Saturday, March 09, 2013

Our Altar


We have an altar from which those who serve the tabernacle have no right to eat. For the bodies of those animals, whose blood is brought into the sanctuary by the high priest for sin, are burned outside the camp. Therefore Jesus also, that He might sanctify the people with His own blood, suffered outside the gate. Therefore let us go forth to Him, outside the camp, bearing His reproach. (Hebrews 13:10-13, NKJV).

Altars have been a part of human history from the beginning. Even from a secular viewpoint, the earliest hominids left behind evidence of ritual platforms endued with religious or spiritual significance. These were entirely focused on the need to propitiate angry deities who sought to punish mankind for its unapproved behavior.

It is fascinating how pervasive such beliefs were, arising all over the globe, across cultures, widely variant religious beliefs, practices, vast geographical areas, and levels of civilizational advancement. Evolution cannot explain such commonality of thought and practice, but the Bible can, and does.

The inherent need to somehow make up for bad behavior, to placate powers beyond human control and understanding, the need to, in some way, offer sacrifice to forestall or prevent judgment is as natural to human behavior as avarice, greed and lust. It is a powerful impulse and remains to this day, and is expressed in any number of obvious or covert ways.

From self-inflicted suffering, to guilt-assuaging charity, to silent bargaining with the Universe, even the most rabid atheist feels, and acts upon, this ubiquitous need. It is part of our cellular make-up, an integral component of our emotional-spiritual DNA.

And it is all futile and useless.

The only sacrifices that had any effectiveness were ordained by God for the Jews of the Old Testament, and even these were only prefigurements of the one Sacrifice that would, once and for all, placate the Creator's righteous wrath against His creatures' unrighteous rebellion – the sacrifice of Jesus on the Cross.

With the exception of the sacrifice of consecration, which was completely burned, the ancient Levitical offerings entailed eating a portion of the slain animal or produce in the vicinity of the altar upon which the gift was presented. The best parts of the animal or the first-fruits of the field were consumed in the presence of God, as an acknowledgement that He was the Person who was sinned against, while simultaneously acknowledging Him as the provider of that which was being offered in payment.

He both established the cost of sin and was the Source of the means to settle the debt, as He did with Abraham and Isaac, and by giving His Son to die on the Cross.

In the Old Testament economy, the priesthood of Israel was given the remainder of the sacrifice as payment for their service in the Tabernacle, and later in the Temple.

In contrast, our altar is of a completely different nature, based on the immeasurable superiority of our Sacrifice, the Lord Jesus. His death did not provide mere atonement (the covering up of sin, for that is what atone means), but complete elimination of the stain and debt of sin.

No other sacrifice was possible or needed after that one superb act of filial obedience and divine love on His part. And therefore the figurative altar of that sacrifice, the Cross, is utterly unique and irreplaceable, and can be approached only by those who place their complete faith in Christ. To everyone else, it is unapproachable.

The right of access, then, is inviolable and irrevocable. It is reserved for neither Jew, nor Greek, but for the church of Christ alone.

That is the bad news.

The good news is that everyone is eligible to be granted that right if they cease depending on anything else but Christ to satisfy God's wrath against sin.

But as many as received Him, to them He gave the right to become children of God, to those who believe in His name: who were born, not of blood, nor of the will of the flesh, nor of the will of man, but of God. (John 1:12, 13, NKJV).

Now the modern, “enlightened” world rejects this reasoning, considering it archaic, superstitious nonsense. If God exists at all, in their thinking, He would not be so arcane and bloodthirsty. Instead He would be more like what they imagine themselves falsely to be.

What they fail to understand in their arrogance, is that God is not the God of their own imagination, but the transcendent, eternal, all-knowing, and all-powerful Creator of existence. He gets to set the rules, and while He gives them the freedom to disobey those rules, He promises to exact judgment on those who do.

And he also provides the only vehicle of escape from that punishment, faith in His Son's sacrifice on the altar of His love.

Monday, March 04, 2013

Profitless Doctrines


Do not be carried about with various and strange doctrines. For it is good that the heart be established by grace, not with foods which have not profited those who have been occupied with them. (Hebrews 13:09, NKJV).

Because Jesus is unchanging (Hebrews 13:08), His teaching is unchanging and is established forever. Consequently there are no new doctrines needed or possible for the Christian faith. Nonetheless, these abound, and anticipating this, the writer of Hebrews gives this plain, common sense warning about the illogic of being enticed by the inferior teachings of men.

While we may not understand fully all the tenets of the New Testament, (in terms of the depth and richness of God's eternal purposes) we can only concur with what has been said by expositors throughout church history, “the main things are the plain things”.

Thus, the best protection against being carried about with various and strange doctrines, is immersion in the truth. We are to be steadfast, immovable, rooted and grounded, holding fast the word of life so that we do not fall prey to the cunning craftiness of deceitful plotting and the trickery of men.

This does not mean we are to fear such error, for it has no power against the truth, but we are to guard against it in the same way that a diligent householder guards against threats to the security and safety of the house: with eyes and ears open, and ever-ready access to the armory of the Word of God.

Perhaps, one of the strangest doctrines in existence, one that has been around since the Fall in Eden, is that we are capable of saving ourselves. This is the foundation for legalism and it is deadly. It is the height of human arrogance and unreason, and if it gains the least foothold, it spreads like an enervating fungus, defiling the soul with spiritual pride.

That is why in the verse above, strange doctrines are coupled with the eating, or the not eating, of specific ritualistic foods. We know that the Levitical dietary restrictions of the Old Testament served two primary purposes – they kept God's people apart from the world, and they provided daily reinforcement of the concepts of “clean and unclean”.

However, these strictures were completely abrogated by the grace revealed in the New Testament, for the Law was given through Moses, but grace and truth came through Jesus Christ. His atoning death made all things new and clean, so that the new contrast between the works of the Law, and salvation by grace alone through faith alone were equally reinforced by daily living. Yet, some could not put away adherence to outward laws, and, instead continued to be occupied by that which had been rendered obsolete. The temptation of the old and comfortable proved too strong for many, preventing them from fully embracing the “new” law of faith.

In the end, their unbelief, for that is what it was, resulted in their rejection of the promised Messiah.

Another enticing, but unequivocally false doctrine is Darwinian Evolution, which is the theory (dogma, really) that states that all Causality came about solely by chance over time. In essence, this false scientific premise states that some postulated Quantum Singularity, at some distant “time” in the past, exploded, and, in the process, created time and space and all the elements of primordial matter. These, in turn, through random happenstance over eons, “evolved” into galaxies, stars, planets, and ultimately, us.

The reason this impressive sounding idea is so alluring is because it brilliantly feeds the maw of human pride (mankind is accountable to itself only), while simultaneously rendering us as a kind of potluck result. We exist not because we are special, but because we aren't. And because there is No One and Nothing outside of Materiality that had anything to do with anything, we can go about our business of becoming the gods we have always wanted to be since the Garden, without regard to the true and living God.

Aside from the inherent utter despair this philosophy leads to due to its fundamental acknowledgement that there is no purpose, intelligence, or direction to anything, it provides the one thing a Christ-rejecting world so self-destructively desires: an argument for dispensing with a Creator. Doing so at the expense of all purpose and meaning in life is considered only a small price to pay.

Almost as good, and in someways even more brilliant, is the heresy of Theistic Evolution. This is the idea that while a Creative Intelligence may have started the whole thing, she/he/it has no interest in anything other than sitting back and watching the drama unfold – less despair, perhaps, but equally allowing for supernatural non-interventionism. Thus, dispensing more or less entirely with the God of the Bible, while retaining some semblance of overarching, but passive, authority.

There is no good reason to hold either of these fallacies as true, but reason and rebellion against God have little to do with each other. Both of these strange doctrines gives man the illusion of control and non-accountability to a Deity, with the unspoken corollary that we ourselves will eventually fill that post.

It requires more faith and suspension of reason to believe in Macroevolution than it ever would to believe in Special Creation by a Personal Deity. Everything in the Universe, from the Cosmological Constants, to the contradictory results of Radioisotope Dating, to the irreducible complexity of the simplest organic cell, flies squarely in the face of mindless, or “passive” Creationism.

The purported long ages of both the earth and the Cosmos are being addressed with new cosmological theories, extensions to Relativistic Physics, and hypotheses regarding gravitational time dilation, with earth at the center of a created Universe.

And regardless of whether these latest Creationist origins theories serve to explain fully all the scientific data at our disposal, it is clear that the Theory of Evolution does not. The dirty secret kept from popular culture is that Evolution is a paradigm on the brink of complete collapse. Even its staunchest proponents are beginning to realize (and admit) it is woefully inadequate in accounting for the most fundamental questions of modern physics. That is why we here about such imaginative pseudo-scientific constructs as Dark Matter and Dark Energy. These are the mathematical necessities required to “fill the gaps” in the whimsical Big Bang tales.

The bottom line of this exhortation in Hebrews, then, is for each of us to realize that there is no profit in denying truth. God has spelled out clearly what we must do to be saved, and among the most important steps is to cease being willfully deceived.

It is a profitless endeavor to turn aside from the truth of God to the gossamer imaginings of fallible man, knowing that ultimately, rejecting His truth ends in eternal calamity.

Instead, we should cling to that which was revealed to us through His Word, and in the ministry of His Son's propitiatory work on the Cross.

Finally, understand that all doctrines regarding faith and godliness that are sourced outside the recognized Canon of Scripture are neither authoritative or inerrant. These are, like all things man-centered, corrupt and corrupting, profiting nothing.

Ultimately, unless you are firmly anchored in the truth, you WILL be carried about by your own understanding and by “popular wisdom”. Jesus Himself said it best:

But everyone who hears these sayings of Mine, and does not do them, will be like a foolish man who built his house on the sand: “and the rain descended, the floods came, and the winds blew and beat on that house; and it fell. And great was its fall.” (Matthew 7:26, 27, NKJV).

Saturday, March 02, 2013

Unchanging


Jesus Christ is the same yesterday, today, and forever. (Hebrews 13:08, NKJV).

There is no ground quite as useless as shifting sand. This is true in geology, and is metaphorically true in all spheres of human experience. Consistency, solidity, and stability - not whimsy - are the requirements needed in the realms of life and death, morality, ethics, and religion.

Mere mortals cannot achieve this goal, only Deity can. If we were to base anything of substance on vaporous human opinion alone, we would stumble through life as the blind leading the blind. Our views of right and wrong, the sanctity of life, the value of marriage and family, and the dignity inherent in being human would be blown about with the wind of culture and popular opinion. These would be as changeable and uncertain as shifting sand.

When you remove the omnipotent, omniscient, and omnipresent Being from the equation, all that is left is the miserable imagination and intellect of fallen and depraved man. The inevitable result is chaos and anarchy, the deadly slime upon which evil thrives.

Increasingly, as “modern” civilization departs from God, we see this very thing. When you decry the Standards-Maker as obsolete, standards themselves become pillars of reed in the sand. Nothing of value can be counted upon to survive the next gale of plebeian thinking and Christ-denying rebellion.

That is why the short verse above is so vitally important to understanding the nature of our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ. This text, and others like it, affirm and establish the unequivocal deity and eternality of the One we serve.

It is logically impossible to accept the mistaken concept that Jesus was other than God in the flesh. If you accept Him at all, and understand the things He said and what was written about Him, you MUST conclude what perhaps C.S. Lewis said best:

I am trying here to prevent anyone saying the really foolish thing that people often say about Him: I’m ready to accept Jesus as a great moral teacher, but I don’t accept his claim to be God. That is the one thing we must not say. A man who was merely a man and said the sort of things Jesus said would not be a great moral teacher. He would either be a lunatic — on the level with the man who says he is a poached egg — or else he would be the Devil of Hell. You must make your choice. Either this man was, and is, the Son of God, or else a madman or something worse. You can shut him up for a fool, you can spit at him and kill him as a demon or you can fall at his feet and call him Lord and God, but let us not come with any patronizing nonsense about his being a great human teacher. He has not left that open to us. He did not intend to.”

Now, at least on the surface, it does not necessarily follow that eternality equates to immutability. Other religions speak of the “whimsy of Allah”, or the “unknowability of God”, but if you look only a little closer you will see that for God to be God - infinite, and all-knowing - He must be immutable, unchanging. You must see, even further, that “change” from that perspective is antithetical to omniscience. Why would He alter an opinion, or action, or plan? Did He not foresee all the contingencies in the first place? Did His perception change?

Granted, the Bible speaks of God's interaction with Creation in anthropomorphic terms, “He regretted that He made man...”, “He turned against them...”, etc., but that is only an accommodation for human understanding; a way to describe the flow of events that, for God to be God, He must have foreknown before the foundation of existence.

What this means for us is simply this: the fact that Jesus is unchanging is surety that all His promises and warnings are true; that He is faithful; that He will complete that good work that He has begun in us; that He holds all of Causality in His hands and will fulfill all that He has purposed and planned... for us.

It also means that the doctrine laid out in the New Testament, inspired by His Spirit, is unalterable. His precepts and truths do NOT evolve, they are established in Heaven, and nothing and no one can change what has been written.

So, man's only escape from eternal judgement is by forgiveness through faith in Him. We are immortal whether we like it or not. There is no way into Heaven except through Him. We are saved not by works but by grace through faith. We cannot please God without faith. All our righteousness is as filthy rags. In Him is all fullness of joy forever. He always lives to make intercession for us. In short:

...He made Him who knew no sin to be sin for us, that we might become the righteousness of God in Him. (2 Corinthians 5:21, NKJV).

Instead of arrogantly denying the relevance of Christianity as old-fashioned, we should glory in its stability, consistency and immutability. For upon that rests our entire eternity. There MUST be some things which cannot change in order for things to be at all.

While His unthinkable judgment against sin is unchanging, so too is His immeasurable forgiveness through faith.

Without Christ as our rock, we could not rest, for without Him we are forever on the shifting sands of our own powerlessness.

Sunday, February 24, 2013

Consider the Outcome


Remember those who rule over you, who have spoken the word of God to you, whose faith follow, considering the outcome of their conduct. (Hebrews 13:07, NKJV).

There exists authority in the church, real, ordained by Christ Himself, and purposeful. There is always first, Christ, then the Pastor or Under-shepherd, then the Elders and Deacons. It is simple, direct, and, if exercised under the guidance of Scripture and in the will of God, remarkably effective.

In some sense, it is modeled after Moses and his elders as the Children of Israel wandered through the Wilderness, and that is a fitting picture, for the church of Christ is also comprised of strangers in a strange land, sojourners in a place that is not our home.

All other ecclesiastical hierarchies are man made, and aside from a man being called by God, immersed in sound doctrine for an extended time, and leading a godly life, there are no other qualifications or prerequisites. The trappings of degree and pedigree, educational resume, and man-centered certification are all so much vapor and smoke. If a man is called, he can do no other than to teach and lead the people of God. If he is not, no matter what his official job title may be, or how large his following or congregation, he is a human figurehead, a kind of pseudo-spiritual counterpart to an elected official or hired CEO. No amount of ritual, ceremony, or stately pageantry can alter his (or her) standing.

But if a man is these things, called, godly, and immersed in sound doctrine, his authority and responsibility are as real and solid as the planet itself, and his people are to respect and comply with that authority. That is not to say that such a one cannot disqualify himself by sin, or “lording it over” his church, or holding to heretical views, but it is to affirm that the true church of Christ has structure and divine purpose. It cannot be a willy-nilly conglomeration of man-made strictures and codicils. It must be in accord with the pattern laid down in the New Testament or, regardless of what it calls itself, it is not Christ's ekklesia (church).

Now, a woman is not to hold spiritual authority over a man in the church, and in writing this, I can hear the gasps of feminist outrage rocking the very foundations of the universe. Nevertheless, that is simply the clear teaching of Scripture. Yes, we know Priscilla of the 1st century taught Apollos doctrine, and corrected him in his misinterpretations of the gospel. And yes, often women did more in the founding of the early church than any number of men (Phoebe, Eunice, Lydia, the numerous Marys, Tryphena, Tryphosa, and many unnamed others), but that is irrelevant in the context of following Christ's blueprint for His church. He sets the rules for His reasons and purposes (and there are many – some known, some unknown), and obeying Him in all things, not just the easy or politically correct things, is the first priority.

In a practical sense, for a church to be a true church, the pastor must be a godly man whose primary purpose is to teach the Word of God to a submissive congregation in order to equip them for the work of ministry. Again I hear the seething outrage at the use of the word, submissive, but that may be because the word has taken modern connotations which have little to do with what it really means.

Submission in the Bible is entirely voluntary, propelled by love, not fear or intimidation. In the church we are to submit first to Christ, and then to one another. It is a gloriously simple proposition, when embraced unencumbered by the deadweights of sinful human society. It is the perfect plan for peace and unity, and it has in the past, and continues in the present, to shake the very foundations of the earth.

Which brings us to the desired outcome of the whole ecclesiastical plan: powerful witness for Christ while providing a home for the saints. And by home, I mean a place of safety, nurturing and edification – not a cloister, but a loving boot camp that trains and prepares the people of God for the work of God in a fallen world.

The outcome then is effective evangelism and protective sanctuary, a twofold mission implemented for the sole purpose of providing a means for human beings to escape from unthinkable judgement through faith in Christ.

A pastor or elder's effectiveness is based entirely on that performance criteria. It is not quantified by numbers or political influence, but by the faithful shepherding of the flock of God so that through their words, deeds and way of life, the Kingdom of God is increased.

Please note the conjunction of “rule” and “spoken the word of God to you.” These must go hand in hand; it is impossible to have one without the other in the church, for it is the faithful exposition of the inerrant word of God that saves, edifies, and equips. Nothing else will do, and without these, no matter what else may be present, there is no fulfillment of Christ's purpose for His church.

With these, no matter how unadorned or impressive from an earthly perspective, God's work is done and the impact and reward is both temporal and eternal.

Leaders in the church are not only to be “apt to teach”, but their leadership MUST be affirmed by example. Eloquence and erudition are no substitute for living out one's faith in steadfast and consistent example. There can never be a “do what I say not what I do” approach to pastoral ministry. Word and deed must be one.

The importance of this role cannot be understated. The influence wrought by a godly pastor can be far-reaching, and so can the damage by one who is unfaithful or hypocritical. That is why teachers are worthy of great reward... or “double judgment”. It is no small thing to be called to lead the people of God and then to succeed... or fail.

And it is for these outcomes that a pastor has been granted spiritual authority over his people, not as tyrant or potentate, but as a shepherd laying down his life for those under his care - pouring himself out as a drink offering on the sacrifice and service of their faith.

What happens if the focus exhortation above is ignored? If the ruler of a church is counted unworthy of respect and submission? The outcome is division and strife spiraling down into eventual dissolution of that fellowship.

It is very much a reciprocal arrangement between church and pastor. To the man is given respect and godly obedience. To his people, in return, he gives all he has, all the time, to build them up in the faith, to teach, to exhort, to correct, and to lead in the ways of godliness. 

Saturday, February 23, 2013

Contentment


Let your conduct be without covetousness; be content with such things as you have. For He Himself has said, “I will never leave you nor forsake you.” So we may boldly say: “The LORD is my helper; I will not fear. What can man do to me?” (Hebrews 13:05-06, NKJV).

The root word in Greek for being content has a surprising etiology: it comes from an emphatic action verb that conveys the idea of “raising a barrier, behind which one is able to defend against, or ward off threats, to keep possession of unfailing strength, and thus, to be satisfied.”

First and foremost then, the formula for contented godly living is founded on security, rather than possessions. As Christians, this makes absolute sense since our security is in an all-powerful, faithful, eternal and good Person. It is NOT in anything we devise or achieve, but in what we have been given through Christ, which makes the barrier raised around us impenetrable and invulnerable. Therefore the rhetorical question that follows, What can man do to me? is answered with a resounding and unshakeable, NOTHING.

Contented living is a byproduct of faith. It is not an attitude of apathy or indifference, as often mischaracterized by the modern world, and it does not stem from material riches, but, paradoxically from poverty of spirit. The engine that powers it is thankfulness engendered by the humble realization of who and what we really are (miserable sinners), in contrast to what we are destined for in following Christ (inconceivable and utterly undeserved eternal blessing).

Too frequently the concept of “miserable sinners” falls blithely from our mouths as mere sounds signifying nothing. To be fully content, again paradoxically, requires hard-bitten introspection, coming face to face with what we were before Christ. This is not easy and the difficulty largely results from two handicaps.

The first, for those who came to Christ later in life, stems from the pain of viewing our past actions in the full light of Christ's glory. Even our most altruistic achievements were inevitably and ultimately motivated by fallen human pride, and the more we understand the Lord's purity and moral beauty, the uglier we become.

And our worst behaviors, however dark and evil they may have been, take on an unmitigated pall straight from the pit of Hell itself. We smell of death and decay, an endless noxious bog of depravity, selfishness, and murderous intent.

If you think this hyperbole, take note of Jesus' Sermon on the mount, where He condemns not only the outward actions but the inward intent, and summarizes each and every one of us by saying, if you being evil...

It is not that our past life was utterly devoid of benign, or at least morally neutral, misbehavior, it is that the heart behind every action, word and thought was incurably and desperately wicked.

Ironically, one advantage for conversion late in life is that we fall into the category of those who are forgiven much, love much.

The second difficulty arises for those who came to Christ earlier in life, and, by so doing, were mercifully prevented from committing the more obviously egregious sins. While equally hard-bitten introspection is also required, the concrete and tangible data points, the blood trail, so to speak, is harder to see. And the temptation to a false sense of spiritual superiority is that much greater.

This, incidentally, is why legalism is deadly – it overlooks the root cause, like a lovely house built upon shifting sands destined for collapse. Christianity is as far from an outward facade of righteousness as Heaven is from Hell. Without doubt, it is the inward that matters most – the thoughts and intent of the heart.

However hard then, contentment can only come from accurate self-perception in comparison to a doctrinally sound and correct view of our Savior. With Christ as the standard, we are all, indeed, the most miserable of sinners.

That realization must then be followed by a full comprehension of these facts: we are forgiven; and we have been made new.

Forgiveness is sometimes easier to give than to receive, but for us to be truly grateful we must first truly receive that which has been extended to us by the death of Christ on the Cross. If we don't, we can neither be content, nor can we fully rest in Him.

In turn, this lack leads to anemic witness and a life energized by either delusional pride, or enervated by the sense that we are not, in fact, forgiven.

The former leads to unforgiveness of others, and the second to unforgiveness of ourselves. Neither outcome is what the Lord desires for His children, hence the repeated New Testament exhortations to be content.

Again, contentment is not complacence or self-satisfaction. It is an active gratitude for the strength and security that is forever ours through Jesus.

It is living based on the certainty that “The LORD is my helper [companion, protector, reward]; I will not fear. What can man do to me?”

Finally, note again the emphasis on the absurdity of what mere man can do to us in light of our security in the Lord. The mention of man includes us, ourselves, individually. If we are fully cognizant of the forgiveness we have obtained through faith in Christ, we are fully immune to condemnation from whatever the source; the world, Satan, and ourselves.

The emphatic statement in Romans 8, There is therefore now no condemnation most assuredly, and perhaps especially, applies to self-condemnation.

Yes, spiritual pride is a definite temptation, but so is false spiritual poverty based on the lie that while Christ can and has forgiven all others, there is something special about our evil that makes it beyond His reach.

Beware, for that is blasphemy of the highest order.

Monday, February 18, 2013

The Undefiled Bed


Marriage is honorable among all, and the bed undefiled; but fornicators and adulterers God will judge. (Hebrews 13:04, NKJV).

It should come as no shock today that the world is attempting to undermine any and all aspects of godly living, marriage, childbirth and parenting being the most targeted. As human history winds down into its prophesied depraved conclusion, expect the battles to intensify.

Christian marriage, after all, is the bedrock of raising godly children. The cycle is designed to repeat, as it has for the last 2000 years, so that those engaged in Christian marriage raise godly children, who engage in Christian marriage and raise more godly children, and so on.

This a threat to the world's long war against God, and from its perspective, must be stopped at all costs. The strategies of warfare are many and devious.

In the past, Christian marriage has been portrayed in a negative light in terms of sexual repression. Puritanism, painted in the most derogatory terms possible, became a curse and insult. It was an effective tactic based on lies. Puritans believed in marital fidelity, but to say these godly men and women eschewed sex, is to imply that their typically large families were brought about by obligation and duty rather than the natural and joyful intimacy of loving married couples.

But the stereotype continues in books and movies, and Christian marriage has become synonymous with cold and perfunctory human relations, or the evil insistence that a faithful life-long marriage between one man and one woman is unnatural and damaging.

Nothing could be further from the truth. Human gender and sexual reproduction are inventions by God Himself. On the 6th day of Creation, one physically perfect man became paired with one physically perfect woman, in a perfect garden situated in a perfect world. And both were unclothed.

Even in today's twisted and perverse morality, that does not sound like a sexually repressive scenario, but rather an idyllic and physically intense romantic setting. That the end result was corrupted by rebellion and sin takes nothing away from the obvious original intent.

God made man and woman to enjoy and revel in each other's presence and company on every possible level. Had our original parents stuck to the original plan, childbirth would have remained painless, and the marriage partnership would have been effortless and joyful, with physical bodies unencumbered by aging and decay forever.

That does not sound like something implemented by a pleasure-aversion Deity, for it is God who manufactured our bodies to experience profound joy on the marriage bed.

The corruption of all that is a human invention. Sexual activity was defiled by human sin, and used for purposes that are truly evil and unnatural. Sex outside of marriage (adultery) and sex before marriage (fornication), are fundamental violations of the Manufacturer's detailed specifications for His creatures.

The results of the last 50 years of the so-called Sexual Revolution has wreaked havoc on the institution of marriage, and has brilliantly served to undermine the foundation of the most tactically effective means of evangelism, the godly human family.

This is not to imply that saving faith is hereditary, but it is to emphasize that, aside from pleasure and life-long companionship, the institution of marriage was devised by God to maximize the chances of raising godly seed in a fallen world.

It is through the example and teaching of faithful Christian parents that children come to know of Christ as Lord and Savior. This is the crucial foundation from which each child may step beyond merely knowing of, to knowing in a personal relationship.

That the enemies of God recognize this, either intellectually or through brutal animal cunning, is clear by the all-out attacks against marriage, family and sexual purity.

From cynical mockery to rabid cultural antagonism, the ways of godly living are increasingly marginalized and demonized.

By far, the most effective counterattack is to simply live a godly life, in a committed Christian relationship that unapologetically affirms that the best course for human relationships is a godly family. That means purity and abstinence before marriage, and fidelity afterwards.

This is the diametric opposite of repressive or restrictive because it facilitates the manifold pleasures, blessings and security of lifelong monogamous marriage. There is no human institution more powerful, or that serves as a stronger bulwark against personal isolation, despair and moral dissolution.

It is no wonder that God promises to judge any and all who willfully, and without repentance or seeking forgiveness, violate His perfect design for interpersonal relationships, for in so doing these people become destroyers of the future of God's most beloved creation: humanity.

It has been well-proven throughout history, that when the foundations of godly family are undermined, civilization collapses. We are on that path now. It is only through God's grace and mercy that the battle rages on, but there will come a time when He lifts His protective hand from sphere of earthly events and gives humanity over completely to its own fallen desires and God-hating rebellion.

Then all Hell will literally break loose upon the planet.

Sunday, February 17, 2013

Remember the Prisoners


Remember the prisoners as if chained with them--those who are mistreated--since you yourselves are in the body also. (Hebrews 13:03, NKJV).

Although muted in much of today's media, the persecution of Christians is on the rise throughout the world. In many areas, professing faith in Christ is a felony. Evangelizing others is a capital offense. Pastors are imprisoned and mistreated daily. Families are torn apart. Missionaries are beaten and murdered. It is a trend without precedent even given the hostility of the Roman world of the 1st Century and subsequent Christ-rejecting eras.

Other forms of persecution, especially in the West, are more subtle but nearly as repressive, and none of it should be a surprise. In fact, it is exactly as Jesus said:

If the world hates you, you know that it hated Me before it hated you. “If you were of the world, the world would love its own. Yet because you are not of the world, but I chose you out of the world, therefore the world hates you. Remember the word that I said to you, ‘A servant is not greater than his master.’ If they persecuted Me, they will also persecute you. If they kept My word, they will keep yours also.” (John 15:18-20, NKJV).

Make no mistake. If you are a true follower of Christ, the world is against you. The more closely you walk with Him and the more you speak the truth in love, the more enmity will come your way. Those in your own household may turn away from you and betray you; your own family may despise and slander you.

There are really only two camps; those whose allegiance is with Christ, and those who are of the world. You can attempt to straddle the dividing line, closeting your faith, holding your tongue, trying to fit in, and you may, for a time, succeed. But know this, that is precisely what the world wants you to do: shut up.

If you have never suffered from this kind of pressure, your are either fortunate, or guilty of compromise.

While we are commanded to live peaceably, as much as it depends on us, we should not expect peace. We are soldiers in enemy territory, and while we do not wrestle against flesh and blood, it is often from our own flesh and blood that the deepest hurts come.

So what are we to do?

From the verse above, the strategy is profoundly simple. We are to so identify with, and support, each other, following Christ's own example, that what is done to one of us, grieves us all. There is no room or place for apathy in the Body of Christ. Indifference to the persecution and mistreatment of our brothers and sisters in the Lord is not an option.

We are to weep with those who weep.

Know this too, there are many forms of imprisonment, as there are forms of mistreatment - not just the physical kind. Chains are not always visible, and abuse does not always leave marks.

The writer of Hebrews exhorts us to remember the prisoners. Remember them in prayer. Remember them in anyway that can provide comfort and support. Remember them as you would remember the parts of your own body.

Think how desperately hard it is for you to forget a broken limb, or your own chronic illness. That is the model to follow.

When one child of God suffers, we all suffer, and in remembering them in this way, we are not only following the example of the Lord Himself, but we are reminding ourselves of His care for each one of us, and of His so extravagantly identifying with our own suffering and sin that He went to the Cross on our behalf.

This is not to say that weeping is our only recourse, for we are also to rejoice with those who rejoice. Martyrs throughout history have counted it joy to suffer for Christ's sake. From the Apostles onward, there are astounding accounts of men, women and children who, by God's empowerment, have faced persecution and death, not with sorrow, but with supernatural grace and resolve.

In the Book of Acts, we see Peter, John and others rejoicing with great joy to be counted worthy to be beaten and imprisoned on behalf of Christ. Not that they sought such outcomes, or by their own actions deserved them, but that when persecution came, they understood the glory of suffering for their allegiance with the Savior of the World.

This kind of attitude and way of life makes Christians indomitable. While the world wants to exterminate us like vermin, all they can do is kill our bodies. They can never take away our faith or our faithful witness.

And as was said by Hugh Latimer to Nicholas Ridley as they were burned at the stake in Oxford, England:

Be of good comfort, Master Ridley, play the man! We shall this day light such a candle, by God's grace, in England, as I trust shall never be put out.

Above all we are to remember that this world is not our home, that our true citizenship is in Heaven as children of the King, and that nothing that comes our way in this life is without His purpose and meaning.

But even if you should suffer for righteousness’ sake, you are blessed. “And do not be afraid of their threats, nor be troubled.” For it is better, if it is the will of God, to suffer for doing good than for doing evil. (1 Peter 3:14, 17, NKJV).

Remembering the prisoners, then, is a way to bring us back to the Cross of Christ, to affirm our unity under one God and one Spirit, to remind us that we are utterly and solely dependent on the One who Himself purged our sins.

And to bring to mind this truth: nothing is ever truly lost in Christ. For those in chains are not prisoners of the world, but of Christ.

Saturday, February 16, 2013

Stranger Hospitality


Do not forget to entertain strangers, for by so doing some have unwittingly entertained angels. (Hebrews 13:02, NKJV).

The popular view of the Christian faith, foisted by an antagonistic culture, is one of isolationism based on a sense of superiority. While it is undeniable that there are so-called religious groups naming the name of Christ who are unbearably obnoxious, toxic, and even evil, these are not true followers of the doctrine and practice laid down by Christ and the 1st century Apostles.

Believers are to be in the world, just not of the world. Permanent cloistered separation is as unbiblical as idol worship. Our relationship with Christ is to be lived out in the world so that others can see.

Aside from temporary retreats for the purposes of rest and recuperation, there is no verse in the New Testament that makes such a lifestyle permissible, let alone mandatory. Strictly isolated Monasteries and Cloisters were brought about by the traditions of men, not the commands of God. That is not to say that the less exclusionist variety of these communities have not done good for the world, for they most certainly have, but it is to affirm that complete separation from the world in this life is unscriptural.

Further, permanent isolationism may be a grand idea for a variety of reasons, not the least of which is sparing the world from obnoxious groups, but religious practice is not one of them. In fact, we are commanded to do the opposite:

I wrote to you in my epistle not to keep company with sexually immoral people. Yet I certainly did not mean with the sexually immoral people of this world, or with the covetous, or extortioners, or idolaters, since then you would need to go out of the world. But now I have written to you not to keep company with anyone named a brother, who is sexually immoral, or covetous, or an idolater, or a reviler, or a drunkard, or an extortioner--not even to eat with such a person. (1 Corinthians 5:9-11, NKJV).

I do not pray that You should take them out of the world, but that You should keep them from the evil one. (John 17:15, NKJV).

You are the light of the world. A city that is set on a hill cannot be hidden. “Nor do they light a lamp and put it under a basket, but on a lampstand, and it gives light to all who are in the house. “Let your light so shine before men, that they may see your good works and glorify your Father in heaven. (Matthew 5:14-16, NKJV).

It goes even further. Not only are we to be conspicuous Christians, speaking the truth in love at every God-given opportunity, knowing it is an offense to those who are in darkness, even among families and in “churches”, but we are to be hospitable in an inhospitable world.

As in the focus verse above, we are to entertain strangers. Now this was a crucial practice in the early church, since the gospel was spread through the ministry of traveling evangelists who, through whatever means necessary, journeyed the known world with little funding or advanced itinerary planning. These men and women usually walked into a city or village unannounced and with no entourage or sponsor, following the model set forth by the indefatigable Paul.

Their survival and continued efforts depended solely on the kindness of strangers.

It is not so easy today, I think, to open one's dwelling to total strangers, even with some kind of letter of recommendation from a trusted source. In the modern urbanized West, hospitality is a forgotten virtue. In large part, we are barely acquainted with our immediate neighbors, and share little of our private lives with anyone, but that is NOT the Christian way.

The incentive provided to overcome this reluctance is astonishing: some of those strangers, brought to our door by God Himself, may be immortal supernatural beings of immense power and intelligence. The Bible calls them angels, and it is unfortunate that misuse of that term has rendered these magnificent beings a cliché, or a caricature of their revealed natures.

Angels can and do manifest themselves in human form. Scripture is replete with such occurrences. From Abraham's visitors to Lots rescuers (and other such encounters), we know without doubt that angels from Heaven walk to and from among us, ministering to the saints (all believers in Christ), and carrying out God's will.

Now they are not to be worshipped or prayed to, or otherwise revered, nor are they to be considered beyond their role as holy servants of God – one day, Paul assures us, we will even judge fallen angels – but they are to be treated with hospitality and respect.

As I already mentioned: astonishing.

How many of us have unwittingly entertained angels?

Remember, one angel alone destroyed 185,000 Assyrian soldiers in one night to protect the nation Israel.

Believe what you will, but if you hold the Bible to be the authoritative Word of God, you must understand that one or more these same individuals may show up on your doorstep.

And you are commanded to let them inside.

Despite the mischaracterizations rampant in the world, Christianity is anything but stifling and repressive. Instead, our faith is exciting and filled with joy. True Christian doctrine is astounding.

But to appreciate this, you must first actually read and study the Bible itself, as a disciple, and not rely on the lies perpetrated about it by the Christ-rejecting world.

If and when you do, you will fall in love with its Author, and marvel at the care and precision with which He has revealed Himself to His children.

Sunday, January 27, 2013

Brotherly Love


Let brotherly love continue. (Hebrews 13:01, NKJV).


The final chapter in the incredible New Testament epistle of Hebrews is a comprehensive presentation of godly exhortations to those who are in Christ Jesus.

The world does not readily understand what it means to be a true follower of Christ, partly because it is a state of being spiritually discerned - and without the indwelling Spirit of God it remains an opaque designation at best. And partly because the visible church is rife with professing believers who are, in tragic reality, unsaved.

One of the most amazing hallmarks of soul-deep Christian conversion is the glorious expansion of family through faith in Christ. This is a real phenomena based on what the Bible calls koinonia, rendered in English as fellowship.

Perhaps this is best defined as profound community, that real-time experience of deep and abiding affection (brotherly love) for those whose spirit testifies with our spirit that we are children of God. This often happens instantaneously; a sense of commonality and fundamental unity that bonds deeper than the blood ties of earthly family.

It is inexplicable, surprising, even irrational, outside of faith in Christ, but is an essential sign of a transformed heart. Consider these verses:

So He said to them, “Assuredly, I say to you, there is no one who has left house or parents or brothers or wife or children, for the sake of the kingdom of God, “who shall not receive many times more in this present time, and in the age to come eternal life.” (Luke 18:29, 30, NKJV).

We know that we have passed from death to life, because we love the brethren. He who does not love his brother abides in death. (1 John 3:14, NKJV).

In addition to being a signpost of true faith, it is a source of supernatural strength, and gracious encouragement. That is why the exhortation above is to let brotherly love continue. Many a Christian throughout the centuries has found support and overflowing love in time of need from groups and individuals who, from the human perspective, are complete strangers. Yet, from the spiritual perspective, these same people are more intimately related than congenital twins.

That is one of the reasons behind the earlier exhortation in this letter to …let us consider one another in order to stir up love and good works, not forsaking the assembling of ourselves together, as is the manner of some, but exhorting one another, and so much the more as you see the Day approaching. (Hebrews 10:24-25, NKJV).

In a gathering where love of Christ and love of one another abounds, amazing things occur, and a sweetness of fellowship is present that nourishes the heart and strengthens the soul. It serves as a bulwark against a hostile world - a world that increasingly hates Christ, and views Christian virtue as evil or regressive.

Even  the Apostle Paul, who suffered so much for the sake of Christ without wavering from or doubting his calling as evangelist and church planter, greatly desired the fellowship of like-minded believers, as he writes in Romans:

For I long to see you, that I may impart to you some spiritual gift, so that you may be established-- that is, that I may be encouraged together with you by the mutual faith both of you and me. (Romans 1:11, 12, NKJV).

The true church is an aggregation of powerful relationships in Christ that transcend socio-economic background, ethnicity, and even language. It is an organism much more than an organization, which is why the church, the true church, is likened in Scripture to the body of Christ.

One final point. Note the explicit assumption that brotherly love already exists, and that the encouragement is to simply let it continue. Like all things truly Christian, brotherly love can't be a result of gritted-teeth effort. It is a byproduct of surrender to the Spirit of God. Anything else is a human work, doomed to failure.

Saturday, January 26, 2013

Consuming Fire


Therefore, since we are receiving a kingdom which cannot be shaken, let us have grace, by which we may serve God acceptably with reverence and godly fear. For our God is a consuming fire. (Hebrews 12:28-29, NKJV).

The only things that will survive the transition from this age to the next are those things whose origins and foundations are spiritual. All other things, the things that are made, will be consumed and remade, shaken to the point of regeneration. While the New Heavens and the New Earth will consist of the physical, the present separation between that realm and the eternal realm of the spirit will be eliminated. Then it will be as it was in the beginning, with both conjoined as one. 

The prospect of this coming to pass should fill the child of God with unspeakable joy, but the unbeliever should tremble with fear - for it is a fearful thing to fall into the hands of the Living God. For our God is a consuming fire.

What does this mean? And what exactly is the difference between ungodly and godly fear, since both are either explicitly or implicitly in view in these latter chapter of Hebrews?

Godly fear leads to repentance and hope; the turning of a human heart from the deadly pursuit of sin to the pursuit of life-giving righteousness. In this context, "hope" is the present certainty of a guaranteed future event, and righteousness is not the petty popular concept of religious stodginess, but the very inviolable righteousness of God, Himself - the righteousness which serves as the bedrock of all that is good and beautiful and the source of all true joy.

Ungodly fear is the opposite in every respect. Instead of repentance, it fosters paralysis and hatred. Rather than hope, utter despair. It is that state of being that until death, spirals downward and inward toward complete depravity, and after death is the very substance and ecology of Hell.

The depiction of God as a consuming fire is both ecstatically and excruciatingly accurate. It is what MUST be the case for a holy, righteous, and all-powerful Being who offers either forgiveness and regeneration, or promises destruction and eternal judgement if the miraculous offer is rejected.

The world hates God, and all the things of God, and this hatred can only be overcome by the miracle of faith, which recreates a human heart, and enlivens a dead human spirit. There is no other means of escaping the consuming fire. All creation will be brought through the flames, and either refined and remade, or consigned to be forever burning in unrelenting agony.

As declared in these verses, it requires grace to serve God acceptably, with reverence. That ability is not something we can grit our teeth and drum up somewhere inside us. If that were the case, then Christ would not have had to die. No, that ability is a gift, a grace of God. And we are instructed to have it, that is, to receive it with open arms, for grace is something God delights in giving.

Acceptable service to God is nothing done in our own strength motivated by our own delusional self-sovereignty. It is ever and only that which He empowers us to do for his purposes through our complete surrender. In essence, it is walking in those good works which God prepared beforehand that we should walk in them. From simply supplying a cup of water to someone who thirsts, to being burned at the martyrs' stake as His witness.

So yes, our God is a consuming fire. He is NOT that grandfatherly and loving curmudgeon in Heaven who "winks at our sin". Nor is He someone with whom any bargain can be struck. Instead, He is the almighty ruler of all existence, who offers us, not only an eternity of blessedness, but Himself as our exceedingly great reward. But ONLY on His terms.

And that too is eminently fitting. He is the Maker, the Eternal King, the One Who is Who Was and Who is to Come. The Source and Power and Intelligence and Personhood from which all else proceeds and has its being.

Monday, January 21, 2013

No Escape


See that you do not refuse Him who speaks. For if they did not escape who refused Him who spoke on earth, much more shall we not escape if we turn away from Him who speaks from heaven, whose voice then shook the earth; but now He has promised, saying, “Yet once more I shake not only the earth, but also heaven.” Now this, “Yet once more,” indicates the removal of those things that are being shaken, as of things that are made, that the things which cannot be shaken may remain. (Hebrews 12:25-27, NKJV).

There is coming a day - inevitably, irrevocably - when every mouth will be stopped and all the world will become guilty before God. Until that day, there is hope for repentance, a hope of escape from the wrath to come, but it entails a conscious, willful, and committed acquiescence to an authority and a Person who, for now, allows refusal.

This is a test, the same test taken and failed by our forefather, Adam, who through the beguilement of Eve, his own god-like pride, and the vicious contrivance of the Enemy, refused Him who spoke in the Garden.

The consequence of refusal is death, not merely physical death and illusory annihilation, but eternal and conscious death in the excruciating torment of everlasting regret and separation from the only Source of life and light and good. For separation is the essence of death, though the world would have you believe otherwise.

We are either absent from the body and present with the Lord, awaiting the regeneration of all things, or, through refusal to heed His immeasurably gracious offer of forgiveness and salvation through faith in Christ, we are forever separated from God Himself - sentenced to an inescapable prison where the fire is never quenched and the worm never dies.

The Old Testament picture of this ultimate fate was repeatedly played out in the lives of the Children of Israel, whose actual history entailed both the blessings and curses of the Mosaic Law, the personification of Him who spoke on earth.

That declaration is followed by yet another comparison of the superiority of Christ as Him who speaks from heaven, whose voice then shook the earth. Christ, as the Word of God, speaks with the same authority and power now, from His position at the right hand of God, as He did long ago at Mount Sinai in delivering the Law.

[But] now He has promised, saying, “Yet once more I shake not only the earth, but also heaven.”  What made physical reality shake at Sinai will, in a time yet future, shake all of Causality - earth and Heaven.

Given this, the statement, much more shall we not escape follows as incontrovertibly as all the promises of God. The forgone conclusion is this: what was inescapable in the past under the Old Covenant, is even more inescapable under the New. No possibility of reprieve exists outside of faith in Messiah.

And to eliminate any doubt of his meaning, the writer of Hebrews, under Divine inspiration, explains that “Yet once more,” indicates the removal of those things that are being shaken, as of things that are made, that the things which cannot be shaken may remain.

Know this, there are two realms of existence; the spiritual realm, which precedes and is the foundation of existence itself, and the physical realm - the sphere of 3-dimensional space and time. It is the physical realm that consists of things that are made, while the eternal and unshakeable spiritual realm is that which will remain.

This is not to say that God did not create them both, but it is to emphasize that He who transcends both space and time, will remake them both - a new heaven and a new earth - and the only thing that will survive the transition are those saved by faith in Christ; the things which cannot be shaken.

To be saved, you must heed the invitation from Him who speaks. You must set aside any false sense of conceit and confidence in your own understanding, and surrender to the unsearchable wisdom of God.

Not that He does not provide sufficient evidence to make this choice rationally and logically, for the evidence is in the anthropomorphic construction of the Universe, the undeniable fulfillment of prophetic history, and the miraculous demonstration of changed lives. Indeed, it does not involve a surrender of intellect or reason, but of pride and arrogance.

These truths were once well accepted, but are now increasingly viewed as wishful thinking. The marginalization is no accident. It is yet another fulfillment of Biblical prophecy:

But know this, that in the last days perilous times will come: For men will be lovers of themselves, lovers of money, boasters, proud, blasphemers, disobedient to parents, unthankful, unholy, unloving, unforgiving, slanderers, without self-control, brutal, despisers of good, traitors, headstrong, haughty, lovers of pleasure rather than lovers of God, having a form of godliness but denying its power... (2 Timothy 3:1-5, NKJV).

The warning is clear. When the Day of Judgment comes, no one will have an excuse. God has inscribed His existence on our very DNA, expressed His power in the very vastness of the Universe, and shown His intelligence in the complexity of the life that He has designed and brought forth by the Word of His power.

To deny the God of the Bible is to deny your own source of being. To refuse Him who speaks results only in inescapable destruction.