends to us? If we don’t, it is our fault, not His. The Church exists to equip, and when this topic is misunderstood or misappropriated, Her members are maimed. It should not be this way; it is not what He wants for us.




Submission is Inferior to Reverence

Submission is inferior to
Reverence.  However, in Reverence how can
I but submit?

March 18, 2013, following two weeks of preparation on a
new trading plan, I again believed I was following Father’s direction in my
choice of work and how He would lead me to successfully carry it out.  For the past 2 ½ years, day by day, I sought
His direction on refining my trade, looking forward to success.  16 hour days, most every day of the week was
the norm.  I can’t say I could have
worked any harder; every day was spent to its fullest.

The discouragement could hardly have been greater,
either.  Day after day, money went out
and little if any came in.  Loss after
loss, I fought back discouragement and turned to God asking for help.  I knew learning something new like this would
be hard and the risks very high, yet the reward would be a good and secure
living.  Every realization that the trade
plan was still lacking would lead me to seeing the next change.  Each reexamination would bring me an
improvement I doubted I myself could have conceived.  I believed these were direction from God’s
Spirit, echoes I am familiar with hearing. 
Today, I’m not sure if it was Him or the enemy.

That Monday the 18th, a much hoped for success
turned into another loss.  This time,
rather than patiently accepting yet another hard knock, I became angry.  I slammed down the mouse, flew out of my
chair, and began venting my anger, I hope respectfully, at the God Who I
believe was guiding me.

I went outside to smoke. 
Being cold, I went to the greenhouse and shut the door.  Pacing back and forth, years of frustration
grew, as did my anger.  Pacing, pacing,
yelling at God for the first time I can recall in my life, I looked East
towards the door – and it was gone. 
Instead, I saw, from the shoulders up, Jesus.  I recognized Him immediately, smiling at
me.  Curiously, tragically, I didn’t
recognize the gravity of the moment either. 
I looked at Him and seethed “I’m killing myself to make this go, we’re
going down the toilet, and You’re there smiling at me.  What the Hell is that all about?”

It was the worst day of my life, and the best day of my
life.  And I didn’t even realize it.

Amazingly, it would be another couple of hours before I
actually took inventory of what had happened. 
Jesus appearing to me.  Smiling as
I showed incredible irreverence.  What
was I to make of it?  My initial
conclusion was akin to a good parent looking lovingly at a child in the throws
of a tantrum, knowing that this too would work out.




Leadership, Authority, and Subordination

Leadership, Authority, and
Subordination

In over twenty five years of knowing each other, my wife and
I have learned a lot about relationships and the factors that make them work –
or not.  The truth is, it really didn’t
begin to gel for us until we became aware of God’s Word and began shaping our
roles according to His commands.  Today,
from the outside looking in, an observer might see her needing something done
at the house, while I’d prefer to be doing something else.  Deferring to her, I would choose to do the
tasks she desires.  Or, perhaps I have my
sights set on pursuing an activity which she sees as a lot more work for her,
yet she chooses to support me.  Or maybe,
I choose to make a decision that is not popular with her, but before I do, we
discuss it so I can see her perspective as well, and she knows my decision is
informed of her desires.

The choices we have made aren’t merely polite and simple, nor
without large consequences.  While often
deferring to each other, I have lead my family through informed choices – cross
country with all of our belongings; through several life changing decisions;
into three different businesses; into many Ministry adventures; through many
disagreements and conflict; and as a family, through countless minefields of
issues with far too many strongly opinionated participants.

I believe a measure of our success has been the fact that we
have successfully covered an extreme amount of ground as a family, despite the
fact we began as undisciplined, un-Churched, married sinners.  Yet at the same time my wife would report she
is satisfied with my leadership, while not recalling many times where I forced
my way, even though I did make choices and led my family in directions with
which they didn’t always agree.  It was
in the times I forced my way without considering her desires that I made some
of the worst decisions that hurt my family. 
Godly leadership is unapologetically effective and decisive, yet at the
same time strives to be cognizant of the needs of those following.  It is a skillful mix, avoiding both extreme
pitfalls of disengaged wimp and controlling tyrant.  Skillfully leading any group of rebellious
sinners with their own desires, and all the while as you have your own competing
desires as well, can only be learned by following God’s directions and
respecting our roles.

The question was posed to our group:  What is one way a husband might hinder his
relationship with his wife?  My answer
was “shortsightedness”.  When I was asked
to expand on my answer, I believe I made two mistakes.  First, I made a controversial statement that
came off as callous and easily misunderstood. 
It was blunt, and without a proper explanation is even harder to
defend.  Second, with realistically only
a couple of minutes to explain myself, it was impossible to give a thorough
explanation.  I should not have opened a
subject I would not have time to explain, and in doing so, I caused confusion
and division.  For both of these, I am
sorry.  Please forgive me if I offended
you.

If you care for a further explanation of leadership and
authority, I have included my thoughts below. 
I don’t make a habit of pages and pages of text to make a point, but I
believe this is a very misunderstood topic, and I want to share what I have
learned so anyone who is interested can grow with me as we follow Jesus, in our
roles as leaders.  If you have anything
to contribute (or dispute), please share with me so we can be as iron
sharpening iron.

Leadership and
Authority

Authority might be defined as having the responsibility over
resources, the right to conduct those resources as seen fit, and the
responsibility to answer for the outcome of the effort.  In all cases, the Bible shows that legitimate
authority, be it in men or women, is granted by God.  It is prescribed in God over mankind,
government over citizens, Church leaders over members, a husband over his wife,
and parents over their children.  All
mankind are equal in God’s Creation, and among us is a hierarchy of organization
and responsibilities.  Therefore, anyone
in his respecting role, and his corresponding responsibilities, are sanctioned
by God.

This also means that legitimate authority is established
upon assignment, not merit.  Authority
has nothing to do with a person’s abilities, and in fact, means that authority
remains even in an ignorant leader.  Bad
leaders are still responsible.  This is
why it is so important, when possible, to carefully choose what leadership we
place ourselves under.  Our job, as subordinates,
is to comply with our leaders the best way we can, in as much as those leaders
are in accord with God’s expectations. 
We are never expected to sin against God, no matter what our leaders
expect of us.

Children, as long as they are under the headship of the
father of the family, are under authority. 
Technically, I believe this means until those children are either
married and have formed their own respective family, or have gone out to
establish themselves in a single, celibate life.  A daughter must therefore choose her mate
well.  In marriage, each commits to a
covenant agreement before God, and once consummated in sexual intercourse, are
bound by Holy matrimony until one or the other dies, or through legitimate
divorce, or upon the Lord’s return.  That
woman is now subject to her husband’s authority, and their joint standing
before God.  She would do very well to be
sure she is committing to a godly husband who, with her, understands their
responsibilities before God, and they both should understand how to discern
their surroundings and divide the Word accordingly.

Such is it in placing ourselves under Church
leadership.  Again, it behooves us to
know the leaders’ fear of and commitment to God, as well as the basis of their
decisions and how the Church is organized. 
Believers are to be under Church authority, and in obeying this, are
offered the protections of the Church.

It is common today for people, including believers, to
attend a congregation yet not become members. 
The problem, aside from not understanding the issue to begin with, is
two-fold; first, attendees might require guidance, even Church discipline.  Non members who do not commit to the bond to
the Church then find it convenient to just leave when confronted by the
uncomfortable process of discipline. 
While apparently not a covenant bond like marriage, this avoidance of
Church membership – and more specifically a commitment to hold oneself under
the leadership’s Bible-guided, legitimate authority no matter what – is still
rebellion in that the attendee will not submit to that authority under
membership.  It is preferable in their
eyes to leave and find another Church that does not challenge or know about
their sin.  In the end, non-members enjoy
many of the benefits of the Church, without the safety of the bonds of being
under authority.  The problem arises when
this person, faced with godly, Bible based discipline, leaves to escape what
they need the most – correction, forgiveness, and repentance.

How leaders thrive

The best example of leadership we might follow is seen in God.  Jesus, and other leaders who work to emulate
Him, show us the living out of the Scriptures. 
Some key points in Jesus’ example include: Sanctioned by Father;
Knowledgeable of His responsibilities and boundaries laid out in the Word;
Instruction of the facts to those under Him; Careful examination of the current
issues in relation to Scripture; Reacting and following through as Father
expects; and, doing all in love and while understanding the needs of all people
involved.  In summary: the leader
exercises his resources, in accord with God’s Truth, all done in love – be it towards
our child, our congregant, our wife, our employee, or anyone under our charge.

How leaders fail

Conversely, a leader has unlimited opportunities to fail,
such as failure to acknowledge the responsibilities of himself or his
subordinates, which leads to confusion, abandonment of his post, or
rebellion.  Or, he might fail to instruct
all in his circle of responsibility, which leads to a lack of cohesion to God’s
directions, and to problems that might have been avoided.  For example, consider Eve.  Genesis 2 and 3 describes Father’s
instruction to Adam, as well as Adam’s responsibilities to govern, all before
Eve was created.  Scripture does not tell
of God talking to Eve, and we conclude that Adam was to instruct her, as he was
her authority, under God.  In the Fall
however, Adam stood by as Eve proceeded to take of the fruit, and then too, did
Adam from her hand.  In this, Adam failed
to either instruct her or turn her away. 
As further proof of his responsibilities, though she ate first, Father
placed the most substantial curse on him – and through him sin entered the
world, not her.  This was Adam’s failure
to live out God’s expectations.  In this,
Adam failed to read the situation correctly and follow through as Father
expected, as well as his thoughtless exercise of his responsibilities, lacking
love and regard for the billions of people his actions would ultimately affect.

I will get my way
anyhow, in the end

Be it good or bad, right or wrong, popular or despised,
informed or ignorant – the decision of a legitimate leader, as it agrees with
God’s expectations, is his right and responsibility. 

A shortsighted leader is interested in the immediate
outcome, often in that it satisfies his goals. 
His priorities trump those of others, be it through an exercise of
power, pride, ego, wealth, gratifications, or other personal gains.  In all of these cases, he puts himself first,
and accordingly, the people he is responsible for are placed behind his own
consideration.  Pressing ahead for his
own gain, at the expense of others without consideration or understanding,
damages the chief tool of his influence – the relationship.  This is a shortsighted, I-want-it-my-way-now,
approach.  He will likely get his way,
but at what cost?

A longsighted approach is based upon opposite goals:
Admiration of what is right, the betterment and success of his people,
promoting the success of his people’s efforts over his own, and generally
foregoing short term gratification in exchange for the payoff down the
road.  The leader knows that success
means all affected parties believe their relevant input has been considered,
and they find it easier to work to support the goal he has pointed them
toward.  Most of us feel safe under good,
longsighted authority.  Once in
submission, I felt comfortable under Father. 
In my roles as leader, sanctioned by God, I also feel comfortable exercising
my responsibilities.  The people under a
leader’s charge should also feel comfortable, as he leads wisely and in
consideration of his subordinates.  Good
leadership is that in which a subordinate can achieve more that he might on his
own.

In the end, the person in authority makes the final
decision.  A Scriptural approach employs
participation, but is not a democracy. 
By definition, a pure democracy is decided by the will of the majority,
and no one person has authority over another and all are equal in effecting the
outcome.  It is also not a shared
leadership, where both husband and wife are equal authorities over their
marriage and family.  Instead, God
prescribes for us a positionally authoritative hierarchy, exercised in a
Biblical love where we always strive to put the other’s needs first, yet as we
carry out our responsibilities in agreement with Scripture.  This would be a leader who, in accord with
Scripture, in Biblical love, takes his subordinates into consideration as he
makes an informed decision.  He will
direct his resources as he sees fit, and one day will answer to God for the
outcome of his efforts.

Can women lead, and excel at their work?  Of course, under the authority over
them.  Women are under the same
principles of authority as men.  Husbands
often make a mistake in believing their authority is threatened by their wife’s
activities – especially when she is better at it than he is.  But a wise husband knows his authority has
nothing to do with how smart he is, and he actually realizes his wife is a
tremendous asset who can help him achieve more than he ever could have on his
own.  His wife can thrive as she
exercises her abilities, under his authority. 
Both men and women have the ability and privilege of pursuing their
chosen activities, in as long as their primary responsibilities to their family
and each other are first met.

Leaders who do not execute their post as commanded by God
will suffer loss.  So will subordinates
who resist their leaders’ authority, though it agrees with Scripture.  Men who do not submit to legitimate
authority, who fail to understand and embrace their role as husband and father,
who fail to know the Word and instruct their family and help them obey, who
allow their authority to be assumed by others, or who abuse their position,
will suffer loss for their failure. 
Women who do not submit to legitimate authority, who fail to support
their husband in his efforts, who attempt to control him and fail to submit, who
fail to uphold their responsibilities before God, will also suffer loss for
their failure.  The work of every leader,
as well as the obedience of every subordinate, will be judged.  In the end, we all are subordinate under
Father.  We are equal in value, but not
in responsibility.  And accordingly, we
will not all be found equal as we are judged according to the quality of our
work, be it as leader or subordinate.

Informed decisions
and appeals

This doesn’t mean a leader exists in a vacuum, answering to
no one.  A wise leader solicits the
opinions of everyone his decision will involve, and takes those opinions to
heart before setting the course.  This
also means that a wise subordinate understands the process and uses it as
well.  Acknowledging that his leader will
make a decision that affects him, a subordinate will do his best to inform his
leader of the issues he should consider before making a decision.  This might even be a passionate argument, but
it should never be confused as a passionate challenge to legitimate
authority.  If both parties understand
that it is not the issue of authority at stake, but instead the issues
impacting the pending decision, it paves the way for an honest discussion about
the facts as they impact the decision to be made.  And once the decision is made, it is the
responsibility of everyone subject to the decision to support it and follow
through.

Love and fear as
motivators

A pastor has observed that husbands employ one of two
approaches in directing their families – leading through love, or forcing
through fear.  There are four different
aspects to this notion: Leading versus forcing, and, love versus fear.  All four are effective means, in their own
right.  But, all four are not
interchangeable.  We might, at first,
believe that the negatives – force and fear – do not belong at all.  However, don’t we see this very thing in God’s
handling of Israel at Mount Sinai?  And
King Belshazzar of Daniel 5, so scared his knees literally knocked.  And what of God’s Law, promising the sure
demise of those who didn’t obey, as well as the numerous times He followed
through when they failed to do so?  The
Jews had every reason to fear God, and when they failed Him, people died.

Conversely, leading and love are the hallmarks of this Age
of Grace, following the Cross.  Enemies
of God are warned by the pre-Cross actions of God in the Old Testament, but He
has stayed His Judgment for the time being and asked everyone to turn to Him
now during a period of clemency.  The
Lost are shown love and grace, and no one is forced to comply, they are led to
obey – if they will.

Forcing someone is an act against their intentions, while
leading is an invitation to follow.  The
first is pushing someone to the instigator’s conclusion, while leading is
drawing them to the conclusion.  Forcing,
at its worst, is a violation of someone’s personhood, while leading is making
an environment to attract that personhood on its own volition.  A wise leader, acting Biblically, will seek
to lovingly lead his followers to the conclusion he has in mind.

Love is not one
dimensional

Father shows us love in several ways – not only tenderly
holding our hand as we are led along the Path, but also in the assurance and
justice of the protection of His legal hierarchy and order.  His love for
us – in dividing what is right and wrong – isn’t shown by His winking at us and
letting things slide, but instead in His absolute adherence to His dutiful
leadership through His Just Law.  I’m thinking about the love that Jesus
showed us in the Cross.  That was a show of selfless love in giving Himself.  However, His simply giving of Himself in just
any sort of death wouldn’t Save us.  Our Salvation is an absolute legal
exercise as He satisfied Father’s Justice, through a legal sacrifice on the
Cross, to settle debt according to the Law, to be legally propitiated, or
attributed, to us.  His governing us in justice is a strict adherence to
His Law, which because it is absolute, provides us shelter.  Therefore,
even his absolute Law is a show of His loving care for us.  If we only see
Jesus’ holding our hand, yet overlook His loving Justice through the Law, we
would only be seeing half of the picture.

Resolute love

Resolute: Firm, unyielding, unbendable, determined, unwavering.

In my mind, I see Jesus on the Cross in His steely
resolution to complete the task, bravely carrying out His role for the sake of
His subordinates, Humanity and Creation.  Was the scene lacking gentleness
and the softer expression of love?  In many ways I think so, but it
wouldn’t make it any less loving.

The statement “I will get my way anyhow, in the end” was
callous.  The intent was reaffirming the
reality of a man’s role in leadership, and demonstrating a side of a man’s
responsibility in deliberate contrast so it could be showcased.  Soft men, who only exercise passive love yet
not resolute love, and those who are easily pushed over in their authority, should
see they are lacking a sense of duty towards their wives, children, and whoever
else would try to dissuade them.  Good
leadership includes both an exercise of soft love and resolute love.

The statement “I will get my way anyhow, in the end” is also
a warning to all of us.  The realities of
the authority of a leader mean that he will get his way (under God’s
authority), and followers must do their part (under God’s expectations).  But this also advises us to be sure we
carefully lead, taking all underlying issues into consideration, and that
subordinates both respect the leader’s rights and work hard to help him make
good decisions.  Resolute leadership is a
shelter and a blessing, and resolute subordinates play an important role in
helping the leader achieve that.

Leading with
conviction

A halfhearted approach to our responsibilities would be a
mistake.  If you were convinced that God
had a specific purpose for you, wouldn’t you firmly stand your ground and carry
out your job as best you could?  Consider
Nehemiah, who set out to rebuild the Temple and the walls of Jerusalem.  Nehemiah reported that he was on a mission
from God, supported by His clear declaration of intent.  While rebuilding the wall, their enemies
sought to stop them from building and threatened to attack.  Nehemiah responded by posting the military
officers behind the workers, and the workers themselves were also armed to
fight. (Neh 4.13-18)  Nehemiah knew Who
had sent him, he fiercely stood his ground, and he invoked God’s Name and His command
as the basis of his authority, both over his people and his enemies.  Nehemiah knew why he was there and what he
was expected to do, and no one was going to dissuade him.  We too are under that same God, and likewise,
we should not be dissuaded from our responsibilities, lest we be judged as
unfaithful.  And to anyone who would seek
to take our position and assume our respective authority, Nehemiah says we
should fight, backed by the authority of the Lord.

Is it correct for a leader to state he will have his way
anyhow, in the end?  Yes.  But a wise leader knows that while he can
expect to have his way, it is always best to do it well, in a longsighted
manner for the overall sake of his cause and his people.  If we do this well, as subordinate or as
leader, we can look forward to one day hearing “Well done, good and faithful
servant!”




Hannah’s Baptism

Hannah
Scheffer’s Testimony

Hi
everyone, my name is Hannah Scheffer and I want to be Baptized to publicly
share that I am ready to give it all in to God, and I am ready to start my walk
with him.

I
grew up in a Christian family and being Saved and Baptized was always a big
thing for me.

Being
Saved was the first step, and the second step is being Baptised at the start in
my walk.

I
always doubted my self and asking the question like “Am I saved?” or “Does God
really want ME in heaven?” I didn’t realize how much faith I was lacking with
my relationship with God.

However
that all changed one Thursday night at AO. Pastor Travis was talking about how
we needed to give our life to God and trust in him in everything that he wants
us to do.

He
gave an example of a poker chip. In the game of poker, you could bet a little,
you can bet a lot, or you can go all in. He asked how much we would put in if
our relationship with Jesus was on the line.

Would
we commit a little for God and say I will let you have a little of my life, or
say God, I am going to let you have most of my life. Or do you want to stand up
and say “God, I want you to have all of my life and I want to follow you in
everyway, everyday!”

He
ended the sermon with asking us one question: “What poker chip are you? Are you
willing to risk going all in for God?” That night really spoke to me, and after
that, I looked hard at where I was in my walk with God, and where I should be.

After
my Baptism, I am excited for my new life with God.

I
see Father God teaching us about Himself and His relationship to us through the
gift of our own children, and the perspective that brings.

I
can understand something of God’s perspective through the experience of
fatherhood that I get to share with Him.

And
as a follower of Jesus, He tells us to help our children to know about Him
through the Word and by sharing insight from our own experience in the Walk.

Your
Mom and I try to show how sinners follow Jesus, so that you can, too.  And here we are today, and I am very pleased
to have this opportunity to enjoy the fruit of our labors and be a part of
Jesus command to make disciples.

Today
you acknowledge His place in your life, and you can begin the lifelong process
of gaining your own personal insight as you live John 14:21 – to know his Word,
to obey it, and to see Him show up again and again in your life.

I
am very proud today, and very happy for you!




Test Yourself, Christian

Test Yourself, Christian


·  Going to church does not make you a
Christian; nor does saying a prayer, going down an aisle, passing a catechism,
telling yourself that you are, or trying to be a decent person. You can only be
a Christian if Christ is in you, which can be tested and proven
according to the scriptures.

Test Yourself

2Cor
13:5 (NIV) Examine yourselves to see whether you are in the faith; test
yourselves. Do you not realize that Christ Jesus is in you–unless, of course,
you fail the test?

1Cor
11:28,31 (NAS) But a man must examine himself… If we judged ourselves rightly,
we would not be judged.

2Cor
13:5 (Wey) Test yourselves to discover whether you are true believers; put
yourselves under examination…

·  God gives us instructions on how we can and
should “test ourselves” in scripture, which can be grouped into five
major categories: 1) Gospel Belief and
Confession; 2) Born Again / Sonship /
Correction; 3) Repentance / Deliverance
from Sin; 4) Good Works by Grace,
and 5) The Fruit of the Spirit. The
first three are starting points, but can also serve as ongoing tests, as we
will see. The last two are living proof of “Christ Jesus in us”, or
not. These scriptures should encourage those who are true Christians, and give
cause for sober reflection to those who think they are but are not.

2Pet 1:10a (NAS) …Be all the more
diligent to make certain about His calling and choosing you.

TEST 1:
Gospel Belief and Confession of Faith

1Cor
15:1-4 (Jer) Brothers, I want to remind you of the gospel I preached to you,
the gospel that you have received and in which you are firmly established;
because the gospel will save you only if you keep believing exactly what I
preached to you–believing anything else will not lead to anything. I taught
you… that Christ died for our sins, in accordance with the scriptures,
that he was buried; and that he was raised to life on the third
day, in accordance with the scriptures.

Rom
10:8-13 (NIV) …”The word is near you; it is in your mouth and in your
heart,” that is, the word of faith we are proclaiming: That if you confess
with your mouth, “Jesus is Lord,” and believe in your heart
that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved. For it is with
your heart that you believe and are justified, and it is with your mouth that
you confess and are saved… for, “Everyone who calls on the name of the
Lord will be saved.”

·  We must believe the right Gospel about the
right One. Christian life starts with an embracing of the Gospel, but what we
believe in is also an ongoing test as well. We are warned in scripture
not to drift away from the faith as we go through life, which is a real
danger. Do we believe in, and are we following, the simple and
scripture-defined Gospel of Jesus Christ?

1John 2:24 (NIV) See that what you
have heard from the beginning remains in you. If it does, you also will
remain in the Son and in the Father.

2Cor
11:3-4 (Jer) But the serpent, with his cunning, seduced Eve, and I am afraid
that in the same way your ideas may get corrupted and turned away from simple
devotion to Christ. Because any newcomer has only to proclaim a new Jesus,
different from the one that we preached, or you have only to receive a new spirit,
different from the one you have already received, or a new gospel, different
from the one you have already accepted–and you welcome it with open arms!

Gal
1:9 (Phi) I am amazed that you have so quickly transferred your allegiance from
him who called you by the grace of Christ to another “gospel”! Not
that there is another gospel, but there are men who are upsetting your faith
with a travesty of the gospel of Christ. Yet I say that if I, or an angel from
heaven, were to preach to you any other gospel than the one you have received,
may he be dammed!

Rev
3:3a [Jesus:] “Remember, therefore, what you have received and heard; obey
it, and repent.”

Heb
2:1 (NIV) We must pay more careful attention, therefore, to what we have heard,
so that we do not drift away.

Heb
10:23 (NKJ) Let us hold fast the confession of our hope without wavering…

TEST 2:
Born Again / The Inner Witness / Correction as Children

John
3:3-7 (NIV) Jesus declared, “I tell you the truth, no one can see the
kingdom of God unless he is born again… Flesh gives birth to flesh,
but the Spirit gives birth to spirit. You should not be surprised at my saying,
‘You must be born again.'”

1Pet
1:23 (Phi) For you are not just mortals now but sons of God; the live,
permanent Word of the living God has given you his own indestructible heredity.

Gal
4:6 (NIV) Because you are sons, God sent the Spirit of his Son into our hearts,
the Spirit who calls out, “Abba [Daddy!], Father.”

Rom
8:14-16,23 (NIV) For as many as are led by the Spirit of God, these are sons of
God… You received the Spirit of adoption by whom we cry out,
“Abba, Father.” The Spirit Himself bears witness with our spirit
that we are children of God… Not only so, but we ourselves, who have the
firstfruits of the Spirit, groan inwardly as we wait eagerly for our
adoption as sons, the redemption of our bodies.

·  Those who believe in the Gospel and follow
Jesus will be born again into new, spiritual life. This will result in what is
termed “the Spirit of adoption” which is evidenced by the “inner
witness” of “Abba, Father”. This is an inner knowing that
we are children of God, where we cry out “Daddy! Father!” with love
and expectation by deep, spiritual instinct.

Rom
8:9,15-16 (Phi) You cannot, indeed, be a Christian at all unless you have something
of his Spirit in you… You can say with a full heart, “Father, my
Father”. The Spirit himself endorses our inward conviction that we really
are the children of God.

·  Christians do not habitually remain in sin,
as we will see in the following test. Yet we all can stumble, we all can fall
into sin. Hopefully, this is not deliberate, but even if it is on occasion God
can still use it to encourage us that we are His children. For if and when we
sin, the correction / rebuke / chastisement of the Lord will train us into the
righteousness of Christ–if we are His.

Heb
12:5-8 (Wey) And you have quite forgotten the encouraging words which are
addressed to you as sons, and which say, “My son, do not think lightly of
the Lord’s discipline, and do not faint when He corrects you; for those whom
the Lord loves He disciplines: and He scourges every son whom He
acknowledges.” …God is dealing with you as sons; for what son is there
whom his father does not discipline? And if you are left without discipline, of
which every true son has had a share, that shows that you are bastards, and
not true sons.

·  This is a very clear-cut test: if you can
continue in habitual sin and “get away with it”, no matter what you
say, you are not a child of God. On the other hand, if we really are His
children, this will be proven by the fact that He will not allow us to remain
in sin–or go far wrong–through His active correction in our lives.

Rev
3:19 (NAS) [Jesus:] “Those whom I love, I reprove and discipline;
therefore be zealous and repent.”

Heb
12:9-11 (Wey) Our earthly fathers used to discipline us and we treated them
with respect, and shall we not be still more submissive to the Father of our
spirits, and live? It is true that they disciplined us for a few years
according as they thought fit; but He does it for our certain good, in order
that we may become sharers in His own holy character. Now, at the time,
discipline seems to be a matter not for joy, but for grief; yet it afterwards
yields to those who have passed through its training a result full of
peace–namely, righteousness.

TEST 3:
Repentance / Freedom from Habitual Sin

2Tim
2:19 (Wey) God’s solid foundation stands unmoved, bearing this inscription,
“The Lord knows those who really belong to Him.” And this also,
“Let every one who names the Name of the Lord renounce all
wickedness.”

Jude
1:4-5 (NIV) For certain men whose condemnation was written about long ago have
secretly slipped in among you. They are godless men, who change the grace of
our God into a license for immorality and deny Jesus Christ our only Sovereign
and Lord.
Though you already know all this, I want to remind you that the
Lord delivered his people out of Egypt, but later destroyed those who did not
believe.

Eph
5:6 (Wey) Let no one deceive you with empty words, for it is on account
of these very sins that God’s anger is coming upon the disobedient.

Heb
10:26-27 (NIV) If we deliberately keep on sinning after we have received the
knowledge of the truth, no sacrifice for sins is left, but only a fearful
expectation of judgment and of raging fire that will consume the enemies of
God.

1John
3:5-10 (Phi) You know that… Christ became a man to take away sin, and
that in him there is no sin. The man who lives in Christ does not habitually
sin. The regular sinner has never seen or known him. You, my children, should
not let anyone deceive you.
The man who lives a good life is a good man, as
surely as Christ is good. But the man whose life is habitually sinful is
spiritually a son of the devil, for the devil has been a sinner from the
beginning. Now the Son of God came to earth with the express purpose of undoing
the devil’s work. The man who is really God’s son does not practice sin, for
God’s nature is in him, and such a heredity is incapable of sin. Here we
have a clear indication as to who are the children of God and who are the
children of the devil. The man who does not lead a good life is no son of God.

1John
2:3-7 (NIV) We know that we have come to know him if we obey his commands. The
man who says, “I know him,” but does not do what he commands is a
liar, and the truth is not in him. But if anyone obeys his word, God’s love is
truly made complete in him. This is how we know we are in him: Whoever claims
to live in him must walk as Jesus did. Dear friends, I am not writing you a new
command but an old one, which you have had since the beginning.

Luke
6:46 (Wey) [Jesus:] “And why do you all call me ‘Master, Master’ and yet
not do what I tell you?”

1Cor
6:9 (NIV) Do you not know that the wicked will not inherit the kingdom of God? Do
not be deceived:
Neither the sexually immoral nor idolaters nor adulterers
nor male prostitutes nor homosexual offenders nor thieves nor the greedy nor
drunkards nor slanderers nor swindlers will inherit the kingdom of God. And
that is what some of you were. But you were washed, you were sanctified,
you were justified in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ and by the Spirit of
our God.

John
8:34-36 (Wey) “In most solemn truth I tell you,” replied Jesus,
“that every one who commits sin is the slave of sin. Now a slave does not
remain permanently in his master’s house, but a son does. If then the Son shall
make you free, you will be free indeed.”

Titus
2:11-15 (NIV) For the grace of God that brings salvation has appeared to all
men. It teaches us to say “No” to ungodliness and worldly passions,
and to live self-controlled, upright and godly lives in this present age, while
we wait for the blessed hope–the glorious appearing of our great God and
Savior, Jesus Christ, who gave himself for us to redeem us from all wickedness
and to purify for himself a people that are his very own, eager to do what is
good. These, then, are the things you should teach…

TEST 4:
Good Works by Grace

2Tim
2:19-21 (NIV) …”Everyone who confesses the name of the Lord must turn
away from wickedness.”
In a large house there are articles not only of
gold and silver, but also of wood and clay; some are for noble purposes and
some for ignoble. If a man cleanses himself from the latter, he will be an
instrument for noble purposes, made holy, useful to the Master and
prepared to do any good work.

·  When speaking of good works, it is important
to note that such can never save us, and this is a serious deception often
warned about in scripture. Rather it is the other way around: if we are really
saved then we will do good works. These are produced in us by the
ministry gifts of the Holy Spirit, given by the grace of God.

1Pet
4:10-11 (NAS) As each one has received a special gift, employ it in
serving one another as good stewards of the manifold grace of God. Whoever
speaks, is to do so as one who is speaking the utterances of God; whoever
serves is to do so as one who is serving by the strength which God supplies; so
that in all things God may be glorified through Jesus Christ…

Rom
12:6-8 (Phi) Through the grace of God we have different gifts. If our
gift is preaching, let us preach to the limit of our vision. If it is serving
others let us concentrate on our service; it if is teaching let us give all we
have to our teaching; and if our gift be the stimulation of the faith of others
let us set ourselves to it. Let the man who is called to give, give freely; let
the man in authority work with enthusiasm; and let the man who feels sympathy
for his fellows in distress help them cheerfully.

Eph
2:10 (NIV) For we are God’s workmanship, created in Christ Jesus to do good
works, which God prepared in advance for us to do.

2Tim
1:6 (NIV) For this reason I remind you to fan into flame the gift of God…

2Cor
9:8 (NIV) And God is able to make all grace abound to you, so that in all
things at all times, having all that you need, you will abound in every good
work.

Jas
2:17b-24 (NIV) Faith by itself, if it is not accompanied by action, is dead.
…I will show you my faith by what I do. You believe… Even the demons
believe… Do you want evidence that faith without deeds is useless?…
Abraham’s… faith and his actions were working together, and his faith was
made complete by what he did… You see that a person is justified by what he
does and not by faith alone.

Acts
26:19-20 (NIV) [Paul:] “So then… I was not disobedient to the vision
from heaven… I preached that they should repent and turn to God and prove
their repentance
by their deeds.”

Col
1:10-11b (NIV) …That you may live a life worthy of the Lord and may please
him in every way: bearing fruit in every good work, growing in the
knowledge of God, being strengthened with all power according to his glorious
might.

TEST 5:
The Fruit of the Spirit

Mat
3:7 (NIV) “…Produce fruit in keeping with repentance.”

Mat
7:16-23 (NIV) [Jesus:] “By their fruit you will recognize them. Do people
pick grapes from thornbushes, or figs from thistles? Likewise every good tree
bears good fruit, but a bad tree bears bad fruit. A good tree cannot bear bad
fruit, and a bad tree cannot bear good fruit. Every tree that does not bear
good fruit is cut down and thrown into the fire. Thus, by their fruit you will
recognize them. Not everyone who says to me, ‘Lord, Lord,’ will enter the
kingdom of heaven, but only he who does the will of my Father who is in heaven.
Many will say to me on that day, ‘Lord, Lord, did we not prophesy in your name,
and in your name drive out demons and perform many miracles?’ Then I will tell
them plainly, ‘I never knew you. Away from me, you evildoers!'”

Mat
12:33 (NIV) “Make a tree good and its fruit will be good, or make a tree
bad and its fruit will be bad, for a tree is recognized by its fruit.”

Gal
5:22-23 (NIV) The fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace,
patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness
and self-control. Against such things there is no law. Those who belong
to Christ Jesus have crucified the sinful nature with its passions and desires.
Since we live by the Spirit, let us keep in step with the Spirit.

John
13:35 (NIV) “By this all men will know that you are my disciples, if you
love one another.”

Col
1:6 (Wey) Just as it [the Gospel] has also spread through the whole world,
yielding fruit and increasing, as it has done among you from the day when first
you heard it and came really to know the grace of God.

Plp
2:12-13 (NIV) Therefore, my dear friends… continue to work out your salvation
with fear and trembling, for it is God who works in you to will and to
act according to his good purpose.

John
15:4-5,8,16 (NIV) [Jesus:] “Remain in me, and I will remain in you. No
branch can bear fruit by itself; it must remain in the vine. Neither can you
bear fruit unless you remain in me. I am the vine; you are the branches. If a
man remains in me and I in him, he will bear much fruit; apart from me you can
do nothing… This is to my Father’s glory, that you bear much fruit, showing
yourselves to be my disciples…
You did not choose me, but I chose you and
appointed you to go and bear fruit–fruit that will last…”

Mid Term
Exam

2Cor
13:5 (NAS) Test yourselves to see if you are in the faith; examine
yourselves!…

·  Now then; let us reflect on these
“tests” and give ourselves an honest self-rating of “Christ in
Us” in these five areas.

  1. Gospel Belief and Confession: Do you believe the Gospel of Jesus Christ? Have you
    held fast to sound doctrine against the many false prophets
    offering a different gospel?
  2. Born Again / Spirit of Adoption
    / The Lord’s Correction
    :
    Are you born from above? Do you have that ongoing “Abba,
    Father!” instinct within, that inner knowing of your
    relationship with Him? Is God treating you as His child when you fall into
    sin?
  3. Repentance / Freedom from Sin: Have you resolutely turned away from sin? Do you
    habitually sin, or can you praise God in spirit and truth that He has
    truly “set you free indeed?”
  4. Good Works by God’s Grace: Have you been given a grace-gift of ministry to serve
    others with? Is your life living proof of Christ in you, or have you only
    “mere words” and self-delusion to cling to?
  5. The Fruit of the Spirit: Are love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness,
    faithfulness, gentleness and self-control manifesting and growing in your
    life? Are you producing fruit in keeping with repentance?

·  As we go through the various seasons of life
we might well find ourselves deficient in one or more of these tests. Seeing
the whole of them can illuminate where we have stumbled, and encourage us to
deal honestly and urgently with any problem areas.

Col
1:27-29 (NIV) …God has chosen to make known… the glorious riches of this
mystery, which is Christ in you, the hope of glory. We proclaim him,
admonishing and teaching everyone with all wisdom, so that we may present
everyone perfect in Christ. To this end I labor, struggling with all his
energy…

Gal
4:19 (TEB) My dear children! Once again, just like a mother in childbirth, I
feel the same kind of pain for you until Christs’ nature is formed in you.

1John
5:12-13 (NIV) He who has the Son has life; he who does not have the Son of God
does not have life. I write these things to you who believe in the name of the
Son of God so that you may know that you have eternal life.

2Pet
1:10-12 (Phi) Set your minds, then, on endorsing by your conduct the fact that
God has called and chosen you. If you go along these lines there is no reason
why you should stumble. Indeed, if you live this sort of life a rich welcome
awaits you as you enter the eternal kingdom of our Lord and savior Jesus
Christ. Therefore I shall not fail to remind you again and again of things like
this, although you already know them…

Eph
3:16-21 (Phi) I pray that out of the glorious richness of his resources he will
enable you to know the strength of the Spirit’s inner re-enforcement–that
Christ may actually live in your hearts by your faith. And I pray that you,
rooted and founded in love yourselves, may be able to grasp (with all
Christians) how wide and long and deep and high is the love of Christ–and to
know for yourselves that love so far above our understanding. So will you be
filled through all your being with God himself! Now to him who by his power
within us is able to do infinitely more than we dare to ask or imagine–to him
be glory in the Church and in Christ Jesus for ever and ever, amen!




Why did God Create Man?

Why did God create man?

We often
point to the Westminster Catechism and state that our chief goal is “to glorify
God and enjoy Him forever”.  While a
great explanation from Man’s viewpoint, I have wondered about God’s point of
view, too.  I believe the question might
be, what does an Omnipotent and Omnipresent God do to exercise himself and
bring Himself glory?  No matter what, how
can He ever have an expectation that goes beyond His own thoughts, desires, or
interactions since He is boundless and perfect? 
It seems it might be like the owner of the department store buying
himself a gift – yet he owns it all and can’t be surprised because he knows his
inventory.

I think
the word ‘exercise’ is a good one, because what might an all powerful God do to
challenge or satisfy His creativity? 
Consider a young athlete who needs to run as fast as he can, or an
artist who strives to draw out the essence of his expression, or a conqueror
who needs to gather a domain and bring it under order, or a lover who desires
to show his affection to his beloved? 
Whoever has potential knows the need to exercise it.  And being made in His Image, shouldn’t we
wonder how much more our Maker desires to be excellent?

I believe
that God has taken on an incredibly dangerous and worthy endeavor, one that
showcases Who He is and what He alone is capable of.  Going backwards from the conclusion, we read
that in the end, He is worshipped by a sea of people who truly know and value
Him.  These are veterans of God, people
who know of His Mercy as they recall what they were and what they have become
under Christ.  People who have known the
truth of wretchedness and Relief, or sin and Forgiveness, of weakness and
Power, of hopelessness and then Hope, of strife and then Peace. These are
people who are rightly sold out to God and have every reason to adore and
worship Him.

Considering
all of Creation, it is all very incredible. 
A cursory survey of the stars and space is a thing of wonder, both in
the complexity and the magnitude.  A look
in our own world is a shocking display of creativity, complexity, order,
variety.  At the molecular and atomic
levels, even more amazing and intricate works abound.  Colossians 1.17 tells us that in Christ all of
these things consist, as He holds it all together.

However,
this incredible array of Creation is not the direct subject of Salvation, but
we are.  Jesus didn’t come as a Godly
natural anomaly, but as a man, as one of us. 
I think the incredible and daring work of God is that He created a host
of humanity that would say ‘no’ to Him. 
I believe this is incredible, because if He wanted to take the direct
route, He could have instead made all of us already worshipping Him – and even
believing we had taken the same long road through life to get there.  But no, He has instead chosen to exercise His
Will over us in a bid to convince us, compel us, draw us to turn to Him – and
all without ever overpowering us.  No one
has ever been forced to ask Forgiveness. 
Instead, He does takes the daring approach and goes as far as He can to
chance the risk of rejection – and in the end all to magnify His love for
us.  This is the means to the end, where
He carries all of our deficits as only God can, and thus creates true and
genuine worship!




Two Minutes to Explain the Gospel

Given two
minutes to explain the Gospel, what would you say? (To an inquisitive adult)

First,
let’s acknowledge there is a God Who has expectations.  One proof of this is your inherent sense of
right and wrong, which is there as an anchor to His expectations.  You, and everyone else ever born will face
Him and answer for our actions of our lives. He has spoken His expectations to
mankind and recorded them in the Bible.  The
Bible is how we can know Who God is and what He intends for us to understand.

Second,
let’s acknowledge that He is perfect, and that none of us are.  And so, each of us have defied His
expectations.  This means that He, as
God, has the right and obligation to hold each of us accountable for the right
and wrong things we have done.  Being
perfect and righteous, He cannot allow sin to remain unpunished, and so, all
who are guilty and unforgiven of any sin whatsoever will one day be removed
from His presence.  This will be
Hell.  This is important to understand –
every soul ever created will be presented before God in resurrected bodies that
will never again die.  Each of us will
spend eternity either in peace with God, or in torment without Him.

Third,
His goal is to surround Himself with people who recognize His value and worship
Him.  Those who will be allowed to remain
must be relieved of their debt of sin to Him. 
That means we must be forgiven by paying a debt we ourselves are
unqualified to pay.  We have nothing to
offer Him.  Before Creation was ever
made, He decided He would use Jesus to legally satisfy the personal, individual
debts of those He would Save.  He offers
us the only way that our debts can be paid, but it will only be through His
gift, not through our own efforts.  Only
God can save us from our sin and our debt.

Fourth,
Jesus, offering Himself as a sinless Sacrifice, as both a man like us and as
God, earned the right to release those who would ask Him for forgiveness.  To receive this from Him, He expects you to
recognize that He is God Who alone can save you; that you are a sinner who
cannot save himself; to admit your sins and commit to a lifetime of turning
away from them; and then asking Him for that Forgiveness.  Jesus has promised that no one can be Saved
except through Him.  He also promised
that anyone who asks Him for Forgiveness will not be turned away.  The repentant sinner who believes Who Jesus
is and the Promises He offers will immediately find relief of his guilt before
God.  As a follower of Jesus, you will
begin your journey of peace and assurance as you learn to follow your Lord.




The Results and Effects of Sin

Define
sin.  Describe in detail the results and
effects of sin.

I
would describe sin as an act that defies the stated expectation of God.  God calls Himself boundless in His Person and
attributes, and everything about Him is Just. 
We cannot know His thoughts except those He reveals to us.  Those utterances that have been revealed are
His Law and an expression of Who He is. 
Once God has uttered His Word to us, we are then responsible to obey
It.  Those Words He has not given us, the
balance of His thoughts that remain a secret to us, are still just as perfect
but are not our responsibility to keep. 
Being responsible to obey, if we do not, we commit sin against God.

The
results of sin are seated in our legal transgression against the Holy God Who
created us, in which we are now indebted to. 
The effects of this offense include a break in our initial relationship
with God, leading to consequences named by Him. 
At the onset of our sin, we are immediately on course to death, first
and immediately in our spiritual self, then in our physical body which will
later die, then as a result of sin on our ‘heart’ our actions debase, and
finally the people around us whom we influence and are responsible to are also
affected.

We
are told not to grieve the Spirit in our sin, proving that after Salvation as
He resides in us, as we can still choose to sin and have it negatively affect
Him.  We also know that central to
Christ’s Passion was the effects of Hell’s punishment for our sins.  And most importantly, the definitive
punishment suffered by Jesus as Father turned away from Him for the first and
last time in His endless circle of existence.

But,
ultimately, our sin offends the very thing that Saved us from it – our
relationship with the Lord Who denies His wrath in exchange for a sacrificial,
loving extension of Grace once again, that we would choose to turn to obedience
out of love for Him.  Sin’s effects on
our relationship cannot dislodge our Salvation, as we were never responsible
for its beginning, either.  But, sin does
damper our sensitivity to the Spirit, it hinders Father’s hearing our prayers,
and it pollutes those around us.

I’ve
thought about my sin and the sad ease I possess in choosing my desires over
Jesus’ demands.  I know academically the
effects, as well as the harm it brings in my life.  But, despite the consequences, I still will
choose to sin.  I’ve concluded the reason
is that I fail to appreciate the harm it brings to my Saviour, and that is
because I fail to draw closer to Him. 
The distance I allow insulates me from the reality, much like a faceless
crime victim is easier to harm than a loved one, face to face.  Damn my sin! 
I want to want to be pure.




The Missional Life

Explain what is meant by the word “missional”, and describe
what a missional life might look like.

If I
understand Chris’ explanation, “missional” encompasses the core meaning or
focus of a believer’s life in fulfilling Jesus’ commission, not fulfilling our
desires to get Saved and ride it on Home.

A
missional life will rest upon an understanding of the core reason of a man’s
existence, being realized through his Saved life.  A useful believer (useful to Jesus, the only
Judge Who matters) is soaked through with his continual exposure to God, the
stirring of the Spirit, to quicken him into seeing, understanding, embracing,
and doing the work for which we were Saved, per Eph 2.10 “For we are His
workmanship, created in Christ Jesus for good works, which God prepared
beforehand that we should walk in them.”

A man
engaged in a missional life understands Who Jesus is; who he is as His slave;
Jesus’ intentions; recognizes the opportunities around him; grows in the Tools
he is given in the Word and the Spirit; and then operates in the authority
pushed upon him that he will have a life worth examination by his Lord on the
Last Day.




The Inerrancy of the Bible

Critics
argue that proof for the Bible’s inerrancy is based upon circular
reasoning.  How would you answer this
argument?

I believe my job is to explain God to you as clearly as I
can, hopefully convincing you to look for Him yourself.  In the end, if you will find Jesus and
embrace Him, it will only be because He has called you Himself.  I cannot make that happen, and neither can
you.  The most I can do is bring you to
the foot of His Cross and point you towards your own introduction to Him.

I believe the Bible is the faithful compilation of
everything God intends for us to hear from Him. 
I have studied Its origins, Its interconnectedness and continuity of
theme, Its successful impact on people’s lives (including my own), and examples
of archeological and historical proofs. 
In the end, I realized that even if I were to hold the original texts
upon the parchments which Moses and Paul wrote, I would still be faced with the
same issue.  I must choose whether to
believe It, or not.

You question the validity of the Bible because it refers to
Itself.  One reason I believe the Bible
is because it wonderfully references Itself. 
Jesus pointed to all of the ancient texts which referred to Him, as
proof of His Deity.  I think that by your
reference that would be circular logic, but in having faith that would be
called prophesy fulfilled.

The Bible is called the Word of God, Jesus is called the
Word of God revealed in flesh to us, and we are told that we will only find
belief through faith in them both.  My
faith, once established, showed me the tapestry of the Bible like I never could
see it with eyes lacking faith.  If you
do not believe the Bible, I can understand that, because you do not have faith.  However, without that faith, you will never
see the Bible or Jesus for what they are. 
Only God can give this faith, if you will only ask for it.

My
suggestion to you, if you genuinely want to get to the bottom of the issue, is
this – without bias, seek God in the way He says he can be found, and see if He
responds.  See if you find Him.  If you truly endeavor to pursue the truth,
and He shows up, then you have your answer. 
If He doesn’t, then the rest of us would be wrong.  I believe He will come through, once again.




General and Specific Revelation

Explain
the difference between general and specific revelation.  Use specific texts to support your answer.

These
are the two ways God has elected to reveal Himself to mankind.  General revelation is through the natural
world and our natural selves – IE: Romans 1.19 states that every man knows of
Him in that “what may be known of God is manifest in them, for God has shown it
to them”, and Psalms 19.1 “The heavens declare the glory of God; And the
firmament shows His handiwork.”

Specific
revelation is God revealed through the supernatural, or the miraculous – IE:
Preincarnate physical, Gen 18.1 “Then the LORD appeared to (Abram) by the
terebinth trees of Mamre,as he was sitting in the tent door in the
heat of the day”, or Gen 14.18 “Then Melchizedek king of Salem brought out
bread and wine. He was priest of God Most High”; or, in the vision in Daniel 7;
or His voice in Matt 3.17 “And a voice from heaven said, “This is my Son, whom I love; with him I am well pleased.”; or through His
movement to guide men as per 2 Pet 1.21 “for prophecy never came by the will of
man, but holy men of God spoke as they were moved by the Holy Spirit.”  Most
importantly of course is God made in Flesh, Jesus the Christ. Of John 1.14 “And
the Word became flesh and dwelt among us, and we beheld His glory, the glory as
of the only begotten of the Father, full of grace and truth.”

I
believe both categories speak of His character. 
No person will ever be without an awareness of the God of Everything,
and on the other hand, all who pursue Him can find Him personally.  It seems any other god remains beyond reach,
never allowing the lesser beings below to see him, yet in contrast our God has
allowed, encouraged, us to press in close – even now through His Spirit in us
as believers.




Created in God’s Image and Likeness

What does it mean that man was created in God’s image and
likeness?

Being that the Bible states that God
has no material form, and the fact that all of us look very different both in
person, race and gender, I believe the Image and Likeness He imparted upon us
refers to His characteristics and attributes.

I believe the seat of who we are is
found in our soul – the soul is the eternal aspect of man, the part Jesus
resurrects, the part that flees to God when we die, the essence of who we
are.  Our soul contains our person, our
memories, the lessons learned, the reasons we will understand Who God is, the
center of our total worship of a worthy God.

I also believe this is seen in God’s
‘respect’ towards our person, in that He never violates our person and expects
us to do the same.  Our sins against each
other are rooted in personal offense, not so much the physical.  Hatred, envy, lust, slander, pride – all are
against another’s person.  Consider
suicide, a sin because it violates our own person. Or drunkenness, as it
arrests our moral awareness and surrenders it to another controlling
factor.  Conversely, love must be
expressed toward another, or how can it be love?  Love perfectly expressed toward another is
our example in Jesus.  Also consider that
even in our Salvation, God has never forced or violated another’s person.  Even in groups that argue ‘free’ will vs
predestination, both parties must agree that while a decision was made, then
why was it actually made and by whom? 
Even then I would argue that we make a decision as a moral agent, yet
under the undeniable, unavoidable urging of God.  But, He stops at urging, never resorting to
force that takes our moral accountability away. 
I see God bringing us to a point where what other choice can we possibly
make?

In this ‘person’ I believe He has lent
much of His own aspects, so that in seeing into ourselves and the people close
to us, we might know something about Him. 
Consider some of the expressions of humanity, or of being human:
Emotions, creativity, morality, organization, desire, personal expression,
worship, and perhaps most importantly, our central desire for lack of
discomfort – namely, peace.  Peace is one
of the most central aspects of God’s trinity.

I believe we can see something of the
Person of God by putting together the pieces of evidence we find in the
genders.  Man and women are undoubtedly
different, yet each is made in God’s image, and therefore each tends to possess
a predominant part of Him.  However, in
the beauty of a healthy marriage, both spouses might experience a fullness of
love and peace as they each contribute their person to a whole that exceeds the
sum.

As parents, we can understand Father’s
parenting over us.  Under authority, we
can learn the comfort of being cared for by someone we trust.  As an authority, we can grow in our mandate
to provide and be righteous.  All of
these require the attributes God has passed to us, and are at the same time the
proof He actually did.




Brief Explanation of the Trinity

Give your best explanation of the Trinity, using specific
texts to support your answer.

I am not sure I am prepared to answer
this.  I believe the basics of the
Trinity include Three Persons, all God, holding distinct offices and
responsibilities, with subordination among Them under Father, yet none of Them
no less God Supreme.  Some texts illustrating
the Three existing simultaneously, yet in Their own roles, would be:

God Holy Spirit, Gen 1.2 “And the
Spirit of God was hovering over the face of the waters“; God Father, Gen 1.26
“Then God said, “Let Us make man in Our image” (plural) and God Jesus, v27 “So
God created man in His own image” (unified), supported by Colossians
1.15-16 “He (Jesus) is the image of the invisible God, the firstborn over all
creation. 16 For by Him all things were created that are in heaven
and that are on earth, visible and invisible, whether thrones or dominions or
principalities or powers. All things were created through Him and for Him.”

We also see all Three present at Jesus’
baptism in Luke 3.21-22 “21 When all the people were baptized, it
came to pass that Jesus also was baptized; and while He prayed, the heaven was
opened. 22 And the Holy Spirit descended in bodily form like a dove
upon Him, and a voice came from heaven which said, “You are My beloved Son; in
You I am well pleased.”




Some Questions for the Pastor

Choosing a
Church

Some Questions
for the Pastor

Choosing
which Church to attend is not a simple question, because many issues are
involved.  To clarify – a good Church is
not necessarily what we might think, but it’s much more about what God thinks.  The Church is made up of His people and
leaders, and it goes on to reason that He has an opinion of what makes for a
good Church.

If
we were to find two Churches that He would approve of, then we are apparently
free to choose among them based on our preferences.  Churches, being made of people, will have an
endless variety of flavors and styles. 
And that’s great, because God loves the variety of people He has made to
fill His Churches.  We just need to make
sure we belong to a Church that obeys Him.

Church
leadership and their view of the Bible are two very important aspects coloring
a Church.  The Bible, and the Church’s opinion
of It, will dictate how they can be expected to handle everything under their
authority.  Knowing a Church’s leaders,
their character, and their direction is very important – because these are the
same people who will be in a place of authority over you, once you join.  You’ll want to be sure your leaders are
trying to do things God’s way.  Good
leaders will also be important to you if they are one day called on to help you
change course in your life.  Knowing that
your leaders do things God’s way is crucial.

The
following questions can help you identify the beliefs of the leadership of the
Church you are considering for membership. 
Consider Paul’s letter to the Colossians, and ask yourself if this
Church’s leaders are worthy, like Paul.

Colossians 1.25-29

I have become (the
Church’s; vs 24)
servant by the commission God gave me to present to you
the word of God in its fullness— the mystery that has been kept hidden for ages
and generations, but is now disclosed to the saints.  To them God has chosen to make known among
the Gentiles the glorious riches of this mystery, which is Christ in you, the
hope of glory.

We proclaim him, admonishing and teaching everyone
with all wisdom, so that we may present everyone perfect in Christ.  To this end I labor, struggling with all his
energy, which so powerfully works in me.

Purpose of the Church

What do you believe are
the main functions and goals of a Christian Church?

What role does God the
Father play in the world?  The Son?  The Holy Spirit?

What role does prayer
play in your Church?  Service?  Missions?

What is the Bible

What is your view of the
Bible?  Is it historical?  Inspired? 
Suggestive and/or authoritative?

How does the Bible play
into the direction and activities of the Church?  What about the leadership?

Is the rest of the
Bible’s contents as valid as Jesus’ own words?

What style of preaching
happens here?  Topical?  Expositional?

Jesus

Who do you believe Jesus is,
and what was His purpose in coming here?

What do you believe
Jesus’ purpose is now?

Do you believe Jesus’
birth was actually a Virgin birth?  Is
that important?

Was Jesus mother, Mary,
somehow special?  Was she without sin?

How is someone “Saved”?

Church Leadership

How is the leadership of
the Church organized?

How is leadership chosen
at your Church?

Do you believe there are
different leadership and service roles based on gender?

How do you believe a
Pastor comes to serve the Lord?

What does a Pastor need,
to do a good job?

How are corporate Church
business issues dealt with here?

What do you expect of
your Church attendees?

What is your position on
Church Membership?

Church Members

Do you have to be a
member to be involved with ministry at your Church?

If we attended here, what
ministries might we be involved in?

What attention does the
Church place on attendees’ growth or discipleship?  What avenues do you have available?

How is guidance and
discipline handled with Church members? 
Non members?

For an
excellent source of  more in-depth study,
see “Life in the Father’s House”, ISBN 1596380349




Trials from God and the results He intends from us

Trials from God and the results He intends from us.

Our
lives and circumstances – what are they? 
To ourselves, to us as we focus on ourselves, we are quick to lose sight
of what our lives and circumstances truly are. 
The truth is, in light of God’s view, everything we are – our lives and
circumstances – are at best secondary. 
We must always be recalled to the fact that God, not we, is the Center
of everything, and in turn, everything revolves around Him and His agenda.  Whatever that agenda may be.  It is all His, and we do well to remember
this.  We are His possession, His charge,
His servants.  We own nothing.

The
good news is that this totally Sovereign God over all things is a True, Loving,
Perfect, Flawless God.

Ps 18.30 – ‘As
for God, His way is perfect; the word of the Lord is proven; He is a shield to
all who trust in Him.’

He
is without fault, and His way is perfect. 
We must, and can, trust Him.  To
those who do, He is our Protector and Shield. 
He has not nor ever will fail – He has and continues to prove it in His
actions.  His actions never sway from His
character.

As
our Shield, we are promised safety. 
Safety in the One who alone can truly provide, can truly deliver on His Word,
Who alone has shown His ways to be perfect. 
In Him we are truly safe from true harm.

Isa 41.10 –
Fear not, for I am with you; Be not dismayed, for I am your God.  I will strengthen you, yes, I will help
you.  I will uphold you with my righteous
right hand.

He
is True, Perfect, Righteous – and will help and strengthen us.  He is trustworthy, and tells us not to be
dismayed, for He will hold us up with His right hand, His flawless, strong
hand.

This
same Protector works our lives, the same ones He alone owns, for His good
purpose, for His good agenda.  He does all
of this while remaining Perfect, our Shield, strengthening us, holding us up,
assuring us not to dismay, not to despair. 
As He conducts our lives and circumstances, we can trust in why and how
He does so:

Rom 8.28 – And
we know that all things work together for the good of those who love God, to
those who are called according to His purpose.

These
are assurances reserved for those who belong to Him, and who, loved first by
Him, respond in devotion back.  These
same children of God must know that all are indeed orchestrated by Father to
achieve His agenda.  We, who belong to
Him, are included in the process achieving His purpose.  All of His orchestration, which He perfectly
conducts over all creation, is worked in harmony for this purpose – and we can indeed
trust Him while He does His work.  We
must trust, we can trust – He is God Almighty, He loves us, and His directives
are clear.

So,
in this, as we find ourselves in the various circumstances of our lives each
day, we must conclude to stop and ask ourselves: what is the situation I have
found myself in, what does God think about it, and how must I respond?  We must ask this while remembering the above
truths, and our answers must also reconcile with these truths.  Finding ourselves in any given situation, we
must acknowledge we are still and remain the possession and responsibility of
an All Powerful, Omnipotent, Loving, True and Pure God – and that He has
brought us to this situation sovereignly, and in this He intends His purpose,
and that He protects us from true harm, and that all of life works together,
and that He will use these issues to develop His children – and that we are to
count our trials as all joy because of these truths.  But how? 
We must first understand, then in faith in God’s Word, we must do our
best to obey.

Jas 1.2-4 – My
brethren, count it all joy when you fall into various trials, knowing that the
testing of your faith produces patience. 
But let patience have its perfect work, that you may be perfect and
complete, lacking nothing.

Relying
on God’s working of all things to His good, this too must include trials.  The trials we face are in an endless variety,
yet all trials can be sure to share one thing in common – they will bring us to
face a decision to believe God, or not.  In some way, every trial arrives to exercise
our faith by challenging our belief and measuring it by our reaction.  Because these exercises are always under the
ultimate Lordship of Father, we can be glad He is sovereignly committing us in
order to work His purpose of growing our faith, and so producing patience.  This patience is apparently valuable to God,
and so to us, for if we ‘let patience have its perfect work’, we will enjoy the
purpose He intends – our growing towards His completion as his craftsmanship.

Jas 1.12 –
Blessed be the man who endures <trial>, for when he has been approved, he
will receive the crown of life which the Lord has promised to those who love
Him.

‘Who
endures trial’ is a truer translation than ‘endures temptation’.  More so, let each find its rightful place in
order, for temptation is a trial, but a trial is not a temptation.  Trials include many possibilities, including
temptation.  These trials are ultimately
for our benefit, and are so from God. 
Yet, temptations are not from God, for ‘He Himself <does not>
tempt anyone’.

By
enduring the trials brought to those who love Him, we participate in a Holy
Work, the Work of Sanctification, whereas we are purged of the sinful habits of
rebellion and of calling God a liar.  In
exchange, we are of those under His tutelage and who will be brought to His
approval as the Finisher of our faith.

Jas 1.19-20 –
‘So then, my beloved brethren, let every man be swift to hear, slow to speak,
slow to wrath; for the wrath of man does not produce the righteousness of God.’

This
Sanctifying work, conducted by Father Himself, is also typically a slow and
prolonged process.  We all possess a rate
at which we are brought to understand, absorb, and embrace the righteous
attributes of God.  His work is of the
Spirit in us as believers, yet while still in our sinful flesh – a body bent on
sin, yet at the same time embodied by the very Spirit of God Himself.  This same flesh resists God, left to
itself.  This same flesh will be
increasingly brought to comply with the Spirit within it, until we are called
to our Maker, our Saviour.  An arduous
process, we easily rebel as our old ways are exchanged for the New.  In our discomfort, we are urged to be ‘swift
to hear’ the good counsel before us, to be ‘slow to speak’ so as not to stifle
our counselors, and to be ‘slow to wrath’ and not reject God’s good
administration of our lives and circumstances. 
Only in patient obedience will we enjoy the benefit of His efforts.  And so, for this we will count it all joy.

Rom 5.  – ‘But we <also> glory in
<afflictions>, knowing that <affliction> produces perseverance; and
perseverance, character; and character, hope.’

So,
obeying and counting it all joy, knowing there is also purpose behind it, we
read also of glory in these afflictions which again bear the fruit of
Sanctification.  Father’s goal is
achieved in our open obedience to His Prescription; steadfastly enduring
affliction ‘produces perseverance’, the willingness to stay the right course; producing
then ‘character’, the evidence of good personality, one of experience in God’s
dealings; then to ‘hope’, the disciple’s far-reaching expectation of his Lord’s
response.  This hope is the Creator’s
goal, the prize, the fruit borne of His craftsmanship – the hope which He does
not hastily create but rather draws forth in a patient harvest.  He does not settle for a one dimensional,
forced, created response – He instead delights in a genuine longing fermented
of genuine response from His creatures. 
And perhaps this is one of the joys He derives from His work – not
simply stones crying out upon command, but beings of will, of His Hand,
responding in a way one step past His direct input.

‘Now hope does
not disappoint, because the love of God has been poured out in our hearts by
the Holy Spirit who was given to us.’

Is
this His joy?  The hope forged in us in
response to His Husbandry?  Yet can this
hope also directly impress Him too?  He
began the work in the pouring out of love in us, and the echo we return to Him
is our hope.  Perhaps we can all enjoy
this hope, even God.

This
response, this hope, this crafting of our lives – all of this is reserved for
the children of the King.  Everyone else
must look to their father in expectation and receive only the bitter loss he
has to offer.  For we read that there are
only two of who we may belong – the prince of this world, or the King of all
kings.  And for either to whom we may
belong, to one or the Other, we can expect the fruit borne out of what
character each possesses.  The Liar is a
hateful, hopeless, deceptive, wicked task master, and those under his charge
can know only the same.  They must,
because he has nothing else to offer. 
Yet the Lord God is all that is Good, and His children will flourish in
His abundance.

‘Therefore,
having been justified by faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus
Christ.’

Faith
in our Lord Jesus and faith in what God says about Him in His Word to us; in
this faith, in Jesus alone, we are Justified to God the Father, to Whom we have
been an enemy in our offense and sin, for He alone is a Holy God Who cannot nor
will not tolerate offense nor suffer it unpunished.  Yet in His obedience to the Father and in
Grace then towards us, our Jesus received Hell’s punishment for mankind that we
might be ransomed in the forgiveness which is remarkably, undeservedly, offered
to sinners.  This forgiveness brings us
before the Father, reconciled to Him in the now absence of sin’s debt.  We are free!

‘our Lord
Jesus Christ, through whom also we have access by faith into this grace in
which we stand, and rejoice in hope of the glory of God.’

Having
faith, believing in what God says, ushers us into this grace of forgiveness,
and from this vantage we may gaze towards the glory of God, in justifiable hope
of Its Revelation.

Peace.  Faith. 
Hope.  All three exclusive
property of God, offered only to His children. 
All others must be devoid of these three.  So where does this leave us in the trying
times sure to visit us in this life?  For
the lost, they have nothing from their father to help them, and only more of
the same to torment them.  There is no
hope, only despair and false comfort. 
Yet for those Found, we shall count it all joy because we can be assured
that no aspect is lost on our God.  He
may, He will, bring trials to us – but He will never forsake us.  His
righteous approval waits for all who will understand and respond.  Amen.




Matt’s Baptism

Acts
8:26-40 (New International Reader’s Version)

Philip and
the Man From Ethiopia

   26An angel of the Lord spoke to
Philip. “Go south to the desert road,” he said. “It’s the road
that goes down from Jerusalem
to Gaza.” 27So
Philip started out. On his way he met an Ethiopian official. The man had an
important position. He was in charge of all the wealth of Candace. She was the
queen of Ethiopia.
He had gone to Jerusalem
to worship. 28On his way home he was sitting in his chariot. He was
reading the book of Isaiah the prophet. 29The Holy Spirit told
Philip, “Go to that chariot. Stay near it.”

   
30So Philip ran up to the chariot. He heard the man reading Isaiah
the prophet. “Do you understand what you’re reading?” Philip asked.

   
31“How can I?” he said. “I need someone to explain it
to me.” So he invited Philip to come up and sit with him.

   
32Here is the part of Scripture the official was reading. It says,
    “He was led like a sheep to be killed.
       Just as lambs are silent while their wool
is being cut off,
       he did not open his mouth.
    33When he was treated badly, he was refused a
fair trial.
       Who can say anything about his children?
       His life was cut off from the earth.”
(Isaiah 53:7,8)

   
34The official said to Philip, “Tell me, please. Who is the
prophet talking about? Himself, or someone else?” 35Then Philip
began with that same part of Scripture. He told him the good news about Jesus. 36
-37
As they traveled along the road, they came to some water. The official
said, “Look! Here is water! Why shouldn’t I be baptized?” 38He
gave orders to stop the chariot. Then both Philip and the official went down
into the water. Philip baptized him. 39When they came up out of the
water, the Spirit of the Lord suddenly took Philip away. The official did not
see him again. He went on his way full of joy. 40Philip was seen
next at Azotus. From there he traveled all around. He preached the good news in
all the towns. Finally he arrived in Caesarea.

Matthew
28:8-10, 16-20 (New International Reader’s Version)

8So the women hurried away from the tomb. They were afraid, but
they were filled with joy. They ran to tell the disciples.

   
9Suddenly Jesus met them. “Greetings!” he said.

   They
came to him, took hold of his feet and worshiped him.

   
10Then Jesus said to them, “Don’t be afraid. Go and tell my
brothers to go to Galilee. There they will see
me.”

16Then the 11 disciples went to Galilee.
They went to the mountain where Jesus had told them to go. 17When
they saw him, they worshiped him. But some still had their doubts.

   
18Then Jesus came to them. He said, “All authority in heaven
and on earth has been given to me. 19So you must go and make
disciples of all nations. Baptize them in the name of the Father and of the Son
and of the Holy Spirit. 20Teach them to obey everything I have
commanded you. And you can be sure that I am always with you, to the very
end.”

Mark
16:14-16

14Later Jesus appeared to the Eleven as they were eating. He spoke
firmly to them because they had no faith. They would not believe those who had
seen him after he rose from the dead.

   
15He said to them, “Go into all the world. Preach the good news
to everyone. 16Anyone who believes and is baptized will be saved.
But anyone who does not believe will be punished.

John 3

Jesus
Teaches Nicodemus

   1There was a Pharisee named
Nicodemus. He was one of the Jewish rulers. 2He came to Jesus at
night and said, “Rabbi, we know you are a teacher who has come from God.
We know that God is with you. If he weren’t, you couldn’t do the miraculous
signs you are doing.”

   
3Jesus replied, “What I’m about to tell you is true. No one can
see God’s kingdom without being born again.”

   
4“How can I be born when I am old?” Nicodemus asked.
“I can’t go back inside my mother! I can’t be born a second time!”

   
5Jesus answered, “What I’m about to tell you is true. No one
can enter God’s kingdom without being born through water and the Holy Spirit. 6People
give birth to people. But the Spirit gives birth to spirit. 7You should
not be surprised when I say, ‘You must all be born again.’

   
8“The wind blows where it wants to. You hear the sound it
makes. But you can’t tell where it comes from or where it is going. It is the
same with everyone who is born through the Spirit.”

Acts 1

Jesus Is
Taken Up Into Heaven

   1Theophilus, I wrote about Jesus in
my earlier book. I wrote about all he did and taught 2until the day
he was taken up to heaven. Before Jesus left, he gave orders to the apostles he
had chosen. He did this through the Holy Spirit. 3After his
suffering and death, he appeared to them. In many ways he proved that he was
alive. He appeared to them over a period of 40 days. During that time he spoke
about God’s kingdom.

   
4One day Jesus was eating with them. He gave them a command.
“Do not leave Jerusalem,”
he said. “Wait for the gift my Father promised. You have heard me talk
about it. 5John baptized with water. But in a few days you will be
baptized with the Holy Spirit.”




How and why the Lord keeps us Saved

Looking at the exhortations of Hebrew concerning the
perseverance of the saints and God’s use of Scripture, among other things, to
accomplish this, it seems we can often find difficulty in understanding how
this is so and how it even fits theologically. 
Perhaps, by taking a few steps back to look at the bigger picture, we
can have a better understanding of this, and so, do a better job of cooperating
with the Lord in the effort.

To begin, consider God’s Word.  God, being righteous and without bounds in His
ability, is also interestingly bound and constrained by whet He declares.  Whatever He utters, stands for the duration
of His existence, and cannot be changed, altered, nor amended.  Consider this, for a moment, in the context
of our human experience.  If we say
something, promise something, or even promise something as an oath or law or
commitment, we are bound by our honor to follow through, or at best will be
held accountable by other fallen men. 
Yet even in oath or in law, we find ourselves able to change or
disregard our promise in some way, even if it brings consequences.  The unfortunate truth is that we have the
ability to swerve form what we said.

God, on the other hand, is bound in His perfect honor.  Our deviation from an aoth is sin before God,
yet He cannot sin, and so cannot negate what He has promised.  The result is that whatever He speaks, stands
for eternity.  Jesus pointed to this in
saying our ‘yes should be yes, and our no should be no’; that ‘not one jot or
tittle of the Law would pass away, yet would be fulfilled’; and that ‘their
eyes are blind and their ears are stopped, lest they hear the Word and be
healed’.

The last reference might seem curious.  To understand it, consider the bigger issues
at hand,  Scripture tells us that the
elect were known before the foundation of the world, and because of this, we
can see the lineage of God’s work.  The
typical belief seems to be that the work of Messiah began and focused on the
Cross, and that it was there that everything was started and completed, as far
as our Salvation is concerned.  The fact
of the matter, however, is quite contrary.

The Christ’s Sacrifice and Resurrection were pivotal in His
overall work, but not the end of the issue by any means.  In His punishment, death, and raising up by
God, Jesus became eligible to begin the work He will be occupied with for the
rest of our existence now, in these Last Days, until the enemy is finally put
under and the Elect are finally gathered for presentation.  In His sinless birth and subsequent life, He
maintained and secured His qualification to become the Sacrifice Who would
present the human Blood necessary to cover the sins of men, and once so, be
raised to an endless human life as the One responsible for initiating and
maintaining our sinless status.  All of
this He does now as our High Priest, the office He won by the Sacrifice at the
Cross.  The Cross was not the whole of
his Work.  It was the beginning, the
qualifier responsible for earning His role now as our Mediator, a role He will
continue to hold until sin is put away forever.

Major commitments uttered by God:

The Elect shall be cultivated and gathered.

Their Salvation shall come through a Man, and He will
destroy the author of the rebellion they are being rescued from.

This people will be shown a facsimile of Heaven’s
governance, and by it will be taught obedience and its burden.

The One to rescue them will do so through satisfying the
Law, and in a new fashion under a new order, shall continue to secure them in
the same way they have been shown in the facsimile.

All of these things are sure and guaranteed, and for the
sake of His Name and Honor, they will not be allowed to fail.




Preparation for the Lord’s Supper

Preparation for the Lord’s Supper

The
New Covenant:  Bought in Christ’s
Sacrifice, Administered in His Blood

Followers of Christ are brought into
the New Covenant by the Atonement.  This
is possible through the breaking or sacrifice of Jesus’ Body, to finally
satisfy the Justice demanded by God for our sins.  This Covenant with us is sealed in His Blood,
the same Blood that was spilled out to pay the terrible cost of the world’s
sin.  It is this same Blood we must be
covered in to escape Judgment, to participate in the Next Passover.

The
Lord’s Table:  A Remembrance of Jesus and
His Work – Past, Present, and Future

The Lord’s Table, the Holy Eucharist,
is one of the two Sacraments He has given to the Church to declare our
surrender to Him and to continue in our reverent remembrance of what He has
done through the Cross.  As the Passover
celebration renewed Israel’s
remembrance of the Lord’s mighty work in Egypt, so too does the remembrance
of His Sacrifice meet the Living Spirit’s testimony in us who have been Saved
by the Passover Lamb Jesus.  This Table
represents the culmination of God’s Work in creation, the reason why He spared
humankind despite our continual rebellion against Him, the Promise of the first
Covenanting fulfilled in seeing Abram’s spiritual children gathered as God’s
people.

The
Celebration is for Believers, Alone

We who believe have received the
confirmation of our forgiveness by receiving His Spirit in us.  As well, only those who know Jesus as their
Savior can rightfully acknowledge His Sacrifice, and rightfully participate in
the Supper which celebrates our Lord on the Cross.

The Last Supper focuses it’s entirety
on the betrayal of Jesus and the Sacrifice He was about to become.  Even though He knew exactly what was ahead of
Him, He did not proceed without giving thanks to the Father.

The
Cross, its Sacrifice, and the Worthy Blood begin the Pinnacle of God’s
Redemptive Work

Christ is the Bridge between the Old
Covenant and the New.  His Work on the
Cross fully satisfied the demand of Sacrifice by the Law in His punishment,
this is the bread, and the forgiveness we may have is now available through
faith in His Grace, this is the cup.  The
Lord’s Supper tells us this Truth again and again as we do it in remembrance of
Him.

Christ
is the Bridge between Salvation for the Jews and Salvation for the World

Both the bread and the cup are offered
in relation to what He was sent to do. 
The bread represents His Body as food for our spirit.  His Body was soon to be broken physically in
death and spiritually in God’s punishment, which would make Him eligible to
transfer forgiveness to those He had suffered for.

The cup represents His Blood, spilled
out to make payment for those He represented when He stood in our place for the
punishment of Hell.  His Blood also seals
us in the Promise of the New Covenant, our reconciliation to God and our
assurance of escaping Judgment.

As the blood of the Passover lamb
spread on the doorposts caused Death to pass over Israel’s children, so too will
those covered in the Blood of God’s Lamb be delivered safely past the coming
death of Judgment.  In this Supper, the
Lord wants us to see and remember the reason He came here.  The Supper shows Him standing on both sides
of the Cross: His Body broken to satisfy God’s demand of payment for sin, and
His Blood of the New Covenant, in the Promise of Salvation for those covered in
It.  All of this we do in remembering the
Lamb and His Promise of the Passover to come.

Preparation for the Lord’s Supper

The
New Covenant:  Bought in Christ’s
Sacrifice, Administered in His Blood

  • Followers
    of Christ are brought into the New Covenant by the Atonement. 
  • We
    must be covered in this same Blood to escape Judgment, to participate in the
    Next Passover.

The
Lord’s Table:  A Remembrance of Jesus and
His Work – Past, Present, and Future

  • The
    Lord’s Table, the Holy Eucharist, is one of the two Sacraments He has given to
    the Church
  • This
    Table represents the culmination of God’s Work in creation.

The
Celebration is for Believers, Alone

  • Only
    those who know Jesus as their Savior can rightfully acknowledge His Sacrifice,
    and rightfully participate in the Supper which celebrates our Lord on the
    Cross.

The
Cross, its Sacrifice, and the Worthy Blood begin the Pinnacle of God’s
Redemptive Work

  • Christ
    is the Bridge between the Old Covenant and the New.
  • The
    Lord’s Supper tells us this Truth again and again as we do it in remembrance of
    Him.

Christ
is the Bridge between Salvation for the Jews and Salvation for the World

  • Both
    the bread and the cup are offered in relation to what He was sent to do.
  • As
    the blood of the Passover lamb spread on the doorposts caused Death to pass
    over Israel’s
    children, so too will those covered in the Blood of God’s Lamb be delivered
    safely past the coming death of Judgment.
  • All
    of this we do in remembering the Lamb and His Promise of the Passover to come.



Thoughts on Heb 6.4-9

Summary of thoughts on Heb 6.4-9 after our 3/23/05 meeting

In considering Heb 6.4-9, please
refer to the overall context and flow of the author’s arguments, beginning with
Chapter 3.  It is my opinion that
Chapters 3 and 6 are bookends to the picture illustrating the parallels between
Israel
in the wilderness and the greater group of all of humanity in this
‘generation’.  I believe the two are
further tied together for the expansive comparison through the promise of Rest
to both groups (of which both show members refusing it), as well as the Christ
presented in the chapters in between as our High Priest.

However, after a more thorough
study, I’ve reconsidered the following qualifier in regards to the hinge point
in Hebrews 6.4b.

Partaker (of the Holy Spirit), Metochos,
is the deciding word in the qualifiers. 
The word is inescapably referring to someone who has become a partner,
sharer, involved in a way not possible without Regeneration.  The qualifiers – enlightened, heavenly gift,
partakers, tasted the good word of God and the (as well as the) powers of the
age to come – must clearly define the person in question as a believer.  So if that is the case, what is the point
about this person?

I still hold there is first a
parallel to be recognized between the Israelis in the wilderness and the people
of ‘this generation’.  However, this
person is shown in a superior position over his Old Testament counterparts, in
that while they fell away in unbelief, this person will not be allowed to fall
away because 1) He is held in place by a better Covenant, under the auspice of
a superior High Priest who sees everything, with nothing hidden (Ch 4 & 5),
and, 2) Even if he did fall away (he can’t, he’s secure) he wouldn’t have any
recourse because he would be attempting to sacrifice the Christ a second time
(won’t happen) for himself (God already willed it in Christ for him the first
time).  Therefore, since this person will
be held in Eternal Security, and will not be afforded a second chance at
Atonement, (let alone him crucifying Christ again himself, as well as bringing
Him shame), it is therefore truly impossible for this to happen.  There is merit in the parallels, but this
passage shows the situation to be superior in its security, over the first
scenario in the wilderness.  I hold vs
7&8 to be seen the same as in the original argument.

If this is the case, the passage
is simply pointing to the fact it is impossible for a believer to fall away,
let alone be reinstated again.  The one
Sacrifice is sufficient, along with the holding of each believer in the
Covenant by an all powerful God and Savior.

This seems to fit better, but
still does nothing to help the understanding of the scope of the Atonement.

However, if this is correct, this
passage would be more about the superiority of Christ the Priest, the singular
nature of the offer of Forgiveness, and the permanence of the Final Sacrifice –
than it would be of what happens to those who ‘fall away’, due to the fact that
the person in this example cannot exist.

Thoughts on Hebrews 6.4-9

Hebrews
6:4-9 (New King James Version)

4For it is impossible for those who were once
enlightened, and have tasted the heavenly gift, and have become partakers of
the Holy Spirit, 5and have tasted the good word of God and the powers of the
age to come, 6if they fall away, to renew them again to repentance, since they
crucify again for themselves the Son of God, and put Him to an open shame.

    7For the earth which
drinks in the rain that often comes upon it, and bears herbs useful for those
by whom it is cultivated, receives blessing from God; 8but if it bears thorns
and briers, it is rejected and near to being cursed, whose end is to be burned.

    9But, beloved, we are
confident of better things concerning you, yes, things that accompany
salvation, though we speak in this manner.

The question seems to revolve
around the identification and scope of those who ‘fall away’, and their
fate.  To examine this, chapter 3 begins
the discourse.

Hebrews 3.1-18

There is an unmistakable
difference between the Saved and those destroyed in the wilderness.  All heard, yet most would not believe despite
the clear evidence before them, as well as their promises to do so.

4.1-2

Author continues to show 1.
Concern for those in the midst who hear, yet don’t belong in belief, and 2. The
same Gospel presented to those lost in judgment to the wilderness is the same
Gospel proclaimed in these last days, His Age of Grace.

4.3-10

The predestined – those promised
rest – are yet to be completely revealed, for they are shown to still be
scheduled for Redemption even after the wilderness, David, Joshua, and the Lord
Himself.

4.11

Therefore, beware of falling
short, which would betray the truth of a lack of Salvation, made known through
the same sort of disobedience seen in the wilderness.

4.12-13

To assure there is no deception
and thus false hope of Salvation lying unrevealed, know that we can rely on the
Truth of God’s Word to show the reality of our condition.  With it, all issues hidden in the heart will
be laid bare for examination, if we would only embrace it.

5.1-4

The high priests we (the Jews)
all know are sympathetic in understanding the weakness of our condition, yet
they are not without their limitations.

5.5-10

The reason why Jesus is a better
Mediator – our perfect, compassionate High Priest.

5.11-14

Rebuke for laziness and
exhortation to repent and use the tools given them.

Hebrews 6.4-8

Now, tying back
to those in the wilderness in Chapter 3, the author returns to the subject of
‘those who fall away’.  Beginning with a
solid statement of ‘It is impossible’, he continues on to the qualifying
factors of these people, enumerating one issue upon the next until all of the
parallels with those who perished in the wilderness, are revealed.

In the
wilderness, the Hebrews were ‘enlightened’ to the Gospel and God’s expectations.
After the Cross, so were the Hebrews, and later the Gentiles.  As well, everyone in all Creation is aware of
God (Rom 1.20).

In the
wilderness, they also ‘tasted the heavenly gift’, as do we now, after His
Incarnation and thus the Cross.  The
Preincarnate Christ protected Israel,
and God’s Wrath was stayed if they would adhere to His expectations.  So too do we all enjoy peace, both the
unregenerate are yet spared God’s wrath, and those who believe and obey the
Call to Salvation now have peace with God.

What is it to
‘partake in the Holy Spirit’?  If this
means to be under His blessings, be it His presence or His edification, then
both those in the wilderness as well as all of mankind now living, share this
experience.  They had God’s Truth
revealed to them.  After His Ascension ,
the Spirit poured out on us all to witness God’s Truth.  Even more so, He is given to the Saved He
indwells.

 ‘And have tasted the good word of God and the
powers of the age to come’ – Have not both groups done so?  Moses brought the Word and mediated many
mighty works of God.  At the time of
Hebrews’ writing, as well as even now, we too share claim to this experience.

All of these
qualifiers point to the reality of Chapter 3 and the parallels between those of
the Exodus and the contemporary Hebrews (and so, all of us now who
believe).  This is an illustration of the
precarious place we still hold today on the brink of damnation, unless we
believe and are shuttled to the surety of Salvation.  Anyone not yet Saved stands at the cliff’s
edge, only one breath away from a sealed fate.

The meat of the
passage is obviously verse 6.  The focus
is primarily on the impossibility of crucifying the Lord again, once the only
opportunity for Atonement has expired upon our death.  The passage is meant to show the one-time
supremacy and finality of the High Priest’s Sacrifice, and the futility of
expecting another chance at Salvation once one has irrevocably ‘fallen away’
from that opportunity of Redemption, through death.  He will not be put again to an open shame –
He has already done this; it was most sufficient, and “It is done”.

This cannot mean
a true believer, anchored in Christ, who has fallen away.  To think so would mean Salvation is not sure,
and defy numerous evidences in Scripture.

But what of the
person who “backslides”?  It must mean
one of two things – either that person never belonged to Christ, or, he is a
very poor example of a Christian, who’s ‘works will be burned in the fire’, and
who continues to ‘grieve the Holy Spirit’. 
But before we dismiss this thought, how else might we reconcile never
losing our Salvation, and the command not to grieve the Spirit, and our
inability to never be completely away from sin while still in the corrupt
flesh?  What is the ramification to an irrevocable
Salvation of a lifelong ‘smaller’ sin versus a lifelong ‘bigger’ sin, if both
are commanded to be submitted to God?  Is
not all sin abhorrent to God?  Since it
is the Father’s prerogative to chasten His children, as well as to see their
Salvation through, isn’t this His issue to judge?  This is not permission to sin, but perhaps a
realization of the mystery of God’s Grace. 
Does this raise questions seemingly irreconcilable?  Perhaps, but the existence of all three
concepts cannot be erased from Scripture. 
Therefore, we are left with either a vast swath of God’s grace, or still
a bad assumption.  None the less, this
issue is confined to what defines a backslider, not the meaning of ‘falls
away’.

This phrase ‘falls
away’ might be further defined in Luke
8.13
and 2 Thess 2.3.  In our nomenclature, we say Salvation and
Saved, both in the present tense.  The
reality is, however, we are yet to be Saved in deed, but are for now preserved
in a Covenant promising it will indeed happen, shown so with the deposit of the
Holy Spirit.  In the mean time, we are
held in Forgiveness and shielded from Wrath. 
The Promise is so sure, that even now we can go before God’s Throne
under the Righteousness imparted to us. 
We can actually stand before God as Forgiven, with that Act overcoming
the fact we are still yet sinners.  This
is a very busy time for our Redeemer as He continually mediates our sin,
holding us in the Covenant until we are removed from the flesh.  The actual Salvation will come on the Day of
Redemption, but we, and more importantly God, recognize its validity now,
before the fact.

So too, is the
phrase ‘fall away’ in the present tense while yet to be fulfilled in the end..  The falling away is an act of unbelief and
rebellion, carried out in action, and if its course is unchanged, will result
in damnation.  The falling away began
with sin’s entrance, and all flesh fathered by man is held to the
inheritance.  This is our natural
response, unless we are overcome and preserved in Christ, to which He can expect
us to cooperate in our Sanctification. 
We are all disobedient to varying degrees, but no one will thwart God’s
claim on a soul.

All of this
requires an Atonement different than what Calvin apparently saw.  If this is to be true, then Christ died for
all mankind, not just the Elect.  A
universal Atonement is necessary for verse 6 to come together, for it forbids
the attempt of the lost who have died without claiming Christ’s offer to
reinstate the Sacrifice a second time. 
To paraphrase, “Once the unregenerate leave the flesh in death, while rejecting
and refusing to believe the fact that Christ is the Savior of all mankind, as
well as the only way to Redemption to the Father, they can no longer expect a
second chance.  He bought them wholesale,
and now He will use His ownership against them in Judgment.”  This anchors the argument beginning in verse
4, “It is impossible”.

Does this mean all who come to
Christ have made a decision to accept what He claims as true?  Sure does. 
What then, does this mean in terms of the so called ‘free will’ of those
who chose?  Perhaps we need to ask “Why
then, did you choose?”  God’s effectual
call arrests the Elect, compelling us to action in the Truth.  We do not typically black out, only to awaken
to Salvation.  Instead, God lovingly
takes us by the hand, or by the hair if necessary, and pulls us into the Boat.

The example given in verses 7
& 8 shows a clear differentiation between fruit and briars.  Again, their existence is not questioned, but
to whom each belongs is the issue.  Aside
from application to the above line of thinking, (in regards to a sinning
believer, backsliders, etc.), a key point must be reckoned concerning verse
8.  In the original, the Scripture
confirms that a three step process takes place – bearing thorns, rejected and
brought near the curse, and finally, the burning.  If this is a picture of an unregenerate life,
flirting with the curse of Hell, which exhibits that fact in it bears briars
without value, then that person will die without changing course.  Verse 7 is an affirmation of the rain falling
on the just and not – common Grace – with all of us, Saved or not, benefiting
God’s blessing.  We are the wheat amongst
the tares, but in the end we will all be separated for Glory or for the Fire.

Hebrews 6.9-12

Finally, the author comes back to
the believers he exhorts, assuring them they need not worry as they continue to
show evidence of Saving faith though the fruits promised to accompany
Salvation.  Now, these cannot be confused
with the regular works of the unregenerate, but instead need to be reckoned as
the evidence the Spirit always produces. 
While James argues that the faith preceding the works is what separates
their value, the works themselves are still the same.  There are better ways God points to in
discerning our spiritual health. 
However, verse 10 shows that God watches and the readers were to be
encouraged.  In closing, verses 11-12
bring final balance to the discourse, urging them to press on, in agreement to
the points made.

My summary is that the scope of
who it is that ‘fall away’ is centered on the whole of the unsaved, whether in
the Church, or violently battling against Her. 
And no one, including the staunchest of enemies, will escape our
Sovereign God if He has them slated for Salvation – nor will any of His Elect
ever be allowed to exit the Covenant of the Blood, even if they press It to It’s
limits.  Once Saved, this person is now
God’s responsibility, for the defense of His Good Name.

This passage is a warning to both
the carpet baggers and the deceived who are yet to be Saved among us in the
Church.  But it also needs to include
anyone still alive yet resisting the Truth of Christ and His ownership of us
all.  In either case, God’s means are
deep and unknown, but we do know He will not lose any given to our Lord, and
that offer is open to any who would believe and repent.

James 2:18 (New King James Version)

18But someone will say, “You
have faith, and I have works.” Show me your faith without your works, and
I will show you my faith by my works.

Hebrews 3:6

6but Christ as a Son over His own
house, whose house we are if we hold fast the confidence and the rejoicing of
the hope.

Hebrews 3:12

12Beware, brethren, lest there be
in any of you an evil heart of unbelief in departing from the living God;

Romans 1:20

20For since the creation of the
world His invisible attributes are clearly seen, being understood by the things
that are made, even His eternal power and Godhead, so that they are without
excuse,

Luke 8:13

13But the ones on the rock are
those who, when they hear, receive the word with joy; and these have no root,
who believe for a while and in time of temptation fall away.

2 Thessalonians 2:3

3Let no one deceive you by any
means; for that Day will not come unless the falling away comes first, and the
man of sin[a] is revealed, the son of perdition,

Hebrews 6:4-9 (New King James Version)

4For it is impossible for those
who were once enlightened, and have tasted the heavenly gift, and have become
partakers of the Holy Spirit, 5and have tasted the good word of God and the
powers of the age to come, 6if they fall away,[a] to renew them again to repentance, since they
crucify again for themselves the Son of God, and put Him to an open shame.

    7For the earth
which drinks in the rain that often comes upon it, and bears herbs useful for
those by whom it is cultivated, receives blessing from God; 8but if it bears thorns
and briers, it is rejected and near to being cursed, whose end is to be burned.

    9But, beloved,
we are confident of better things concerning you, yes, things that accompany
salvation, though we speak in this manner.

Assumptions

Can anyone be beyond the Saving
Grace of God, now, in this age of Grace, yet before they die?  No.

Fruit:  The man challenged by James in 2.18 has works
– ‘fruit’ – yet is shown still damned by his lack of faith despite his works.

Once across the threshold of
Salvation, who can be lost?  None.

Salvation is sure, once we are
lashed to our only Salvation, the Christ.

All will be enlightened to the
Gospel, per Romans 1.20; partakers of Common Grace, partakers of the Holy
Spirit who visits and convicts all in the world, and edifies only the Saved He
indwells.

Christ’s Work had to be a
universal Atonement, not limited.  Seems
to fit better with Scripture.




Jesus’ mother and Father – the God-man

Jesus’ mother and Father –
the God-man

What
does Scripture reveal to us concerning the mystery of Jesus’ God and man
realities?  He came here to be among us,
Jesus the Son of God, God Himself in every sense, yet also fully man.  The Son of Man, introduced without sin and
obedient to His death, fully by design, intent, and necessity to bring His own
out from under the very same Law he was born under – releasing us from the Law
through our spiritual death and rebirth in His Spirit’s power.  Without this death, we are bound to the law
and to the sentence sin demands.

But
how did He become this unique Man?  He
must be both, yet without sin.  More
specifically, He must be introduced into humanity as true flesh and bone, yet
without the stain we all carry as sons of Adam, and with the attributes of God
as well.

In
the Garden, God set down the command both Adam and Eve would live under, but
Scripture records God giving instruction only to Adam (Gen 2.15-17), of which he
would apparently be responsible for Eve’s instruction.  His exclusive revelation to Adam, and so his
responsibility, is further seen immediately after the Fall (Gen 3.14-19)
as God deals with the three progressively. 
Adam is the last to be dealt with, as God started with the least and
finished with the most responsible.  Eve,
while being the first to eat of the Fruit, is not the focus of the failure, nor
responsible for the introduction of the lasting problem of sin in
humanity.  Instead, it is Adam who is
held accountable by God – due to his responsibility given in God’s instruction
to him alone, his failure to effectively instruct and shepherd Eve, in his
standing by while she made the decision and ate of it, and finally and most
importantly, his partaking of it himself. 
Adam’s higher accountability is illustrated in God dealing with him
last.  Now, afterwards, he has placed men
and women under an order of authority, apparently to remain in place as long as
sin reigns among mankind.

This
order of accountability is central to understanding the contributions necessary
to arrive at the God-man’s sinless birth. 
This also would need to be possible without God violating or arresting
His law.

Scripture
testifies we die in our inheritance of Adam, and It also tells us we will be
Saved through the new Adam.  The
significance is in that our sin nature has been passed to us by Adam, not
Eve.  Our Salvation is also the
responsibility of the new Adam.  This is
also evident when we consider the conception of the Christ-man.

Mary
was surely a sinner as all of the rest of humanity, despite the lie the
Catholic Church attempts to present in her sinless-ness.  She, as all of our daughters, had inherited
her sin nature from her father, and it would remain until God’s Salvation.  Scripture offers no other remedy, even
temporarily, of our sin.  We are either
under the law or not.  Furthermore, she
could not have received this sin nature from her mother.  The final proof of this must be our Lord’s
own conception.  If God will not ignore
His Word and the consequences, Mary had to be a sinner, but her sin had to have
no contribution to His sinless beginning. 
Our daughters’ sin ends with them, and it is not an inheritance for their
children.

Mary,
while a sinner, was the human contributor to God’s insertion into humanity.  She was also a Jew that He would be born of a
woman, and born under the very Law He would fulfill and overcome (Gal
4.4-5
).  His Father, sinless by
necessity and miraculous to satisfy prophesy, was His God contribution.  A Father outside of the curse, able to
fulfill Isaiah 7.14, and of the essence of God, was mandatory.  She made him a Son of flesh, and He made Him
a sinless Son of God.

Only
God Himself could have been the Father of our Lord, just as Scripture
testifies.  Only Someone able to
miraculously impregnate Mary, as well as bring a Son into flesh Who would be
free from the sin we all are doomed to from Adam, the root of all races.

This
explains why enemies of the Cross are so bent on challenging the sinless yet
human birth.  If He was not flesh, nor
sinless, He could have no role whatsoever in the Sacrifice.  If He was not all of these things, there
would be no value on the Cross, nor any of the consequences that followed.  Give us a Saviour Who is only flesh, or Who
is stained with sin, and the whole issue is moot.  Thank God for His provision, and thank Jesus
for His obedience, Sacrifice, and subsequent work now on High as our Faithful
and Perfect High Priest – God glorified in His body of flesh.




Our Biblical Tapestry

Our
Biblical Tapestry

The
goal of this Study is that you would grow in seeing and understanding the Bible
as a tapestry of sorts.  We reference a
tapestry because it represents a whole picture – and in this case it is the
Revelation of God to you, through His Word.

A
tapestry is woven, and there are many different sorts of threads which run
through it.  If you imagine looking up
close and tugging on an individual thread, you might also imagine seeing where
else that thread runs through the tapestry. 
Studying the Bible, especially by reference, is illustrated in this way
too.

If
a tapestry is a woven picture of a story or idea, then see the Bible as a
tapestry a million miles squared.  And in
this tapestry are sections which are firmed up in your mind, while around these
sections are all of the blind area that you don’t yet understand or are even
aware of.  It might look sort of like
jigsaw puzzle that has several groups of the pieces, but most of the puzzle is
yet to be assembled.

In
your tapestry, these patches represent your current scope of Biblical
understanding.  Our job is to always be
sure the patches of our tapestry are true and confirmed, and to use them to aid
us as we continue to reveal more and more of the weave.

Pulling
on the Threads

The
Scripture cross references found on the inside margin of many Bibles today are
an excellent study tool.  Each of these
numbered references point out the various threads running through the verses as
they make their way through the rest of the Bible.  Pausing to follow each reference as you work
through your main passage of study helps you to see these threads revealed, and
shows you how they are also anchored in other bodies of text.  As we grow in our familiarity and
understanding of God’s Word, we come to recognize more and more of the islands
of thruth, and how they are linked together. 
And this is at the very foundation of any person’s Biblical acuity –
continuing to see more and more of these patches of the tapestry surface, while
recognizing the common threads that run in between each of them.




Why must we pray?

Why must
we pray?

We are commanded to pray

Salvation is free, but we’re not freed from service

It is not difficult to find Scripture commanding us to pray.

Pray without ceasing ( )

Pray lest you fall in to Satan’s hands ( )

Pray to your Father… ( )

Become more Christlike, be Sanctified, through confession
and growth in prayer ( )

More ( )

And fortunately, our Father has ensured that we are very
capable of carrying out His expectations.

We are drawn to pray

Isn’t it easy to pray when we are in trouble?  Looking to God for help during difficulties
is one way He expects us to seek Him. 
But what about the rest of the time?

A great byproduct of good prayer is edification in His
Spirit (consider Paul’s words to Timothy). 
There is often a deep satisfaction in spending intimate time in good
prayer with God.  This encouragement is
rewarding and draws us back for more. 
Jesus has promised that if we obey Him and do what He has told us to do,
we will be rewarded with His loving presence. 
(John 14:21)

We have the means to pray

A wise person in charge knows that in order for his
subordinates to flourish, they must have both the opportunity and the ability
to carry out their responsibilities.  God
our Father is absolutely the best overseer, and all things exist under His
provision, or supply.

He has made sure His children have a Priest, forgiveness,
access, the Holy Spirit, His Will in the Word, and plenty of opportunity.  Later we will discuss these means in greater
detail.  The main point is that He has made
it possible to succeed by providing all of the ingredients.  All that is required of us is obedience to
His Will.

We will be held accountable for our prayer

When someone is directed to do something – is given the
opportunity and has the means to do it – they will also be held accountable for
their response.  In this case we are told
to do so by God Himself, and He keeps perfect accounts of how we respond.

The examination lying ahead of us is a sure thing, and the
consequences are, too.  The good news is
that the Lord has promised rich rewards for those who love Him and labor for
Him, while those who do not will ‘suffer as one passing through the fire, yet not
perishing’.  There will be much joy in
our gathering in Heaven, but there will also be a lot of realization in what
has been lost through a failure to comply. 
Ephesians 2:10 tells it quite well – that we are still here, now Saved,
to serve God in good works.  God our
Provisionary has provided the opportunity and means to do this.

Every issue is eligible for prayer

All things under God’s sovereignty fall into one of two
categories:  those things in His Will,
and those not.  In both cases, prayer is
appropriate.

For the issues in His Will, we give Him gratitude and
appreciation, and adore Him for it.  He’s
responsible for each breath we take, and for all of Creation.  What about the work each of us has seen Him
do?  And what about all that He promises
in His Word, which He guarantees will be done?

As for the issues out of His Will, those polluted in sin,
there is plenty of opportunity.  But this
is no accident.  God’s Creation has been
subjected to sin in order for us to have a need of Him, and ample opportunity
to learn how to rely on His provision through faith.  Every time we take an issue to Him properly
in prayer, He is glorified, the issue is rectified, and we are Sanctified.  Every answered prayer is another issue
brought under alignment with God’s Will, and this pleases Him.




To Whom and how we pray

To Whom
and how we pray

God in Heaven
exists eternally in harmony and unity. 
The three persons of God revealed to us in Scripture, Whom we call the
Godhead or Trinity, are an eternal mystery. 
However, three distinct expressions of God are revealed in His Word, and
each of His roles are special and purposeful in prayer.

God the Father; the Source and Provisionary

A turning point
in our ability to effectively pray, and even successfully live as a child of
God, hinges on our view of God our Father. 
As Father, He is to be at the root of all of our needs met, our Provider
on all fronts.  This can be difficult to
grasp or even accept, especially if we try to compare Him with our earthly
fathers.  Like all men born into sin,
earthly fathers are sinners and prone to failure and limitations.  But God our Father is superior in ability, love, and motive.  In all three
things, He is pure and without limits, and He always deals with us in our best
interests.  Realizing that we never have
anything to fear as He deals with us is truly liberating.  We can always trust Him.  Knowing this frees us from our fears of His
response, because we can trust that He is superior, and that the outcome will
always be right if we follow Him.

As the Source
of all things, our Father possesses all resources.  Consider for a moment that He is without
bounds, and that He is over everything. 
That means all things, without exception.  As our Father, His desire is to see His
children learn to rely upon Him and to grow into the potential He has given us
as heirs of His resources.  His pleasure
is in seeing us flourish in our surrender to His provision.  He wants us to rely upon Him and learn how to
be responsible in using His resources. 
We pray to our Father for our need, and in our thanks for all of His
provision over us.

God the Christ; our Priest, Intercessor, and
Perfector

God the Father
has provided Jesus so we can do our part in His desire.  As our Provisionary, our Father has included
everything we need to serve Him in an acceptable way.  Jesus is pivotal in our relationship to our
Father, because we still are sinners, and we need forgiveness to thrive under
Him.  This is important because to grow
in usefulness requires us to interact with our Father, and to interact with our
Father requires us to have submissive and forgiven hearts.  Jesus completely meets the gap between God’s
requirements and our failure.

Jesus was sent
to eventually become the perfect representative, or priest, between God and
mankind.  Beginning with His sinless
birth, He lived among sin without sinning Himself, and finally embodied our sin
and its punishment as the flawless sacrifice, so that He could always stand in
our defense before the Father’s judgment. 
In line with the Father’s demands under the Law, Jesus fulfilled the
roles of both Priest and Sacrifice, and then went on to sit beside the Father
to represent mankind.  Today, He
continues to be the only High Priest the Father recognizes, and no one
communicates with God without going through Jesus.

He did not sit
down next to the Father to quietly wait for the end of the world.  Instead, Jesus’ continual intercession at the
Throne maintains His gift of Salvation and our effectiveness as servants to God
the Father.  Our ‘flesh’ has not yet been
reborn, and we continue to sin – therefore we continue to need a priest to have
forgiveness. This is not a threat to our Salvation, but it is our continually
being restored in our relationship with the Father.  Our Salvation is now secured in Jesus’ current
intercession, and in the future at the Great Judgment.  We are free from the Father’s anger because
of Jesus’ always saying, “I’ve paid for this sin, too, Father.”  We can always rely on Jesus representing us.

Jesus is
responsible for our growing in useful service now, and for our presentation to
the Father at the Gathering.  The ‘good
works’ we were Saved for serve the purpose of showing God to the world now, and
in shaping us for God later.  Starting at
the point of our Adoption, we continue to grow to become more like Jesus, Who
now owns us.  This process is our Sanctification, where we leave
more of our old selves behind, and in obedience, become more like what God sees
in our potential as His children.  All of
the means the Father has provided – a perfect High Priest, forgiveness, His
Spirit in us, limitless opportunity to grow and serve Him – are tools through
which Jesus oversees our preparation and
forgives our failures.  He is getting us
ready to meet and live with God Himself. 
We pray to Jesus and rely upon Him for all of these things, confessing
our sin, sharing our struggles, leaning on His Divine humanity.  He’s been there, and He knows our
troubles.  Jesus our High Priest is our
best friend!

God the Spirit; the Truth and Essence God shares
with us

We are able to
interact with God in Heaven through His Spirit, Who is here in us as His
adopted children.  Christ’s ascension to
Heaven made way for His Spirit’s distribution to us here in Creation, and is a
central result of Jesus’ life, death, and resurrection.  The Holy Spirit in man, at this time now
after the Cross, is unique to authentic believers.  God’s Spirit will not be found in anyone who
is not forgiven and adopted.

The Holy Spirit
is responsible for teaching us how to grow into our potential.  He only conveys the truth that comes from the
Father, Who is truth in His very essence. 
The Spirit is placed in us to teach us how to know and obey God.  He exists as part of us.  This is an amazing sacrifice on God’s part,
because while we still are sinners, He remains patiently in us.  Despite our frequent offense to Him, He
faithfully continues to impress the truth to us.  He tolerantly serves us because of Jesus’
constant intercession.  He speaks truth
to us in revealing and applying the Word, and by edifying us in joy and
worship, or in convicting us in our sin. 
In all cases, it is because of He is bringing God’s truth to us so that
we will learn to properly react to God’s truth.

The Holy Spirit
is our assurance, a proof of our Salvation. 
He is a most priceless gift, the Spirit of God Whom those before the
Cross could only look forward to.  He is
the treasure we are stewards of, Whom we are to exercise to the fullest
potential.  He is our taste of God, a
preview of the sweet fellowship we will experience in full once we go
Home.  He is our connection in faith to
God, the very Spirit of Jesus our Savior. 
He relays our prayers before the Throne in the way useful and pleasing
to the Father.

To the Father, through His Christ, by His Holy
Spirit

Only people
whose High Priest is Jesus, who are indwelled with the Holy Spirit, are
recognized by the Father as His children. 
The Father has chosen to use priests as representatives between God and
mankind.  Jesus plainly stated that no
one would see the Father, except through Him. 
Jesus is the only One acceptable as the High Priest and perfect
Sacrifice.

Only the
children have the right to be heard and answered by the Father.  Effective prayer is only because of Jesus,
His Salvation, and His constant forgiveness of our sins.  Prayer before the Throne of Grace is only
through His Spirit in us, Who speaks only in truth.

Who do we pray
to?  This is best answered by considering
Who of the persons of God we worship and appeal to in prayer.  All three are God, and all three are worthy.  How do we pray?  Knowing Who God is and how He provides for
us, we can pray effectively to all three. 
This is good service to God, what He desires, and what He has told His
children to do in His Provision, His Priest, and His Spirit.




Sanctification; preparation for prayer

Sanctification; preparation for prayer

To experience God and His answer to prayer,
we must be properly prepared.  Anything
opposed to God’s Will is sin, and sin and it’s effects in us hurt our efforts
to serve Him.  This is not in opposition
to our Salvation.   Those Saved by Jesus
alone are fully forgiven.  However, we
are still here “in the flesh”, still sinners, and still suffering the
consequences of our sin – all of the way up to our death or our seeing the Lord
return.  But even though we are still
sinners, we can approach God as someone already forgiven, under the Sacrifice
of Jesus’ Blood.

The role of sin in the Christian life is
important to understand, because though we are forgiven, our sin still has it’s
consequences.  Knowing how sin affects
our walk, and what to do about it, will make the difference between a
successful walk and a failing one.

This is not an issue in opposition to our
Salvation.  Those in Jesus are Saved and
fully forgiven, though still sinners.  We
are Justified now before God on the merit of Christ’s Sacrifice and constant
intercession on our behalf.  However, we are
yet in the flesh, and we still suffer the results of our sin – all the way up
to death or when Christ returns and we are Glorified in our new bodies.

Though we are sinners, as Righteous through
Christ we may now approach the Throne of God in the Most Holy Place in
Heaven.  We may stand before God in the
Holy Spirit, clean under the Sacrifice of the Lamb’s Blood.

All of these issues speak of the Christian’s
heart.  The Gift of the Holy Spirit is
for the express purpose of the transformation of our heart, and thus our
life.  All that we do and are flows from
the heart, and God’s primary concern is our heart and the results following
it.  The nurture of our heart and our
interaction with the Holy Spirit in us is our primary responsibility, and sin
is the obstacle standing in our way.

The nurture of our relationship with the
Spirit in us revolves around five things – the study of the Word to know the
Person, Heart, and Will of God; prayer to God seeking our conformity to His
Word; the deliberate pursuit of a holy life before God; our obedience to His
Word, supported in prayer made profitable through a holy life; and our joy in
obedience to God, bringing joy in experiencing Him.  All of these issues are common and are seated
in the heart.  If these are necessary for
our transformation to Christ’s image, and if our heart is centrally involved,
and if sin hardens our heart and so dampens our responsiveness to God – then
the only reasonable thing to do is what God already demands.  Examine yourself, see your sin in your
reflection in Scripture, see what you are to be, be conformed in obedience
under the help of the Holy Spirit, turn from your sin, and strive to be a
useful slave to Christ in the Kingdom of God.

See sin for the blight it is.  See its hindrance on your heart, the same
heart responsible as the source of yourself and your Christian walk.  Recognize God’s despise of sin. Strive to be
holy, for He is holy.  Strive and live to
obey His law written on your heart.

Confessed and Sanctified

Once Saved, our Lord Jesus sets out to refine
us, restoring all of the parts of us distorted under our sin.  We are forgiven, but it’s still a long road
to the Christ-likeness we will know when He gathers the Church.  For now, while still in our sinful flesh, we
are sinners who have forgiveness.

The key here is that we continue to disobey
in sin, and we must constantly turn in confession to our Lord Jesus, repent,
and receive forgiveness relief from the burden of our sin.  It is a mistake to believe that one’s
original confession at Salvation will automatically bring forgiveness
liberation from all of the sins we are yet to commit, without any further
action from us
.  No, we are told that
we have been set right before God, adopted, and now have entered into the New
Covenant under Christ.

In His Covenant with us, we are allowed to
confess and repent of our sin, and receive that forgiveness He earned at the
Cross.  We have been placed under the
care of Jesus’ grace and priestly authority. 
But we continue to be responsible for confession and repentance, in
order to be relieved of the sin that affects our relationship with God the
Father, Son, and Spirit.

When we sin, the Word shows us, the Spirit
convicts us, and we respond in confession, repentance, and a plea for
mercy.  When we do this, Jesus always
responds – the guilt and burden of our sin have been hung on the Cross, and He
is always ready to say ‘It’s alright, this issue is behind us now.  Don’t do that anymore.  Let’s try it one more time.’

Standing forgiven, soft hearted, and humble
before the Father, He hears our prayers.  
His Will is that we would be confessed and Sanctified, or made ready and
clean, through Jesus’ forgiveness.