Friday, November 23, 2012

Five Things Christians Should Believe

It was Rupertius Meldinious who said: "In necessariis unitas, in non necessariis libertas, in omnibus caritas." which means: In the essentials unity, in the non essentials liberty, but in all things charity (or love).  You see, there are certain things that as a Christian are essential and we therefore must all believe as part of being a Christian and receiving eternal salvation (IE, Jesus is the Son of God, Jesus was born of a virgin, Jesus rose from the dead, faith in Jesus is the only way into Heaven, etc.). 

Then there are certain things were Scripture is not totally clear.  In those non essential areas Christians can differ in practice and yet not risk eternal salvation (IE. Women in ministry, the rapture, free will vs predestination). These are areas where the scripture is not 100% clear, and therefore we can differ in practice and still be saved.  These are not areas of practice that degrade the sufficiency of Jesus' atonement or would prevent a believer from entering heaven.

But as the quote above states, In omnibus caritas- in all things love!!  Even when we disagree with our Christian brothers and sisters we should still love and respect one another.  There is not place for brothers and sisters in Christ to not treat each other with anything less than love in any circumstance.

That said, I wanted to list a few items that I feel through study in the Word that all Christians should believe:
  1. The Word of God is verbally inspired: Paul, an apostle of Christ, wrote: “Every scripture is inspired of God, and profitable for teaching, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness: that the man of God may be complete, furnished completely unto every good work” (2 Timothy 3:16-17). The Bible asserts its own inspiration—of this there is no doubt.
  2. The Bible is equal in authority through from Genesis to Revelation: All books of the Bible, including the Old Testament, are the word of God. Who can say that one part of God's word is not as important as another? Certainly some are better written than others; some are easier to understand than others. But all are equally true. Revelation 22:18-19 says- 18 I warn everyone who hears the words of the prophecy of this scroll: If anyone adds anything to them, God will add to that person the plagues described in this scroll. 19 And if anyone takes words away from this scroll of prophecy, God will take away from that person any share in the tree of life and in the Holy City, which are described in this scroll.
  3. The Word of God is infallible: Here I say WWJD!!  Jesus never belittled Scripture (as some modern critics do), or set it aside (as the Jewish leaders of His day had done with their Oral Traditions), or criticized it (although He criticized those who misused it), or contradicted it (although He rejected many interpretations of it), or opposed it (although He sometimes was free or interpretive with it), nor spoke in any way as “higher” critics do of the Old Testament (Tanakh).
    1. Jesus knew the scriptures thoroughly and used them- John 7:15
    2. He believed the scriptures and claimed he was the fulfillment- Luke 4
    3. Multiple instances where he quoted the Old Testament as historical fact: Creation, Noah, Abraham, etc. 
  4.  The Word of God progressively reveals the person and plan of God- The Bible is a grand story.  The entirety of Scripture, from the fall of man to the redemption of man is the drama of God working out the promise of Genesis 3:15.  It is consummated in Jesus Christ said "It is Finished" in John 19.
  5. All scripture must me interpreted literally- This must take into account the types of literature in the Bible.  Poetry is poetry, apocolyptic literature is rich in imagery.  But the Bible is to be understood literally.  There are several reasons to interpret the Bible literally, not the least of which is that the Lord Jesus Christ took it literally. Whenever the Lord Jesus quoted from the Old Testament, it was always clear that He believed in its literal interpretation. As an example, when Jesus was tempted by Satan in Luke 4, He answered by quoting the Old Testament. If God’s commands in Deuteronomy 8:3, 6:13, and 6:16 were not literal, Jesus would not have used them and they would have been powerless to stop Satan’s mouth, which they certainly did.




     

Monday, November 5, 2012

Leadership and the Bible

Here we are on the eve of a major election in the United States.  My advice: pray, search your heart, and vote for what you believe is right.  Here are some Bible verses regarding leadership.  In all things keep your faith and know that the Lord is in control.  Stay close to Jesus in all things!!

  • “Do to others as you would like them to do to you.” Luke 6:31
  • Don’t be selfish; don’t try to impress others. Be humble, thinking of others as better than yourselves. Philippians 2:3
  • Guard your heart above all else, for it determines the course of your life. Proverbs 4:23
  • But select capable men from all the people—men who fear God, trustworthy men who hate dishonest gain —and appoint them as officials over thousands, hundreds, fifties and tens.Exodus 18:21
  • With upright heart he shepherded them and guided them with his skillful hand. Psalm 78:72
  • But among you it will be different. Whoever wants to be a leader among you must be your servant. Matthew 20:26
  • Each of you should look not only to your own interests, but also to the interests of others. Philippians 2:4
  • Simply let your ‘Yes’ be ‘Yes,’ and your ‘No,’ ‘No’; anything beyond this comes from the evil one. Matthew 5:37
  • Cast all your anxiety on him because he cares for you. 1 Peter 5:7
  • He must become greater; I must become less. John 3:30
  • So let’s not get tired of doing what is good. At just the right time we will reap a harvest of blessing if we don’t give up. Galatians 6:9
  • For I can do everything through Christ, who gives me strength. Philippians 4:13



Saturday, October 20, 2012

Following Jesus Does Not Make Everything Easy

Following Jesus is the single most important thing anyone can do.  It is our assurance of eternal life.  Our faith and belief in Jesus Christ is the way to our eternal treasure and reward.  But, following Jesus does not automatically make "this life" easy.  Following Jesus has a cost, it's hard, it's tough.  Consider some of the things that Jesus said (italics for emphasis):

Then Jesus said to his disciples, "If anyone would come after me, he must deny himself and take up his cross and follow me. - Matthew 16:24

20 Then the mother of Zebedee’s sons came to Jesus with her sons and, kneeling down, asked a favor of him.

21 “What is it you want?” he asked.
She said, “Grant that one of these two sons of mine may sit at your right and the other at your left in your kingdom.”
22 “You don’t know what you are asking,” Jesus said to them. “Can you drink the cup I am going to drink?”
“We can,” they answered.
23 Jesus said to them, “You will indeed drink from my cup, but to sit at my right or left is not for me to grant. These places belong to those for whom they have been prepared by my Father.”
24 When the ten heard about this, they were indignant with the two brothers. 25 Jesus called them together and said, “You know that the rulers of the Gentiles lord it over them, and their high officials exercise authority over them. 26 Not so with you. Instead, whoever wants to become great among you must be your servant, 27 and whoever wants to be first must be your slave— 28 just as the Son of Man did not come to be served, but to serve, and to give his life as a ransom for many.”- Matthew 20:20-28

18 “If the world hates you, keep in mind that it hated me first. 19 If you belonged to the world, it would love you as its own. As it is, you do not belong to the world, but I have chosen you out of the world. That is why the world hates you. 20 Remember what I told you: ‘A servant is not greater than his master.’[b] If they persecuted me, they will persecute you also. If they obeyed my teaching, they will obey yours also. 21 They will treat you this way because of my name, for they do not know the one who sent me. 22 If I had not come and spoken to them, they would not be guilty of sin; but now they have no excuse for their sin. 23 Whoever hates me hates my Father as well. 24 If I had not done among them the works no one else did, they would not be guilty of sin. As it is, they have seen, and yet they have hated both me and my Father. 25 But this is to fulfill what is written in their Law: ‘They hated me without reason.’[c]- John 15:18-24


I set this up as I look and consider the lives of the Apostles.  The Apostles loved Jesus with all their being and and faithfully spread the Good News of Jesus Christ (except Judas of course).  And, of the Apostles (including Matthias and Paul), they all died as martyrs with the exceptions of John.  Consider some of these facts about the Apostles after Jesus death:

  • Peter- led the church in Jerusalem.  Died by Crucifixion.  Requested to be crucified upside down as he did not feel worthy to die as Jesus did.
  • Andrew- went on to preach in Greece and the Ukraine.  Died by crucifixion.
  • James the Greater (brother of John)- Went on to preach in Spain.  He was beheaded in Jerusalem.
  • John- died in exile and wrote many letters and books of the New testament.
  • James the Lesser- The son of Alpheaus.  Martyred by the Romans.
  • Thaddeus- also known as Jude.  Went on to preach in Persia.  Martyred.
  • Simon the Zealot- Also went on the preach in Persia and was martyred.
  • Philip- was martyred in Hierapolis.
  • Bartholomew- some think he may have also been Nathaniel.  Went on to preach in Turkey, India and Armenia.  Martyred.
  • Thomas- Is said to have brought Christianity to India.  Martyred.
  • Matthew- known as Levi.  Shocked the Jewish community when he left being a tax collector to follow Jesus.  Writer of the Gospel of Matthew.  Martyred.
  • Matthias- replaced Judas.  It is said that he went on to preach to the "land of cannibals".  Martyred.
  • Paul- Brought the Gospel to the Gentiles.  Writer of most of the New Testament.  Beheaded in Rome. 
As you can see the lives of the Apostles were far from easy, but consider that the love they had for Jesus and the conviction in their belief was such that they willingly and lovingly sacrificed all they were for the One who sacrificed all He was.  Consider that the joy of the Lord was such that it led Paul to write these words as he was facing death at the hands of a Roman executioner:  

4 Rejoice in the Lord always. I will say it again: Rejoice! 5 Let your gentleness be evident to all. The Lord is near. 6 Do not be anxious about anything, but in every situation, by prayer and petition, with thanksgiving, present your requests to God. 7 And the peace of God, which transcends all understanding, will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus.

8 Finally, brothers and sisters, whatever is true, whatever is noble, whatever is right, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is admirable—if anything is excellent or praiseworthy—think about such things. 9 Whatever you have learned or received or heard from me, or seen in me—put it into practice. And the God of peace will be with you. Philippians 4: 4-9

Yes, this life is hard and following Jesus is tough.  But the eternal reward and the treasure that was will inherit above is beyond imagination.  Stay close to Jesus, focus on Him, and consider it all joy.

I consider that our present sufferings are not worth comparing with the glory that will be revealed in us. - Romans 8:18

Tuesday, October 16, 2012

Some thoughts on the role of the Pastor and the Flock

I PETER 5: 1 – 4


JESUS CHRIST pledged Himself to build His church, and everything the Lord does is planned out and has a defined order to it. Therefore, the way He organized His church is no different. The text lists three primary group exhortations. This shows the church to have been well organized. Consider these traits of the pastor and the traits of the people in a church functioning as intended and planned.

“The elders who are among you I exhort, I who am a fellow elder and witness of the sufferings of Christ, and also a partaker of the glory that will be revealed: Shepherd the flock of God which is among you, serving as overseers, not by constraint but willingly, not for dishonest gain but eagerly; nor as being lords over those entrusted to you, but being examples to the flock; and when the Chief Shepherd appears, you will receive the crown of glory that does not fade away” (I Peter 5: 1 – 4).

THE PASTOR’S CHARGE

There are three words in the Greek text used here to refer to the office of pastor:

PRESBUTEROS – “Elder”

EPISKOPOS – “overseer” or “bishop”

POIMAINO – “Shepherd”

The last of these terms is the one used by the resurrected Christ when He said to Peter “Tend (poimaino) [Shepherd] My sheep” (John 21:16).

It is interesting to note Peter refers to himself as a “fellow elder.” If he had been the head of the church, the first Pope, this would not have been the title chosen. In verse one he makes even more emphatic his togetherness by using the word “partaker.”

The first two titles noted refer to the same person as the third. Two internal, Bible evidences indicate the first two to be the same as the third:

In Philippians 1:1 Paul greeted the Bishops and deacons. If the elders were a separate body, surely he would have greeted them also.

In Acts 20:28 Paul sent for the elders (PRESBUETROS) and told them God had made them overseers (EPISKOPOS).

In I Peter 5: 1 and 2 Peter greets the elders (PRESBUETROS) and tells them to “feed,” that is, “shepherd the flock.” The verb “to shepherd” is a translation of the same Greek root from which we get our English word “pastor.” This word was doubtless in Peter’s mind from the post-resurrection seaside charge Christ gave him after three times asking him if he loved Him.

The modern pastor is to be the same as the shepherd-elder of the early church.

Saturday, September 29, 2012

Karl Barth 1962 Time Magazine Interview

If you know me, then you know I am a HUGE Karl Barth fan.  I just came across this 1962 Time magazine article in which Karl Barth was interviewed.  Like I said, I am a big fan of Barth and I really enjoyed this article.  Hope you do too!!

Friday, Apr. 20, 1962


Religion: Witness to an Ancient Truth

On a hill outside Jerusalem, a carpenter from Nazareth, condemned by the Roman Procurator of Judea and the high priest of the Jews, died upon a cross. Four historians of the time soberly reported that he was buried, and that on the third day the carpenter, Jesus, rose from the dead. Since that first Easter, his followers have defied all reason to proclaim that the Jew of Nazareth was the Son of God, who, by dying for man's sin, reconciled the world to its Creator and returned to life in his glory. Christianity has always been content to stand or fall by this paradox, this mystery, this unfathomable truth. "If Christ has not been raised," wrote St. Paul to the young church of Corinth, "then our preaching is in vain, and your faith is in vain. If Christ has not been raised, your faith is futile, and you are still in your sins."

In the 20th century, no man has been a stronger witness to the continuing significance of Christ's death and Christ's return than the world's ranking Protestant theologian, Swiss-born Karl Barth (rhymes with heart). Barth knows that the Gospel accounts of the Resurrection are not coherent, but he refuses to make the mystery more palatable to human reason by suggesting—as did the great 19th century Theologian D. F. Strauss in his Life of Jesus—that the story of the crucifixion is a "myth." Instead, Barth argues that the subject of this unique event is God, not man; and only God can know the full truth of his own history. Man's only road to understanding of this divine history is through faith—faith in the reality and truth of what the Evangelists so incoherently describe.

"Do you want to believe in the living Christ?" says Barth. "We may believe in him only if we believe in his corporeal resurrection. This is the content of the New Testament. We are always free to reject it, but not to modify it, nor to pretend that the New Testament tells something else. We may accept or refuse the message, but we may not change it."

Love & Scorn. Last week, at the age of 75, the author of this challenge to modern skepticism was enjoying his first visit to the U.S.—a country whose history he loves and whose way of life he professes to scorn. Arriving in Chicago, Barth quickly found time to check theatrical versions of that life, saw performances of two plays by Edward Albee, and the current review of the iconoclastic troupe that performs in a coffeehouse-nightclub called The Second City. Among Protestant theologians, Barth's arrival has caused as much stir as would a visit by the Pope to a Jesuit convention. At the University of Chicago, Barth will receive an honorary doctorate of divinity, deliver five lectures on evangelical theology. Busloads of theologians and ministers are coming from as far as New Mexico and California in hopes of hearing him. A week later Barth will repeat the lectures at Princeton Theological Seminary. Oddly enough, Barth is as interested in seeing battlefields as debating with his fellow theologians. An amateur expert on the Civil War, he has insisted that his travels include a stop at Gettysburg.

Barth has been variously damned as a heretic, a narrow-minded Biblicist, and an atheist in disguise—and praised as the most creative Protestant theologian since John Calvin. President James McCord of Princeton Theological says that "he bestrides the theological world like a colossus." Harvard's German-born Paul Tillich, the contemporary religious thinker whose stature most nearly rivals Barth's, has often disagreed with Barth —: "shouting at each other over a glass of wine" —but calls him, "the most monumental appearance in our period." Roman Catholic theologians, notably in Europe, have praised his thinking in terms they usually reserve for St. Thomas Aquinas. Once, upon hearing that Pius XII had paid tribute to his work, Barth smiled and said, "This proves the infallibility of the Pope." More seriously, he insists that the best critical work on his works—over 500 titles so far —has been done by such Catholic thinkers as French Jesuit Henri Bouillard and Father Hans Urs von Balthasar of Basel.

By contrast, Reinhold Niebuhr regards Barth as a "man of infinite imagination and irresponsibility" writing "irrelevant theology to America. I don't read Barth any more," he says. And Dr. Cornelius Van Til of Westminster Theological Seminary speaks for a host of U.S. fundamentalists in charging that "Barthianism is even more hostile to the theology of Luther and Calvin than Romanism."

The Yardstick. Barth is a theologian's theologian, whose work in "that beautiful science" by which man seeks to know God is the yardstick that measures what other men do. His treatment of Christian dogma has soared across denominational boundaries, affecting the thought of Baptists, Lutherans and Episcopalians as well as his own Reformed Church. Preachers read him, and his thought probably affects a good share of the sermons spoken in U.S. churches any given Sunday, but laymen hardly know his name. He has far fewer disciples in the U.S. than either Niebuhr or Tillich; and even in Germany, young theologians find more impact in the Christian existentialism of Rudolf Bultmann (TIME, April 14, 1961). All this is fine with Barth himself, who dis owns the idea of a school — "except for my two sons" — meaning Markus, 46, a New Testament scholar at the University of Chicago, and Christoph, 44, who teach es Old Testament in Djakarta.

In a way, this lack of a following is a tribute to the originality and individuality of Barth's accomplishments. His kind of God-thinking has been commonly called "neo-orthodoxy" and "theology of crisis" — labels that Barth rejects, since they scarcely define it at all. Essentially, Barth is a Christological theologian, whose uniquely modern thought centers around ancient realities: faith, the Bible, the church. He has a philosopher's knowledge of philosophy, but unlike such contemporaries as Tillich or Bultmann, Barth is wary of restating the dogmas of the church in nontraditional language. His thought is complex, but he nonetheless writes of doctrine in prose that is not far removed from that of the pulpit. Above all he writes of the mysterious history of Christ. Knowledge of God is knowledge of God through Christ. Faith is faith in Christ; the church is the Church of Christ; the Bible is the witness of Christ. Theologian Hans Frei of Yale calls him "a Christ-intoxicated man."

Dogmatist Greets Dog. In person, Barth looks like a Hollywood type-cast of a German professor, right down to his scholar's stoop and his thick, dark-rimmed glasses planted far down on his nose. His conservative suits are usually rumpled and flecked with tobacco from the pipe that seldom is out of his mouth. Barth is a Calvinist, but not a gloomy one; at home he speaks kindly to large dogs and small children (in guttural Swiss-German), displays a mellow, Dutch-uncle patience with puzzled students. In conversation Barth is full of wisecracks—some pleasantly pixy, some theologian-arch. Once, asked by a stranger on the trolley car if he knew the great Karl Barth, he replied: "Know him? I shave him every morning!"

It was no surprise that Barth came to spend his life in the service of God's Word; theology was as much a part of his family background as history was to the Schlesingers of Harvard. In Switzerland, there have been Pastor Barths since the early 19th century. One of them was Karl's father, Fritz Barth, an earnest, rigorous New Testament scholar who gave up the pastorate to teach Scripture at a seminary at Basel, where Karl, the eldest of five children, was born.

Karl began his theological studies at the University of Bern, but soon found the orthodox Calvinism taught there too old-fashioned for his own taste. He persuaded his father to send him to the University of Berlin, where he could study under the best known of Protestant church historians, Adolf von Harnack. For an embryonic scholar of 20, it was a heady, exhilarating experience. "I was so enthusiastic about him," Barth remembers, "that I missed going to concerts and museums. In the midst of Berlin, I saw little of the city, doing only my work."

Liberal Wind. Von Harnack was Barth's cicerone to theological liberalism, the intellectual wind prevailing in German religious thought after the turn of the century. By then, Protestantism had come a long, hard way from Luther and Calvin. During the 17th and 18th centuries, at the hands of their followers, the creative insights of the great reformers had been hardened into rigid dogmatisms—such as a literal acceptance of Biblical miracles—that were left shattered by the rational attacks of the Enlightenment and the discoveries of natural sciences. By 1850, Protestant thinkers had begun to construct a new and liberal religious synthesis that attempted to reconcile Christianity with man's empirical knowledge.

Instead of starting with a defense of dogma, liberal theology stressed the need for man to respond emotionally to the Jesus of history. Liberalism believed that religion was an expression of man's noblest impulses and that man himself had the freedom to shape his life and his world in accordance with the divine will. Faith in God was made to seem perfectly compatible with an industrial civilization's faith in science, progress and democracy; church and state would work hand in hand for man's final victory over nature, and the eventual establishment of the Kingdom of God on earth. Liberalism also accepted scientific study of the Bible, even when it tended to challenge orthodox views of the divinity of Christ. Von Harnack's own major contribution to this "higher criticism" was a historical examination of church dogmas; his aim was to cut through the formulas of faith created by churchmen, reach back to the simple message of love that Jesus had actually taught. The New Testament in liberal hands became not so much a record of God's unique intervention in human history as an "inspiration" to Christians on how to live a good life.

Parish Parson. Barth spent a year grappling with Von Harnack's historicism. absorbed more liberal theology at the universities of Tubingen and Marburg before being ordained in 1908 by his father at the Reformed cathedral of Bern. He served his ecclesiastical apprenticeship as an assistant pastor in a French-speaking parish near Geneva. Then, in 1911, he was called to the Reformed Church of Safenwil, a small mill town in northern Switzerland, where he married a sprightly young violinist named Nelly Hoffman.

Faced with the problem of how to give meaningful sermons. Barth as a minister discovered that the liberal theology of the universities held out no real message to people. He also found that expression of Christian belief, in the minds of his rich parishioners, was perfectly compatible with economic exploitation. Shocked by the low wages paid to Safenwil's textile workers, Barth became an active socialist, earned the nickname of "the Red pastor" for his role in organizing unions, and for such deadpan japes as passing out free frankfurters to rich and poor alike one Christmas morning at church.

An even more severe test of Barth's theological assumptions was World War I, which ended man's cocky dream of inevitable progress toward a reign of universal peace. Barth, who disapproved of Switzerland's vacillating neutralist politics, was shocked when the church in Germany approved the war policy of Kaiser Wilhelm II; not one of his theological teachers protested. Barth's contempt for this display of their social thinking led him to a reappraisal of their theology. In company with another disillusioned liberal pastor, Eduard Thurneysen, Barth went back over all his past theological and philosophical reading, finally returning to the Bible—a book, he discovered, which contained "divine thoughts about men, not human thoughts about God." He found some of the text of those divine thoughts in St. Paul's Epistle to the Romans, began work on a commentary that would bring that letter alive to modern man.

Bomb on the Playground. Published in 1918 and rewritten completely for the second edition in 1921. Barth's Epistle to the Romans, as Karl Adam, a Roman Catholic put it, "felt like a bombshell on the playground of the theologians." Barth attacked the liberal assumption that the Bible expressed man's religious experience of God; instead, he said, it contains God's Word to man. This God—the real God of revelation—is a being "wholly other" than man, a God who shouts a divine No to all of man's efforts to reach him through inner emotion or reason.

There is, as the great Dane Sören Kierkegaard wrote, "an infinite qualitative difference" between time and eternity, between man and God. The only bridge to God is the one that God provides—the bridge of faith that can come to man only after he has recognized the futility of his own efforts to meet his Creator.

Barth granted the service that liberal theology performed in emphasizing the genuine humanity of Jesus, but charged that in the process it had all but forgotten Christ's divinity. So, too, in speaking of the dignity and natural goodness of man, it had all but eliminated from Christianity the sense of sin. He also challenged the liberal suggestion that there was a natural alliance between God and the men who were building Western civilization—not because Earth opposed culture, but because man had no right to "domesticate" God in the name of progress.

Awakening the Town. In his Epistle, Barth wrote a declaration of independence on behalf of the God who stands in judgment over all human culture; the message made an immediate hit. Barth later compared his experience to that of a man who climbs the church tower at night and grabs a rope for support, only to discover that he has struck the church bell and awakened the whole town. "I did not know," he says "that it was so great a bell." On the strength of the book's success, Barth accepted a chair in Reformed theology at the University of Gottingen in 1921. There, besides teaching, he helped to edit a new magazine that continued his onslaught on liberalism; among the contributors were such rising young theologians as Paul Tillich and Rudolf Bultmann.

As a teacher, Barth found that theology needed reconstruction as well as criticism, and during professorships at the universities of Münister and Bonn he began to study the writings of the church fathers and the Reformation confessions. Totally absorbed in the Word of God, Barth had little time for the word of man. Politics, he wrote then, was "essentially a game," and "fundamentally uninteresting."

Politics suddenly became interesting for Earth in 1933, after Adolf Hitler established the Third Reich. Barth spoke out in anger against Naziism when it attempted to create new "German Christian" churches in which National Socialist political theories were given the same sanctity as theological dogma. "This was a nationalist heresy,"he says, "confusion between God and the spirit of the German nation." He launched a new magazine to attack the "heresy" and in 1934 wrote nearly all of the Barmen Declaration—an anti-Nazi protest that claimed the autonomy of the church from all temporal power. The declaration was signed by 200 leaders of Germany's Lutheran, Reformed and Evangelical Unionist churches.

"Seducing Minds." As a professor at the University of Bonn, Barth was technically a civil servant. But he refused to take an oath of allegiance to the Führer or open his classes with the Nazi salute. It would be bad taste, he told them, "to begin a commentary on the Sermon on the Mount with Heil Hitler." At the end of 1934, Barth was brought before a Nazi court, found guilty of "seducing the minds" of German students. For his defense. Earth pulled a copy of Plato's Apology from his pocket, read Socrates' argument to the court of Athens that he should be given a pension for his services to the city's youth rather than be condemned to death. Something like that, Barth suggested, ought to be done for him. "It seemed like a good idea before going into court," he says sadly, "but it made no impression on the judges."

In 1935 the German Minister of Education decreed that there was no place in the new Germany for Barth. He accepted a professorship of theology at the Uni versity of Basel. Later he tried once more to speak in Germany and was arrested and deported by the Gestapo. After the out break of World War II, Barth issued a flurry of powerful, evangelical epistles opposing Naziism. "The enterprise of Adolf Hitler," he wrote, "with all its clatter and fireworks, and all its cunning and dynamic energy, is the enterprise of an evil spirit, which is apparently allowed its freedom for a time in order to test our faith in the Resurrection of Jesus Christ."

In World War II Barth volunteered at the age of 54 for the Swiss army, spent much of the duration guarding a bridge on the German frontier. Barth cheerfully ad mits that, despite his lifelong hobby of military strategy, he showed no aptitude for leadership. Placed in command of a squad patrolling a mountain pass one cold winter night, he distributed his troops, soon found that they had all deserted to a hut for the warmth of a fire and hot coffee. "That," he says, "was the crash of my ambition to be a corporal."

Summa of the Century. After the war, Barth lectured on theology among the bombed-out ruins of his old university in Bonn for a semester, then returned to Basel to carry on with the intellectual job that has preoccupied him since 1932: the writing of Church Dogmatics. Now 9,000 pages and twelve fat volumes long, Dogmatics is Earth's major effort to ex plain what it is that God has revealed. Dogmatics, in Barth's definition, is the critical examination of the Christian mes sage in light of what the Scriptures say. Barth's own examination of this message is garrulous, eye-wearying, and studded with trackless deserts of scholarly foot notes. "Barth is just about the most gabby person that ever hit Christendom," grumbles Robert Hannen of Berkeley Baptist Divinity School. But Dogmatics is also wreathed with a knowledge of 1,900 years of Christian writing, and stands as the century's only equivalent to the summa of the medieval scholastics.

The dogmatic Barth, in many respects, is "wholly other" than the angry evangelist who wrote the Epistle to the Romans after World War I. In that early work, Barth says, "I had to show that the Bible dealt with an encounter between God and Man. I thought only of the apartness of God. What I had to learn after that was the togetherness of Man and God — a union of two totally different kinds of beings." In place of the divine No uttered by God, Barth in Dogmatics writes about the divine Yes spoken to those who accept God's revelation in faith.

What Theology Is. The foundation of Dogmatics is the faith held by the Christian churches: faith in the God who revealed himself through the Scriptures in the person of Jesus Christ. Faith, Barth says, is not an idea about God; it is man's humble, total acceptance of God brought on by God— "the consequences in man of the action of God himself." He flatly rejects all "natural theology," meaning man's systematic efforts to know God through the use of reason alone by speculating on natural mysteries—the "God is in the stars" theory. Barth insists that natural theology can only understand God as a First Cause or a Great Designer or some similar abstract idea that in reality is a product of man's own thinking processes. But God is not an idea dreamed of by man. He is the Supreme Being, who is only known through a specific revelation of himself. Therefore Barth does not try to "prove" the existence of God in his Dogmatics; he starts with the reality of the God of revelation.

To Barth, theology cannot be free speculation ; it is correct only when it is obedient to what God says. Hence there can be no theology apart from prayer, and no theology apart from God's revelation. The revelation of God is a continuous act: God still speaks to man through the words preached by his church to those who accept Christ. Since this revelation continues within the body of those who witness to God, there can be no theology apart from the church and what it believes. Barth, of course, is appalled at the divisions of Christendom; yet he thinks that most of those differences are the result not of heresies but of "particular errors"in doctrine. Barth's dogmatic theology, which freely ranges across denominational lines despite its basic Calvinist orientation, seeks to correct those errors by analyzing doctrinal interpretations in the light of what the Bible says.

The Divine Address. Barth accepts and welcomes scholarly criticism of the Bible, even when it shows the Scriptures to be full of errors and inconsistencies. He does not consider the Bible infallible, and he deplores orthodox Protestants who make it into "a paper Pope." Nevertheless, the Bible testifies to God's Word, which is revealed to man through human speech. The words that the Biblical writers use may not always be the appropriate ones, but they must be accepted as words elected by God. There can be, in Barth's view, no question of "disproving" the authority of the Scriptures, for the church today must take the "risk" of accepting the witness of the early Christians who established the canon of the Scriptures, and the Reformation fathers who revised it. God still speaks within the Bible; in the light of faith, the church and her theologians must listen and undertake the ever-unfinished task of finding out what He is saying.

The decisive center of the Bible is its witness of Jesus Christ—the Son who became man, and by the humiliation of his death reconciled the sinful created world to the father. For Barth the Word of God came to man in the person of Christ, and Dogmatics is a Christocentric exploration of that word. Since Christ is man's only contact with God, Barth hammers every article of Christian faith into a firm relationship to Christ himself. He defines creation, for example, as the establishment of a place where grace would operate, and argues that God's creation of the universe cannot be considered apart from Christ's redemption of it.

A Joyful Message. This emphasis upon the awesome mystery of the Redemption makes Dogmatics, for all its forbidding size, a joyful and optimistic work. By Christ's reconciling act. Barth says, the Kingdom of God has already been established, although it is held out to man as a promise rather than a visible reality. Man, in Luther's phrase, is simultinstus accpeccator (simultaneously righteous and sinful). He is still besieged by evil and capable of sin himself, but he also knows that Christ has already conquered the forces of darkness, and that in St. Paul's words "death hath no more dominion over him." Says Yale's Theologian Frei: "What emerges from Barth's theology is a breathtaking, daring vision of a universe in which tragedy, demonic evil and chaos have been met and defeated in the figure of Jesus Christ."

Barth feels free to reject the writings of the church fathers where he feels they may have mistaken the meaning of God's Word; even his admitted master, John Calvin, is not exempt. Once, when someone questioned the unorthodox way in which he was commenting on Calvin, Barth retorted: "Calvin is in Heaven and has had time to ponder where he went wrong in his teachings. Doubtless he is pleased that I am setting him aright."

One orthodox dogma that Barth has tried to set aright—much to the dismay of other theologians in the Reformed Church —is the best-known and gloomiest of Calvinist tenets: predestination. In his Institutes, Calvin argued that God has already determined both those who will be saved at the Last Judgment and those who will suffer the eternal pangs of Hell. Barth says that this belief does not pay sufficient heed to the fact that Christ's death was intended for all men: Man's ultimate fate is shrouded in mystery, but Barth believes that Christ, the loving Judge, could indeed reconcile all the world to the Father. "I do not preach universal salvation," Barth insists. "What I say is that I cannot exclude the possibility that God would save all men at the Judgment."

Plenty of Critics. Earth's Dogmatics, says Langdon Gilkey of Vanderbilt University's divinity school, "is the most impressive and most complete statement of the Christian faith in this century." Other theologians complain that if anyone tried to read all that Barth says about the Word of God he would have no time to read the Word of God itself. Barth's interpretation of that Word has plenty of critics. Both Niebuhr and Tillich think that he is too critical of the cultural disciplines, such as philosophy and anthropology, which attempt to give man an insight into life's meaning. Princeton's best-known systematic theologian, Presbyterian George Stuart Hendry, says Barth's Christocentric approach forces many church doctrines into an artificial mold. Wilhelm Pauck of Union Theological Seminary thinks Barth pays insufficient attention to the history of how Christian dogma developed.

Quiet on Communism. A different category of criticism of Barth attacks his enigmatic political views. During World War II, Barth urged the church to stand up and be counted in the "holy war" against Hitler; in the cold war against Communism, he has urged ministers behind the Iron Curtain to live peacefully with Red regimes. In 1956 Barth was perhaps the only important Western theologian who refused to condemn publicly the Communist repression in Hungary.

Barth thinks that Marx sincerely tried to correct injustice in industrial society, but he has no desire to live under a totalitarian government. He argues that Naziism attempted to defeat the church by perverting its doctrines with cultural heresies, whereas Communism is an atheistic political system based upon philosophical ideas that must be countered with other ideas. And God, Barth insists, is not an idea, "not a banner for human ideas and intentions. For many people Christianity is a kind of moral, religious and political idea, against what they call an atheistic idea." To Barth, the capitalist West is as materialistic as the Communist East—and represents a serious temptation to the church, since it tries to cloak its political ambitions in religious and moral terms.

He has asked the West to give up nuclear weapons unilaterally; such a gesture would help the West regain the "confidence" of the Soviet Union, and start it on the road toward a peaceful democratic regime. The vast majority of U.S. theologians regard such views as politically naive at best and irresponsible at worst. Says an old friend and theological colleague, Emil Brunner of Zurich: "If President Kennedy were to adopt Barth's pacifist doctrines, the United States would soon be swallowed by the Soviet Union. A Communist regime would make short shrift of men like Barth."

In other days. Barth would undoubtedly have hit back at such criticism with a barrage of satire, scorn and scriptural learning. "I was hard then," he says. "Now that I am older, I am softer." This older, mellower Barth seems eager only to get on with the fourth section of Volume IV of Dogmatics. At his stucco house on Basel's Bruderholzallee, day begins around 8, when Barth's wife, or his longtime secretary. Charlotte von Kirschbaum, tiptoes to the phonograph and puts on a record. The music that serves as his alarm clock is always by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, whose work Barth describes as a "constant of my existence." "When the angels praise God in Heaven," Barth once wrote, "I am sure they play Bach. However, en famille they play Mozart, and then God the Lord is especially delighted to listen to them."

He usually retires early, lying awake to read military history or detective stories, from which he first learned English at the age of 40. Says he: "My friends claim that I have a criminal vocabulary." Barth has little taste for modern novels, poetry or art. "What I object to," he says, "is the disappearance of the object. In art, as in theology, it is the object that counts, not the subject."

For many years, Barth's only preaching has consisted of occasional sermons to the prisoners in the Basel jail. He takes great pride in this spiritual work, writing out the prayers for the service and choosing hymns for the prisoners. "When I come before these men," he says, "I do not have to explain that we are all sinners. They have committed every sin there is. All I have to tell them is that I, too, am a sinner."

"God Is for You." Does Barthian theology have anything to tell a world in which persistent doubt seems to be man's real condition? Because of its roots in an unchallengeable faith and its reliance upon the truth of a book that many men now regard as a volume of interesting poetry rather than a divine revelation, his theology has been described—by Reinhold Niebuhr—as "designed for the church of the catacombs." Barth himself believes his work contains "a missionary call." It provides no easy, immediate, specific answers to man's daily worries—but summons him to learn that all questions are ultimately theological, and that the ultimate theological answer has been given. Translated into elementary pulpit talk, Karl Barth's rich and complex theology might appear to resemble the exhortations issued by many contemporary preachers; actually his thought is far more subtly attuned to the psychology of modern man. "To the man in the street," sums up Dr. Robert McAfee Brown, of Union Theological Seminary, "Barth's message is 'God is for you.' You're not trapped in overwhelming guilt and anxiety. In these terribly perplexing modern times, there is hope in the Gospel, for God has involved himself in the human situation through Jesus Christ."

Majesty & Love. But Barth's greatest service has been to those who are most likely to listen to him: the committed believers. His Dogmatics is the most exhaustive compendium of what a Christian must believe, and why he believes it, that Protestantism has had in more than a century. Barth's insistence on the supreme majesty of God and His supreme love in Christ has forced Christian thought to reconsider its basic focus. His demand that theology is necessarily church theology has caused Protestantism to take a new look at the confessions it stands by, and has thereby contributed mightily to today's worldwide ecumenical dialogue. Barth has always insisted that dogma is important, that theology is not philosophy, that Christianity is not the spiritual side of politics. The mysteries of God's Word are hard ones—but they cannot be made more palatable to nonbelievers or to the lukewarm faithful by hiding them in the language formed by man's own wishful thinking. God speaks; man must listen. And Barth summons Goethe to warn the church:

Long, long ago the Truth was found, A company of men it bound. Grasp firmly then—that ancient Truth!

Saturday, September 1, 2012

Building up or knocking down? Ephesians 4:29-30

Ever since I saw Building 429 at ALIVE I have been thinking about this verse.  Building 429 takes its name from this verse, and they did a nice job at explaining how they felt that all of their songs should be sung only to build people up!  Then today, I came across a John Piper teaching on Ephesians 4:29.  So that was it...its time to blog about it.

Ephesians 4:29-30

Let no rotten word come out of your mouth, but if something is good for the upbuilding of a need, (let that come out of your mouth) in order that it might give grace to those who hear.

I remember one time as a child that my dad actually washed my mouth out with soap. He took me to the bathroom sink, rubbed the bar of soap around in my mouth and then rinsed it out and made me go to my room. Do you know what I had said? I think I had called my brother "stupid" or something like that.

This may sound like an over reaction based on today's standards, but if you look at scripture then you believe it when Jesus said, "It is not what goes into the mouth that defiles a man, but what comes out of the mouth, this defiles a man" (Mt. 15:11).

I had made myself defiled by calling my brother a name.
"But really!" someone will say, "What's the big deal with calling someone a name? It's not swearing. It's not taking the name of the Lord in vain. It's not a dirty word. Why get so worked up? What's really so bad about it?"

The answer is that when I call someone a name, or when we speak poorly about anyone else, it is being...well, mean. There is no good will and no kindness in it. It is ugly. There is no holiness, no love. To use Paul's phrase in Ephesians 4:29, it is a "rotten word." It comes from pride and one-upmanship and anger and resentment -- and it is all very sinful. That's why you need to watch it, lest you become accustomed to your sin and stop noticing it.

For me, this lesson taught me the truth of Ephesians 4:22-24: You were taught, with regard to your former way of life, to put off your old self, which is being corrupted by its deceitful desires; 23 to be made new in the attitude of your minds; 24 and to put on the new self, created to be like God in true righteousness and holiness.


In the end the battle for purity in the mouth is fought in the heart, because "out of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaks." If you don't like what comes out of your mouth, listen carefully, because the apostle Paul says you need to watch your mouth from the inside out.

Let's look at verse 29. Paul uses the phrase "rotten word." The RSV translates it, "Let no evil talk come out of your mouths." The NIV and NASB use the word "unwholesome." And the KJV says, "Let no corrupt communication proceed out of your mouth." What is this idea behind the words, "evil," "unwholesome," and "corrupt"?

The Greek word (sapros) is used in only one other context in the NT, namely, the places in Matthew and Luke where Jesus says, "It is not the good tree that bears bad fruit "(Lk. 6:43; Mt. 7:17f; Mt. 12:33). The term for "bad" fruit here is the same word for evil or unwholesome or corrupt in Ephesians 4:29 -- "Let no evil talk come out of your mouth!" The image in Paul's mind is probably one of rottenness and decay, something that is spoiled.

This kind of rotten language must be taken off like old clothes. It is part of the old self of verse 22 that needs to be stripped away when a person becomes a Christian. Now what sort of talk does Paul have in mind when he says, "Let no rotten talk come out of your mouth"? John Piper gives us four types of rotten words that Jesus is referring to:

  • "First would be language that takes the name of the Lord in vain. It is a great contradiction of who we are as Christians if we say, "God!" or "My God!" or "God Almighty!" or "Christ!" or "Jesus!" just because we are mad or surprised or amazed. No one with a good marriage would stomp on his wedding ring to express anger. It stands for something precious and pure. And so does the name of God and Jesus Christ.

  • The second kind of language that Paul would call rotten would be language that trivializes terrible realities -- like hell and damnation and holiness. What's wrong with saying, "What the hell!" or "Hell, no" or "Go to hell!" or "Damn it!" or "Damn right!" or "Holy cow!" or "Holy mackeral!"? Among other things these expressions trivialize things of terrible seriousness. It's simply a contradiction to believe in the horrible reality of hell and use the word like a punctuation mark for emphasis when talking about sports or politics. The same is true of damnation. And if the divine command, "Be holy as I am holy," carries for you the same weight it carried for Moses and Jesus and the apostles, you will simply find that "Holy cow" or holy anything will stick in your throat because it treats something infinitely precious as a trifle.

  • The third kind of language I think Paul would include in his command not to let any rotten talk come out of your mouth is vulgar references to sex and the human body. With this kind of language people take good things that God has made, and use them like mud to smear on whatever they get upset about. The whole assumption behind the use of vulgar four-letter words is that they communicate scorn or disdain or hate. How does this happen? How, for example, does the act of sexual relations, created by God as good to be fulfilled in marriage -- how does it get translated into a four letter word and carry the meaning of hate and scorn? The answer is easy: first you get God out of your mind. That's fundamental to all vulgarity. Then you get the sanctity of his creation out of your mind. And then, in your mind, you replace the tenderness of married love with the force of rape, and you've got yourself four letter word which does verbally the same thing that rape does physically: it expresses selfish, uncaring abusiveness. (Which, incidentally, is why I would say to Christian women, don't spend two minutes with a man who uses this kind of language: rape and rotten language come from exactly the same root.)

  • The final kind of language I think Paul would call rotten is mean-spirited language -- like, "Shut up!" The words themselves are untarnished. But the usage is vicious and loveless.

Those are the four kinds of language, I think Paul would include in "rotten talk". Now let's step back and ask what Paul might mean by calling language evil or corrupt or unwholesome or rotten. If we think of spoiled or rotten fruit, like Jesus did, four implications come to mind.

  • First, rotten fruit does not nourish. Neither does rotten language. It does not strengthen or improve or help. It is not useful for food. It is good for nothing but to be thrown out and trampled under foot by men.
  • Second, rotten fruit will probably make you sick if you do try to eat it. And rotten language can make people sick, too. In other words, it not only fails to give positive nourishment, it can cause negative harm. Words can wound a person very deeply. Words can be like the virus that transmits the disease of meanness or vulgarity from parent to child or roommate to roommate or colleague to colleague. Rotten language makes people sick if they are forced to eat it.
  • Third, rotten fruit smells bad and makes the atmosphere unpleasant. I recall a couple of men in graduate school in Germany who seemed to carry the aroma of vulgarity about them. All they ever seemed to laugh at was sexual innuendo. The pitiful thing about it was that the nearer they got to the gutter the more they laughed. With their mouths they created an atmosphere like a stinking locker room. It was unpleasant for everybody but themselves. And it made noble and high and worthy thoughts all but impossible. It's hard to savor beauty from a garbage dump. Can you stand in an "adult" bookstore and look through the window (if there were a window) and be moved by the beauty of a setting sun?
  • The fourth implication that comes to mind when we think of rotten fruit and rotten language is that it probably comes from a diseased tree. If the fruit is rotten as soon as it appears on the branch (as soon as the words come out of the mouth) then the tree is bad.

Jesus said, "Out of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaks. The good man out of his good treasure brings forth good, and the evil man out of his evil treasure brings forth evil. I tell you, on the day of judgment men will render account for every careless word they utter; for by your words you will be justified and by your words you will be condemned" (Mt. 12:34-37).

So if a person takes the name of God in vain, or trivializes the realities of hell and holiness, or turns sexuality into vulgarity, or makes words into weapons of one-up-manship and meanness, then we can say for sure, "There is a rottenness inside the tree as well as outside." If the fruit is bad the root is bad. "

The question for your mouth will not merely be the moral question: Am I avoiding dirty words? But the Christian question: Am I building the faith of others by what I say? Is my mouth a means of grace? Am I frightened and anxious and angry about my life, or am I filled and overflowing with hope that the Spirit of God will keep me safe for the day of redemption?

Monday, August 20, 2012

100 Things About Jesus Everyone Should Know

I was doing some research and deveotional readings this evening and came across this list.  I found it interesting and helpful.  I hope you do too!  Enjoy...
1) Jesus claimed to be God - John 8:24; 8:56-59 (see Exodus 3:14); John 10:30-33

2) Jesus created all things - John 1:3; Col. 1:15-17

3) Jesus is before all things - Col. 1:17

4) Jesus is eternal - John 1:1,14 ; 8:58

5) Jesus is honored the same as the Father - John 5:23

6) Jesus is prayed to - Acts 7:55-60

7) Jesus is worshipped - Matt. 2:2,11; 14:33; John 9:35-38; Heb. 1:6

8) Jesus is called God - John 1:1,14; 20:28; Col. 2:9; Titus 2:13

9) Jesus is omnipresent - Matt. 28:20

10 Jesus is with us always - Matt. 28:20


11) Jesus is our only mediator between God and ourselves - 1 Tim. 2:5

12) Jesus is the guarantee of a better covenant - Heb. 7:22; 8:6

13) Jesus said, "I AM the Bread of Life" - John 6:35,41,48,51

14) Jesus said, "I AM the Door" - John 10:7,9

15) Jesus said, "I AM the Good Shepherd" - John 10:11,14

16) Jesus said, "I AM the Way the Truth and The Life" - John 14:6

17) Jesus said, "I AM the Light of the world" - John 8:12; 9:5; 12:46; Luke 2:32

18) Jesus said, "I AM the True Vine" - John 15:1,5

19) Jesus said, "I AM the Resurrection and the Life" - John 11:25

20) Jesus said, "I AM the First and the Last" - Rev. 1:17; 2:8; 22:13


21) Jesus always lives to make intercession for us - Heb. 7:25

22) Jesus cleanses from sin - 1 John 1:9

23) Jesus discloses Himself to us - John 14:21

24) Jesus draws all men to Himself - John 12:32

25) Jesus forgives sins - Matt. 9:1-7; Luke 5:20; 7:48

26) Jesus gives eternal life - John 10:28; 5:40

27) Jesus gives joy - John 15:11

28) Jesus gives peace - John 14:27

29) Jesus has authority - Matt. 28:18; John 5:26-27; 17:2; 3:35

30) Jesus judges - John 5:22,27


31) Jesus knows all men - John 16:30

32) Jesus opens the mind to understand scripture - Luke 24:45

33) Jesus received honor and glory from the Father - 1 Pet. 1:17

34) Jesus resurrects - John 5:39; 6:40,44,54; 11:25-26

35) Jesus reveals grace and truth - John 1:17 see John 6:45

36) Jesus reveals the Father - Matt. 11:27; Luke 10:22

37) Jesus saves forever - Matt. 18:11; John 10:28; Heb. 7:25

38) Jesus bears witness of Himself - John 8:18; 14:6

39) Jesus' works bear witness of Himself - John 5:36; 10:25

40) The Father bears witness of Jesus - John 5:37; 8:18; 1 John 5:9


41) The Holy Spirit bears witness of Jesus - John 15:26

42) The multitudes bear witness of Jesus - John 12:17

43) The Prophets bear witness of Jesus - Acts 10:43

44) The Scriptures bear witness of Jesus - John 5:39

45) The Father will honor us if we serve Jesus - John 12:26 see Col. 3:24

46) The Father wants us to fellowship with Jesus - 1 Cor. 1:9

47) The Father tells us to listen to Jesus - Luke 9:35; Matt. 17:5

48) The Father tells us to come to Jesus - John 6:45

49) The Father draws us to Jesus - John 6:44

50) Everyone who's heard & learned from the Father comes to Jesus - John 6:45


51) The Law leads us to Christ - Gal. 3:24

52) Jesus is the Rock - 1 Cor. 10:4

53) Jesus is the Savior - John 4:42; 1 John 4:14

54) Jesus is King - Matt. 2:1-6; Luke 23:3

55) In Jesus are the treasures of wisdom and knowledge - Col. 2:2-3

56) In Jesus we have been made complete Col. 2:10

57) Jesus indwells us - Col. 1:27

58) Jesus sanctifies - Heb. 2:11

59) Jesus loves - Eph. 5:25

60) We come to Jesus - John 5:50; 6:35,37,45,65; 7:37;


61) We sin against Jesus - 1 Cor. 8:12

62) We receive Jesus - John 1:12; Col. 2:6

63) Jesus makes many righteous - Rom. 5:19

64) Jesus is the image of the invisible God - Heb. 1:3

65) Jesus sends the Holy Spirit - John 15:26

66) Jesus abides forever - Heb. 7:24

67) Jesus offered up Himself - Heb. 7:27; 9:14

68) Jesus offered one sacrifice for sins for all time - Heb. 10:12

69) The Son of God has given us understanding - 1 John 5:20

70) Jesus is the author and perfecter of our faith - Heb. 12:2

71) Jesus is the Apostle and High Priest of our confession - Heb. 1:3

72) Jesus is preparing a place for us in heaven - John 14:1-4

73) Jesus cleanses us from our sins by His blood - Rev. 1:5; Rom. 5:9

74) Jesus is the Light of the world - Rom. 9:5

75) Jesus has explained the Father - John 1:18

76) Jesus was crucified because of weakness - 2 Cor. 13:4

77) Jesus has overcome the world - John 16:33

78) Truth is in Jesus - Eph. 4:21

79) The fruit of righteousness comes through Jesus Christ - Phil. 1:11

80) Jesus delivers us from the wrath to come - 1 Thess. 1:10

81) Disciples bear witness of Jesus Christ - John 15:27

82) Jesus died and rose again - 1 Thess. 4:14

83) The Christian dead have fallen asleep in Jesus - 1 Thess. 4:15

84) Jesus died for us - 1 Thess. 5:10

85) Jesus tasted death for everyone - Heb. 2:9

86) Jesus rendered the devil powerless - Heb. 2:14

87) Jesus is able to save completely - Heb. 7:25

88) Jesus was a ransom for many and to serve - Matt. 20:28

89) Jesus came to be a high priest - Heb. 2:17

90) Jesus came to save - John 3:17; Luke 19:10


91) Jesus came to preach the kingdom of God - Luke 4:43

92) Jesus came to bring division - Luke 12:51

93) Jesus came to do the will of the Father - John 6:38

94) Jesus came to give the Father's words - John 17:8

95) Jesus came to testify to the truth - John 18:37

96) Jesus came to die and destroy Satan's power - Heb. 2:14

97) Jesus came to fulfill the Law and the Prophets - Matt. 5:17

98) Jesus came to give life - John 10:10,28

99) Jesus came to taste death for everyone - Heb. 2:9

100) Jesus came to proclaim freedom for believers - Luke 4:18

Thursday, August 16, 2012

Authority and Inspiration of the Bible

I first wrote this paper in April 2008 for a Hermeneutics class.  Its awesome to look back 4 years and see ways in which I have grown in Spiritual Maturity.  I may write this paper a little differently today, but I would still come to the same conclusion.  Enjoy...

My opinion on the authority and inspiration of scripture is best summed up in John 10:35, where Jesus not only uses the words of scripture to refute the religious leaders of His day, but he goes on to declare that “scripture cannot be broken”. We all have used 2 Tim 3:16 to claim and assert that the Bible is inspired and authoritative, but is it possible to delve deeper into this understanding and determine why? Having surveyed the views on the authority of scripture, and coming to a better understanding of the liberal, evangelical and fundamental positions, I find that my inclinations are towards a fundamentalist approach to authority and inspiration, with some slight modifications. However, I do feel that the Bible is both infallible and inerrant simultaneously without the need to feel contradicted.

In his book, Inspiration and Authority, Achtemeier presents very well not only a summary view of the 3 major positions, but also the presentation of his own personal view as an evangelical. In summary of his reading, we see that he contends for a Bible reading where scripture is infallible, yet where room exists for errancy in matters not related to faith, or where history and/or science is related. I disagree with the second position stated and will come back to address.

I do agree with his position on inspiration as a 3 part process: scripture as a witness to itself, the relationship with the faith community, and with regards to the formation of canon. (Achtemeier, 91-92) I believe that scripture to be inspired is a process. I do not necessarily feel that this indicates that the Spirit performs direct revelation to the writer, or that the Bible is verbatim the given word of God. The process of rewriting, borrowing, altering events, under guidance and inspiration of the Spirit is all part of the inspiration process. It is this process that allows scripture to contain the internal testimony of the Spirit without which the Bible would be no different than any other period literature book. (Achtemeier, 122-123)

However, I disagree that because of the presence of the Holy Spirit, and it’s internal testimony, that we can separate the need for accuracy due to the deeper meaning of the text. How can the meaning be correct but the content be inaccurate? This is where I split with the evangelical view as presented. (Achtemeier, 124) Furthermore, the act of separating the infallible message with the potentially inaccurate word could ultimately lead to a type of Biblical docetism (Sproul, 83) whereby we receive the infallible message of the Bible through the ability to err of the writer. Furthermore, I cannot agree with Achtemeier’s view that since inspiration is inerrant and inspiration ceased with the original Bible writers, then anything that a current writer could add would only be an errant distraction. (Achtemeier, 127) I think this is based on a particular understanding of the word inerrant. This will be addressed shortly.

Just for the sake of presenting the third option listed, I cannot understand or comprehend the liberal position that the Bible is not inspired, but rather contains revelations, based on subjective and inductive understandings. For example, Rudolph Bultmann in his book Kerygma and Myth, declares that the proclamation of the Gospels is myth, based on mythical ancient understandings. For instance, the notion that we live in a 3 tiered universe; Heaven above, Hell below and Earth in the middle is a mythical notion that we moderns should not have to accept. We “moderns” know that there is nothing below the earth or above the skies from an empirical standpoint. Therefore, we can throw that out of our understanding. (Bultmann, website) What matters is that Jesus lives and is the Son of God, and we must have faith in Him alone and all will be well. But, this understanding alone cannot be. All of our sacred Creeds: Nicene, Apostles’, etc are based in scripture. (Bruce, website) Additionally, scripture reflects the character of God and Jesus, and serves as a pattern for us to follow. (Bruce, website) Should all this be thrown out? Furthermore, the books of the NT were not deemed inspired and authoritative because they were included in Canon; rather they were included in Canon because they were already revered and deemed to be inspired and authoritative by the earliest church fathers. (Bruce, website)

I personally have always believed that the Bible is the inspired, infallible and inerrant, authoritative word of God. Not that it is a substitute for faith in Jesus Christ, because ultimately that is where justification and salvation come from. But having this high view of scripture, I have not been comfortable with the ability for some to take portions of scripture and remove them, thereby reducing canon. (Sproul, 34) I struggle with this for many reasons, not the least of which are the multiple passages of scripture that attest to the infallibility and inerrancy of scripture. Passages that speak in favor of the inerrancy and infallibility in the Word include 2 Cor 4:3-6, 1 John 1:10, 2 Tim 3:16, John 10:35 to name a few. But most importantly to me is John 3:12, Jesus rebukes Nicodemus for not believing him on earthly things. How do we then say the Bible can err? In his book Scripture Alone, RC Sproul takes this a step further. For if we claim that God is inerrant, then how can we claim that writers under the divine inspiration of the Holy Spirit be guided into error? (Sproul, 85)

I believe this is due to a lack of understanding the terms infallible and inerrant, which in my humble opinion cannot be separated. EJ Young defines infallibility as meaning that the Bible has an indefectible authority that cannot be broken. It has absolute authority and cannot be contradicted in anyway. It is incapable of proving false or erroneous. (Sproul, 88) Furthermore, Hans Kuhn adds that the notion of something infallible connotes that something cannot deceive or mislead. (Sproul, 88) As we turn to the term inerrant, we define this word as meaning that it is free from error, incapable of being wrong, perfect in it’s teaching of the truth. By using these definitions and relationship between the words, how then can the words be separated with regards to scripture? By using the words as defined, and declaring scripture as infallible and inerrant, we are simply stating that scripture is true. Now if we can declare scripture is true, then how can anybody simultaneously believe that scripture contains deceit? I cannot make this connection. I don’t believe the Bible to be inerrant and infallible based on the ability of the human author; but rather because our belief is in the integrity of Jesus Christ as the Son of God. (Sproul, 86)

While faith in the Word is the ultimate duty and identification of a Christian, it is not the only response, or defense, as to the declaration of scripture as inerrant and infallible. Many methods exist in which one can verify the objective position that is desired; these include the Confessional Method, the Classical Method and the Presuppositional Method to name a few. (Sproul, 64-67) I feel that the Classical Method best describes my position and justification of the inerrancy and infallibility of scripture.


The Classical Method rests on 4 premises:

A. The Bible is the infallible word of God.

B. The Bible attests to its own infallibility.

C. The self-attestation of scripture is an infallible attestation.

Conclusion: The Bible is the infallible Word of God.

(Sproul, 69)

If we analyze a moment what this says, it becomes clear that this is not a circular or self-fulfilling logic. The premise presents scripture in a light that begins with the general truthfulness of scripture and ends with the declarations of the inerrancy or infallibility of scripture. The following presentation provided by RC Sproul builds upon this method in this manner:

A. The Bible is a reliable and trustworthy document.

B. On the basis of this document we have enough evidence to believe that Jesus Christ is the Son of God.

C. Jesus Christ, God’s Son, is an infallible authority.

D. Jesus Christ teaches that the Bible is beyond question and is the very word of God.

E. Because God is infallible and trustworthy, so to is His Word.

Conclusions: On the basis of the infallibility and authority of Jesus Christ, the church must believe the Bible to be infallible and trustworthy. (Sproul, 73)

In summary, the limitations of the paper cannot begin to do justice to the topic at hand. In my opinion, the Bible is the inspired, inerrant and infallible word of God. It must be the normative pattern for the Christian church to follow. Personally, I do not believe the Bible was a dictation, or that men served as scriveners for God writing word for word the message. The Bible has certainly been rewritten in parts, and assuredly the authors of the Bible used resources available to them in their day to write their message; whether common books, songs, traditions, etc, to best communicate the message laid on their heart through the inspiration of the Spirit. I believe strongly that the Spirit was the inspiring force in and through scripture that guided the writers into the message they were ultimately to communicate. Placement of a story in chronology, a set period of time, a scientific event, these were all written under divine inspiration and there to communicate to us a message that we are to receive under the illumination of the Spirit; these are not wrong, or errors, for as we discussed in class there are no errors in the Bible. To reduce canon, or mythologize scripture, or claim infallibility over inerrancy, in my opinion flies in the face of what scripture says about itself. I will end this brief paper with a passage, a warning, from John as he closed the Book of Revelation with a warning, and hence a warning now for all scripture in canon, with these words:

I warn everyone who hears the words of the prophecy of this book: If anyone adds anything to them, God will add to him the plagues described in this book. And if anyone takes words away from this book of prophecy, God will take away from him his share in the tree of life and in the holy city, which are described in this book. Rev 22:18-19

Bibliography

Achtemeier, Paul J. Inspiration and Authority
Peabody, MA.; Hendrickson Publishers, 1999

Bruce, FF. The New Testament Documents: Are they reliable?
www.earlychrisitianwriting.com; published 1943

Bultmann, Rudolph. Kerygma and Myth
www.earlychrisitanwriting.com; published 1953

Sproul, RC. Scripture Alone- The Evangelical Doctrine
Philipsburg, NJ; P&R Publishing, 2005



Thursday, August 9, 2012

Martin Luther's Verse

Lots of people associate Ephesians 2:8-9 as the classic "Luther Verse". However, it was Romans 1:16-17 that actually sparked the flame in Luther's heart that eventually led him to proclaim that salvation came through faith alone-Sola Fide!! Here is that verse:

For I am not ashamed of the Gospel; it is the power of God for salvation for everyone who has faith, to the Jew first and also to the Greek. For in it the righteousness of God is revealed through faith, for faith; as it is written, "The one who is righteous will live by faith." Romans 1:16-17

Wednesday, August 8, 2012

The Four Temperaments and Biblical Personalities

Ever wonder what your personality is like through the lens of Scripture?  Well this is a great little outline that I picked up during my class on Spiritual Development, with one of my favorite professor's of all time, Dr. David Oliver.  So, are you Sanguine? Melancholy? Choleric? Phlegmatic?  Read on and find out.  Hope you enjoy it!!

1. Sanguine-- ATrust me! It'll work out!

Proverbs 15:13 "A happy heart make the face cheerful, but heartache crushes the spirit."

Proverbs 15:15 "All the days of the oppressed are wretched, but the cheerful heart has a continual

feast."

Jesus enjoyed eating and drinking with friends and sinners and telling parables.

Peter--ATrust Me type.  He was very dramatic, often speaking up for the rest of the disciples. Sometimes he spoke before thinking. One moment, in front of the crowd, he promises to never forsake Christ. A while later he denied even knowing the Lord. He was probably sanguine and choleric.

John Mark--started well but then quit (Acts 15:37-39).

King David, Samson, Barnabas, Mary (Martha's Sister-probably sanguine/phlegmatic, people oriented, somewhat passive). Ruth showed sanguine behavior when she enticed Naomi to let her travel with her. She demonstrated family loyalty and an adventurous spirit by her willingness to move to a foreign country (probably sanguine/phlegmatic).

Many evangelists are sanguine.



2. Melancholy-- How was it done in the past?

Proverbs 27:12 The prudent see danger and take refuge, but the simple keep going and suffer for

it.

Jesus taught the lost about the kingdom of God.


Moses--A Do it Right kind of guy. Wanted to know the details of how God was going to help him lead the people out of Egypt. Attentive to the details of the Law given by God and the precise measurements of the temple. Probably Moses was a melancholy/phlegmatic. He seemed unsure of himself and tried to convince God to make his brother Aaron a leader.

Apollos--Acts 18:24-28 Probably melancholy and choleric.

Mary, the Mother of Jesus--Analytical: She wondered what sort of greeting this might be. Luke 2: 19 "Mary kept all these things, pondering them in her heart." Be it done unto me according to all you have said.  Likely melancholy/phlegmatic.

Judas Iscariot, Joseph (O.T.), Thomas--he doubted Christ's resurrection. Jesus gave him the evidence Thomas needed to believe. Esther the Queen was willing to comply with the rules and requirements of her position. Yet, when it became necessary to bend the rules, she wanted to make sure that it was done correctly. She planned very carefully and prayerfully and was systematic in her approach to problem solving.

Many teachers and intercessors have melancholy personalities.

3. Choleric-- Let's do it now!

Galatians 1:10 Am I now seeking human approval, or God's approval? Or am I trying to please

people? If I were still pleasing people, I would not be a servant of Christ.

Proverbs 11:14 For lack of guidance a nation falls, but many advisers make victory sure. This

text provides corrective guidance for the choleric temperaments who believe they are right

about most things.

Jesus argued with the scribes and pharisees about the Law.

Paul--A Do it Now! temperament.  He was left for dead, imprisoned, stoned, forsaken and forgotten, yet he pressed on toward the high calling of God.

Elijah stood against the priests of Baal.

Joshua, Rebekah, Priscilla, John the Baptist, Martha

Many apostles/prophets are Choleric.


4. Phlegmatic-- Let's keep things the way they are!

Proverbs 15:1 "A gentle answer turns away wrath, but a harsh word stirs up anger."

Proverbs 15:18 "A hot-tempered man stirs up dissension, but a patient man calms a quarrel.

Jesus spoke to the deepest needs of the woman at the well and the woman caught in adultery.

Barnabas--probably phlegmatic and sanguine, Acts 15:37-39.

Nehemiah--AStatus Quo and Consensus builder, good administrative skills to accomplish a task.

Isaac, Joseph (N.T.), Hannah--she was submissive and remained faithful, even though her dreams were not fulfilled. She may have appeared  unstable  when she prayed in the temple. Her reaction after she prayed shows she was very stable.

Many pastors and intercessors are phlegmatic.

Wednesday, August 1, 2012

Mark 9:36-37

Then He(Jesus) took a little child and put it among them; and taking it in His arms He said to them, "Whoever welcomes one such child in my name welcomes me, and whoever welcomes me welcomes not me but the one who sent me."

Tuesday, July 31, 2012

Time Flies

Wow...I cannot believe it has been nearly two months since my last entry.  This summer has been an absolute whirlwind.  Since June 2nd, we have:
  • Wrapped Dale's baseball season
  • Wrapped up Sally's softball season
  • Went to ALIVE Fest
  • Put on two 180 Summer Nights
  • Can Do Soccer Camp
  • First annual 180 Summer Spectacular
  • Went to Charlotte, NC for some training
And I am sure there is more that I am not remember right now.  But God is good and this summer, with it's ups and downs, has been a tremendous blessing and time of growth.  Needless to say, I do not want to neglect my blog like that anymore!!  So, I think I am going to take a new approach to my blogging.  Generally, I have reserved my blogs for larger entries, like ideas for sermons or papers.  I'm still going to keep doing that from regularly, but I think I am going to use it more to just post thoughts that I find interesting or cool snippets of items that I come across.  So that said, let us begin now...

I'm reading this book called "Contours in Christology in the New Testament" with Longenecker as the G.E.  I and reading the section on the Christology in Mark, and came across this cool bit of information on the early hymns used and found in the New Testament: 

"The most obvious early Christian hymns in praise of God are those found in Rom 11:33-36 and Rev 15:3b-4. The most commonly accepted early Christian hymns extolling Christ are Phil 2:6-11; 1 Tim 3:16b; and 1 Pet 2:22-23"

How interesting is that?  Hymns of praise used by the Apostles in their writing of the scriptures. Kind of puts a new perspective on singing hymns of praise during our worship on Sunday mornings, right?

Be blessed!!

Sunday, June 3, 2012

Looking For Signs From God

17 Gideon replied, “If now I have found favor in your eyes, give me a sign that it is really you talking to me. 18 Please do not go away until I come back and bring my offering and set it before you.”  And the Lord said, “I will wait until you return.” Judges 6:17-18

So I had to fly to Charlotte, NC on a business trip today, and anyone who knows me knows that I HATE to fly. I do not use the word hate lightly, but I do hate flying. I hate leaving my family, but most of all I hate it because; well...I'm afraid to fly. I don't like getting in, clicking the seat belt, and not being in control of the situation. I know that my fear is silly, and I have prayed and prayed to overcome it using such passages as Psalm 23, and Matthew 6, and while I have gotten increasingly better, I still don't like to fly.

But it seems like every time I have to do something that I really don't like to do, or better stated something I am afraid to do; the Lord seems to answer my prayers in some manner that helps to calm my nerves and lets me know that He is always near. Today was no different. Here's what happened:

I board the plane (a small regional jet with a 1/2 seat configuration) and it just so happens that the only open seat after everybody else boarded was the one next to me. I heard the Flight Attendant get on her phone and and tell the desk that they could take the one "stand by" customer that was waiting in the terminal. They hurry him aboard the plane as I am already seated and buckled in, with my Bible open and reading Psalm 23. Now this was an older gentleman, very nice. He stows away his carry on luggage, sits next to me and says this:

"Well hello there. I see you're reading the Scriptures."
I said, "Yep, I never travel without them."
"That's good." he said.

I introduce myself, and he does likewise. Here is where the story gets good. His name is Virgil and he is the head of the Aviation Dept. for Samaritan’s Purse. That’s right, he is a big time Christian and he has been a pilot for close to 50 years! As you can imagine our conversation went wild. I started by telling him I was afraid to fly, and he responded by saying, "It sure beats walking!”

I told him about my family, my ministry, Community Bible Church, but it all paled in comparison to what he got to share with me!! He works directly for Franklin Graham, plus he knows and told some great stories about Bev Shea, Cliff Barrows, and he even shared a little from his meetings with Billy Graham himself. How cool, how blessed I was by his company. As you can imagine, the hour flew by (literally) and we soon landed.

We parted by shaking hands, and he said 'Well. I know we'll meet again, either flying around here, or when we get to where we're eventually going." We said God bless you to each other and we parted ways.

You know, the Lord knew how stressed I was about this trip. I prayed for comfort, I prayed for peace, and the Lord provided it in the form of a wonderful chance meeting with Virgil. What a wonderful God we serve. Look around my friends, sometimes I think we may miss the many ways that the Lord answers us when we need it most.

Saturday, May 12, 2012

So what's with the 180?

Matthew 18:1-4 English Standard Version (ESV)


Who Is the Greatest?

18 At that time the disciples came to Jesus, saying, “Who is the greatest in the kingdom of heaven?” 2 And calling to him a child, he put him in the midst of them 3 and said, “Truly, I say to you, unless you turn and become like children, you will never enter the kingdom of heaven. 4 Whoever humbles himself like this child is the greatest in the kingdom of heaven.

I have had several people ask me recently about the meaning of the number 180 for our youth group. There is more to it than just a cool youth group name, even though Group 180 is a cool name!!

We live every day filled with choices. Everything we do, everywhere we are, is a direct result of choices that we make. Some of our choices are big: where to live, what car to drive, where school to go to, what career do I want to pursue, who will I marry, will I have children, and on and on. And then, some of our choices are relatively small: should I wear my hair up or down, what do I want for lunch, what do I want to watch on TV, do I wear shorts or pants today, and on and on.

Concurrently, every day we have the choice to make of whether or not we are going to follow God. Whatever we do, whether big or small, you can either glorify and follow God through your choices, or you can glorify and follow the world. You can’t do both, and it is up to you daily as to what choice you are going to make. You have two very clear and distinct options you can choose to follow daily:

The World <----------------------------------------------------> Jesus

Often times, we start out with the best of intentions. We want to follow Jesus, but we can’t. In our fallen nature oftentimes the world looks good, and we lose our way. When that happens, we need to turn around…we need to change course…we need to do a 180 and choose Jesus!

If we look at the passage from Matthew above, the Apostles are arguing over who would be the greatest in the Kingdom of Heaven. Now just by looking at what they are arguing over you can see that they have lost their way. Who cares about stuff like “who will be the greatest” in Heaven? You know who? Sinful, fallen people that’s who. Humans are a prideful bunch, and heaven sometimes feels just like a reward for doing a good job. So obviously, the better the job you do, the better the reward. On this point the Apostles had started to lose their way. Jesus understanding this, used the opportunity to illustrate to the Apostles the true nature of heaven. Calling a child to himself, he taught the Disciples that in order to enter the Kingdom of Heaven they must turn (do a 180) and become humble and childlike in their faith. There is no least and greatest in Heaven. Heaven is perfected creation as God had intended it to be. The Apostles strayed from the message of Jesus, and Jesus corrected them and got them to turn to him.

That is the driving force behind Group 180. Being a kid, or a young man or woman, in this age is tough. The influences of world through friends, reality TV, social media, etc. is nearly too much to handle. It is so easy to lose sight of the message of Jesus and focus your attention on the world. Group 180 is there so that the students know there is a church body that loves and supports them, that there are other students their age that share the same beliefs that they have, and to serve as a place where students know they can come and be equipped to turn from the world and turn towards Jesus Christ.

Jesus did not call us to partially follow Him. He called us to be His. He is our Saviour, He is our Lord. We need to turn our back to the world, do a 180, and follow Jesus Christ. In the words of the famous song “I have decided to follow Jesus”: “The world behind me, the cross before me. No looking back, no looking back.”

Friday, May 4, 2012

To be a donor, or not?

Is organ donation, or being an organ donor, compatible with the Christian life? I had someone ask me about this the other day, and after giving my response I thought I’d write a little blog about it in case anyone else had the same question. From what I can gather, the Bible does not specifically address the issue of organ donation. Organ transplants (like other modern technologies and advances) would have been unknown during Bible times. However, the scriptures is a unified drama that tells a unified story, with an overriding unifying message about love and redemption. When addressing issues such as this, we can look at verses that address the underlying principle that is needed. That being the case, here are some that in my opinion apply. Love and compassion are large, overriding principles of the Bible, therefore some compelling arguments for organ donation is the love and compassion that such an act demonstrates toward others. The command to "love your neighbor" was given by Jesus (Matthew 5:43), Paul (Romans 13:9), and James (James 2:8), but it can actually be traced all the way back to Leviticus 19:18. From the earliest days in the Old Testament, God's people were commanded to demonstrate a love for God as well as for their neighbors. We can use that principle to state that being willing to donate an organ from our own bodies would seem to be an marvelous example of selfless sacrifice for another. (Side Note: I want to be clear, each person has to make this decision with regards to their own sensibilities. We are not commanded to donate organs, but if you feel the desire to do so there is no argument against it that I can find in scripture. And if donating is not your thing, then don’t)


Getting on with it, the greatest example of sacrificing for another is the sacrifice that Jesus Christ made as He gave up His body for all of humanity. John summed up the command well when he wrote, "Dear friends, since God so loved us, we also ought to love one another" (1 John 4:11). Jesus not only conveyed this message of unconditional love, He also taught us to care for the hungry, thirsty, homeless, naked, sick, and imprisoned (Matthew 25:35-46). Jesus said "I tell you the truth, whatever you did for one of the least of these brothers of mine, you did for me" (Matthew 25:40). If a practice or procedure is not clearly in conflict with biblical principles, then it can be considered permissible and can be supported by faithful Christians.
There are several other topics that can be touched upon here related to organ harvesting. fetal tissue, mutilation of the body, keeping the body intact, etc., etc., etc. I am not going to address those now for the sake of brevity. But just to restate and be clear, a thorough reading and understanding of scripture demonstrates that being an organ donor is not in conflict with a Christian worldview and is therefore acceptable and permissible to faithful Christians.

“The greatest love you can show is to give your life for your friends…” John 15:13 (GWT)

Saturday, April 21, 2012

The Beatitudes

Sometimes, the best thing to do is let Scripture speak and get out of the way!  I love this passage from the "Sermon on the Mount" in Matthew 5.

The Beatitudes
When Jesus saw the crowds, he went up the mountain; and after he sat down, his disciples came to him. 2Then he began to speak, and taught them, saying:


3 ‘Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.

4 ‘Blessed are those who mourn, for they will be comforted.

5 ‘Blessed are the meek, for they will inherit the earth.

6 ‘Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness, for they will be filled.

7 ‘Blessed are the merciful, for they will receive mercy.

8 ‘Blessed are the pure in heart, for they will see God.

9 ‘Blessed are the peacemakers, for they will be called children of God.

10 ‘Blessed are those who are persecuted for righteousness’ sake, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.

11 ‘Blessed are you when people revile you and persecute you and utter all kinds of evil against you falsely* on my account. 12Rejoice and be glad, for your reward is great in heaven, for in the same way they persecuted the prophets who were before you.

Saturday, April 14, 2012

Feeling Depressed?

Do you feel sad? Depressed? Lonely? Discouraged? Down in the dumps? That is a horrible feeling, and often times these feelings get us down and defeat us before we ever know what hit us. Worst of all, these feelings will often prevent us from approaching our Lord.

But there is good news, these feelings are just that...feelings! Feelings change, feelings are not permanent, feelings so often depend on...well, us.

The reality is, for those of us that believe in Jesus Christ, that we should NEVER be sad, depressed or discouraged. Check out this passage from Ephesians 1:

Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who has blessed us in Christ with every spiritual blessing in the heavenly places, 4just as he chose us in Christ* before the foundation of the world to be holy and blameless before him in love. 5He destined us for adoption as his children through Jesus Christ, according to the good pleasure of his will, 6to the praise of his glorious grace that he freely bestowed on us in the Beloved. 7In him we have redemption through his blood, the forgiveness of our trespasses, according to the riches of his grace 8that he lavished on us. With all wisdom and insight 9he has made known to us the mystery of his will, according to his good pleasure that he set forth in Christ, 10as a plan for the fullness of time, to gather up all things in him, things in heaven and things on earth. 11In Christ we have also obtained an inheritance,* having been destined according to the purpose of him who accomplishes all things according to his counsel and will, 12so that we, who were the first to set our hope on Christ, might live for the praise of his glory. 13In him you also, when you had heard the word of truth, the gospel of your salvation, and had believed in him, were marked with the seal of the promised Holy Spirit; 14this* is the pledge of our inheritance towards redemption as God’s own people, to the praise of his glory. 15 -->

Wow...how can anyone read this passage and be depressed? Lets break it down a little:



  • In verse 3 Paul starts by telling us that Christ blessed us with EVERY spiritual blessing in the heavenly places. Hear that, every spiritual blessing. Jesus holds nothing back from us. And these blessings are not temporary earthly blessings, these are permanent, spiritual blessings in the heavenly places. What a blessing!




  • Verse 4 tells us that were were chosen in Christ before the foundations of the world to be holy and blameless in His sight. Jesus choose us before the foundations of the world!! While we were still sinners, while we were still unworthy Jesus choose us and justified us before Him in love.




  • Verse 5 continues this though by telling us that we are destined for adoption. Do you fully grasp that? We have been adopted! We are children of God, we are brothers and sisters with Jesus Christ!! And why did Jesus do this, Paul simply states that He did it according to His good pleasure to the praise of His glorious grace. Thats right...he did it just because. He did it because it gave God pleasure to adopt us. He did it because he loves us.




  • Verse 6 continues this though by saying that this grace and Love of God is freely given, freely bestowed in the Beloved (aka Jesus Christ). What a gracious, and generous and abundant God!




  • Verse 7 assures us that we have redemption and forgiveness through the blood of Jesus. And Paul demonstrates the value of this gift by stating that we receive it through the "riches" of His grace, and that it is lavished upon us. Think about that adjective "lavished", how often do we use that word day to day? Not often, because it really signifies great worth, great expense, great value. Paul uses that word here to describe the riches of God's grace towards us!!




  • If that isn't enough, in verse 9 we are told that God has made known to man the mystery of His Will according to His good pleasure. How awesome is that? Not only are we adopted, not only are we redeemed, not only do we gain and inheritance, but God also shares with us the mystery of His Will: that through Jesus Christ one day all things will come together.




  • Finally, in vv 14-15 we are told that through the Holy Spirit we are marked and sealed as a pledge of this inheritance. That right, once you have accepted Jesus Christ we are sealed with Holy Spirit as a pledge. We are His, He cannot lose us. Once day, we will be called home and the guarantee of the the Spirit is that we will spend eternity in paradise with our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ.



So how do you feel now? Ephesians 1 is quite possibly my favorite chapter in the Bible. What a wonderful, loving, and gracious God we have. To quote Third Day, "Praise to the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, our God and our King, to Him we will sing. In His great mercy He has given us life. Now we can be called the children of God".



Feeling depressed, don't be. Stand on the promises of Jesus Christ. Are feelings can change, but our gracious Lord and Saviour never will.