Yeah, I Won Over a Million Bucks!

I got a letter from Google Incorporation in London saying that I won a drawing that I never entered!

"Wherein your email address emerged as one of the online Winning (sic) emails in the 2nd category and therefore attracted a cash reward of J950,000.00."

I can only assume that Google in the UK doesn’t have as much money as Google in the US, and so they are unable to obtain a computer that can produce a "£" symbol, which is the 3rd listed symbol under "common symbols" in my Thunderbird email program.

However, in case I couldn’t understand the J they used in its place, which they did at least put in superscript, they added words: "Nine Hundred and Fifty Thousand Great British Pounds Sterling’s."

I’m pretty sure that the apostrophe and s at the end are typical Great British practice, as is the use of "Great British," rather than just British by itself. "Great British" only sounds weird to me because I’m an American, thus establishing even further that this a legitimate email from Google Incorporation UK.

I am also confident that the apostrophe and s in "sterling’s" are typical Great British practice because they also used it in telling me that they will need "information’s" from me to process my "won prize." Of course, the information’s is only required to avoid "double claiming and unwarranted abuse of the program" (in contrast to warranted abuse of the program, which wouldn’t require any information’s).

I’ll keep all of you updated after my "claims is processed." Until then, I have to keep my winning details confidential to, once again, "avoid double claiming and unwarranted d abuse of this program by unscrupulous elements."

I’m thinking that they’re referring to Beryllium, which is definitely one of the more unscrupulous elements. Individual Beryllium atoms have been found in two places at once.

This is further indicated by the fact that this unwarranted abuse is called "d abuse," which I judge to be a reference to Beryllium’s spot as the 4th element in the periodic table.

Posted in Miscellaneous | Tagged , , | 3 Comments

Righteousness, Justification, and God’s Kingdom People

Yesterday I wrote on the man to whom the Lord will not impute sin. (You can use that link to see it, or, if you’re on this blog’s home page, you can just scroll down to the post below.)

The question posed at the end of that post was how John—and Paul in some of his other passages—can put conditions on being one of those blessed people to whom God will not impute sin, when Paul said it’s given to those who believe "in the One who justifies the ungodly apart from works" (Rom. 4:6).

Two Stages of Salvation

I write about this a lot, so if you’ve read my blog or any of my web sites (such as The Rest of the Old, Old Story or Christian History for Everyman), then you already know what I’m about to say.

It never hurts to repeat important things, though, so here goes …

There are two ways in which we need to be saved:

  • We need to be saved from the world and enter the kingdom of Jesus Christ on this earth (Col. 1:13). This is being saved from our sin nature and being born again (Jn. 3:3-8; Rom. 6:3-11), so that we have the power to obey God (Eph. 2:10; Rom. 8:1-4; 2 Cor. 5:15-17). This is one of the main purposes of Jesus’ death (Rom. 14:9; Tit. 2:11-14).
  • We need to be saved at the judgment when we die. The judgment will be based on works and will reward eternal life or condemnation (Matt. 25:31-46; Rom. 2:5-8; 2 Pet. 1:5-11; Rev. 20:11-15).

(That second point is not a very popular thing to say, but the Bible’s very clear about it. It doesn’t take a scholar to look up those verses and see what they say. It takes a scholar to explain such obvious verses away because we don’t like what they teach.)

The first of those things happens completely apart from works. This is the context of the emphasis Paul makes on faith only. If you look up "faith apart from works" verses, you will see that they are only in Paul, and they are consistently in the past tense.

In other words, Paul is the only NT writer careful enough to distinguish between our salvation from our flesh and the world—our being born again—and our entrance into heaven after we die. All other NT writers speak of both together, which is why it’s harder to find faith only taught in them.

Paul distinguishes clearly and consistently, always using the past tense when he says we’re saved apart from works. we have been saved—that is, have been born again and delivered from the flesh—by faith apart from works.

When he talks about works, he speaks in the future tense. We shall be saved from wrath through him. We shall inherit the kingdom of God if we do not walk according to the flesh.

There’s one very interesting passage that helps us see that because he mentions both at the same time, with some clear distinguishing features:

Much more then, being now justified (past and present together here) by his blood, we shall be (future) saved from wrath through him. For if, when we were (past) enemies, we were reconciled (past) to God by the death of his Son, much more, being reconciled (present state), we shall be (future) saved by his life. (Rom. 5:9-10)

Note the distinguishing features. We have been justified and reconciled by his death, by his blood. We shall be saved by his life.

Paul says this because even our current good works are not done by ourselves. It is "by the Spirit" that we put to death the deeds of the body (Rom. 8:13). King Jesus has been made to us wisdom, righteousness, holiness, and redemption (1 Cor. 1:30). It is if we "sow to the Spirit" that we reap eternal life and "do not grow weary in well-doing" and thus "reap, if we do not faint" (Gal. 6:8-9).

So that’s the first reason. Paul knows that we are made into people who live in repentance by faith apart from works. We are the ungodly, and we are justified, past and present tense together, apart from works.

It is thus that we can be those who walk in the light and thus experience fellowship with one another and the ongoing forgiveness of sins by the blood of the King (1 Jn. 1:7).

But there’s a second reason, and it is here that N.T. Wright’s What Saint Paul Really Said really helped me.

Righteousness, the New Covenant, and the People of God

It was fascinating to me, in that passage from Justin I quoted yesterday, to discover that the Jews considered themselves to be those to whom God would not impute sin if they stuck to the terms of the covenant: circumcision, sabbath-keeping, and a couple other important rituals like feasts and sacrifices.

N.T. Wright explains that righteousness doesn’t mean good living. Righteousness is the state of being considered righteous by God if you are in covenant relationship with him.

Jews keeping the terms of the covenant I just described considered themselves in covenant relationship with God, so they were automatically righteous. Those who are righteous are not necessarily living without sin, but since they are righteous, they reckoned, their sins would not be imputed to them.

Justin refutes this idea, but we need to look at it.

I’ve always had a problem with the scholars who say that justification means right standing with God, not necessarily righteous living. The reason I had a problem with that is because there’s a lot of verses where that doesn’t make sense. Righteousness and justification—which are exactly the same word in Greek just translated two different ways by our English translators—are often, if not usually, tied to righteous living.

For example, we looked yesterday at John’s statement that those who are righteous as Jesus is righteous are only those who are practicing righteousness (1 Jn. 3:7). He even warns us not to let ourselves be deceived about this.

Nonetheless, I’m not a Greek scholar, and I’ve never felt comfortable dismissing the definitions of those who are Greek scholars.

But why would they say justification—or righteousness, same word—does not mean righteous living when the Scriptures seem to indicate differently?

N.T. Wright solved that issue for me.

A righteous person has right standing with God because he is in a covenant relationship with God.

Now, I can’t prove that because I’m not a Greek scholar nor enough of a historian to do so. You can always get Wright’s book if you want to see his argument for it, but I can’t cover that here.

However, I can show you how it makes the passages of the New Testament fall into place with one another.

Righteousness, the New Covenant, and the Holy Spirit

Jews are no longer in covenant relationship with God through circumcision because God has made a new covenant in which circumcision is of the heart and of the spirit, not of the flesh nor of the letter (Rom. 2:28-29). Paul even argues that they’re not even Jews, but we are, whose circumcision is worshiping God in the Spirit and having no confidence in the flesh (Php. 3:3).

But that’s just it. The righteousness of the New Covenant is living by the Spirit of God.

Even under the new covenant, righteousness is not right living. It’s living in covenant relationship with God. But the new covenant relationship with God is all about living in the Spirit.

Acts 2:17-18 is a quote from the prophet Joel right at the start of his sermon on the first Pentecost that makes it clear that the central issue of the New Covenant is that everyone would have the Spirit (and the ability to prophesy, 1 Cor. 14:31).

Thus, the person who is righteous is not the person who once asked Jesus into his heart. The person who is righteous—who is in covenant relationship with God—is the person who is living by the Spirit.

This explains why Paul would say that if we live by the flesh, we will die, even though he has told us that salvation is apart from works. If we wish to be in covenant with God, we must live by the Spirit, and if we do, then by the Spirit we will put to death the deeds of the body (Rom. 8:12-13).

It also explains why he would say that those who are Christ’s have crucified the flesh with its passions and desires (Gal. 5:24). (Is that as convicting to you as it is to me?)

In the very next verse, he says, "If we live by the Spirit, let us also walk by the Spirit."

When Paul rebukes the Galatians, does he rebuke them for trying to do good deeds?

That can’t be because he is very strong about exhorting them to good deeds in Gal. 6:9-10. In addition, in the letter to Titus he twice tells us that the people of God—the New Covenant people of God—must be zealous for good works (Tit. 2:14; 3:8).

No, he rebukes them for trying to be made complete by the flesh (Gal. 3:3).

Notice that. He does not rebuke them for trying to be made perfect. They are supposed to try to be made perfect (Php. 3:8-15). He marvels that having begun in the Spirit, they are trying to be made complete by the flesh (Gal. 3:3).

Back to the People to Whom God Will Not Impute Sin

Thus, the people to whom God will not impute sin are those who are sowing to the Spirit. By the Spirit they are putting to death the deeds of the flesh.

They are not perfect at it. They sin. If we say we have no sin, then we are liars and the truth is not in us (1 Jn. 1:8). Nonetheless, the letters are written to the church so that we might not sin (1 Jn. 2:1; 1 Cor. 15:34).

It is only if we sow to the Spirit that we will reap eternal life (Gal. 6:8), and it is only if we do not grow weary in doing good that we will reap eternal life (Gal. 6:9). That is because those two things are the same thing.

If by the Spirit we are putting to death the deeds of the body, then God will not impute sin to us, quite a blessed state to be in.

It’s not an impossible state to be in. David was in that state, except when he violated it by committing adultery and then murder. Paul says that we can all be in it by living by the Spirit.

If we do not live by the Spirit, then we are not Christ’s.

I wish I could say something easier than that because it applies to me as well. But the fact is that the Bible says that it is those who have crucified the flesh with its passions and desires who are Christ’s.

The Gospel and Righteousness

We need to believe a bigger Gospel than we believe.

Paul said that his Gospel was the power of God for salvation to those who believe. In it, he says, the righteousness of God is revealed from faith to faith (Rom. 1:16, 17).

But let’s interpret that saying the way Paul did!

He wondered aloud, "How can those who died to sin continue to live in it" (Rom. 6:2).

Paul had great confidence in the grace of God. It would teach us to deny ungodliness and worldly lusts and to live sensibly, righteously, and godly in the present age (Tit. 2:11-12). It would make us new creatures, created in King Jesus for good works (Eph. 2:10). It would make us zealous for those good works (Tit. 2:14). It would allow the righteousness of the Law to be fulfilled in us (Rom. 8:4). It would remove sin’s power over us (Rom. 6:14).

Paul didn’t know about any other kind of grace. The grace he knew about wouldn’t allow the unrighteous to inherit the kingdom of God (1 Cor. 6:9), but it would wash and free us from unrighteousness (1 Cor. 6:11).

And it wouldn’t happen automatically. In order for it to happen to Paul, he disciplined his body and brought it under subjection (1 Cor. 9:27). He knew that if he didn’t, then he, too, could be disqualified (ibid.).

Well, I’ll let y’all chew on that a while. It’s scary to me, too, but can we really deny that’s what the Bible teaches?

Posted in Gospel, Holiness | 1 Comment

Righteousness and the Man to Whom God Will Not Impute Sin

I’m going to try a very theological post for those who have struggled with some of the same questions concerning faith and works that I have.

Romans 4:6-8 says:

David describes the blessedness of the man to whom God imputes righteousness without works. "Blessed are those whose lawlessness is forgiven and whose sins are covered. Blessed is the man to whom the Lord will not impute sin."

There is no doubt that such a man exists, but does every Christian qualify as such a man?

Some say yes because Paul says, "To him that does not work, but instead believes in the One who justifies the ungodly, his faith is counted for righteousness."

That’s Romans 4:5, immediately before the description of the blessed one to whom the Lord does not impute sin.

However, if we’re going to be honest Bible interpreters and not just people who agree with every tradition that is handed to us, then we have to admit that not every Christian is going to enjoy that blessedness. Paul gives plenty of warnings to Christians that their sins most certainly can be imputed to them.

For example:

Do not be deceived; God is not mocked. Whatever a man sows, that will he reap. He that sows to the flesh shall from the flesh reap corruption. (Gal. 6:7-8a)

Or how about:

Therefore, brothers, we are debtors, not to the flesh to live according to the flesh, for if you live according to the flesh, you will die; but if by the Spirit you put to death the deeds of the body, then you will live. (Rom. 8:12-13)

Or again:

For we shall all stand before the judgment seat of Christ so that everyone may be rewarded for the deeds done in the body, according to what each has done, whether good or bad. (2 Cor. 5:10)

It doesn’t matter whether you believe in eternal security or not. It doesn’t matter whether you think these verses refer to our eternal destiny, heaven or hell, or not. The fact is, in some way there is a judgment for the fleshly or bad things we have done. Thus, those who are facing this judgment are having their sins imputed to them.

That simply cannot be denied.

Ephesians 5 is even more clear. I want you to note in the final sentence of the following passage that Paul is implying that Christians who live in sin will be judged in exactly the same way as the heathen:

For this you know, that no immoral person, unclean person, or covetous person—who is an idolater—has any inheritance in the kingdom of the King and of God. Don’t let anyone deceive you with useless words, for because of these things the wrath of God comes upon the sons of disobedience. Therefore, do not be partakers with them. (Eph. 5:5-7)

Note also that once again, Paul says not to let anyone deceive you about this.

So Who Is the One to Whom the Lord Will Not Impute Sin?

John gives us a couple clues to Paul’s meaning—that is, if we believe that God inspired both Paul and John to write what they wrote. If we believe that, then we don’t want to come up with an interpretation of Paul that contradicts what John wrote or vice versa. We also don’t want to come up with an interpretation of Romans 4:6-8 that contradicts so many other statements Paul made, including the ones we’ve quoted above.

John speaks, in my opinion, of the very same blessedness that Paul speaks of, but in different words.

If we walk in the light, as he is in the light, we have fellowship with one another, and the blood of Jesus the King, his Son, cleanses us from every sin. (1 Jn. 1:7)

This is the same awesome promise Paul made. John is talking about a person who is cleansed from every sin on an ongoing basis.

Pretty neat, but apparently John thinks that’s only going to happen if we "walk in the light."

The Early Christians on the Man to Whom the Lord Will Not Impute Sin

There is a passage in the writings of the early Christians that discusses this subject thoroughly.

Around A.D. 150, a man named Justin Martyr got in a discussion with a Jew named Trypho. Since Romans 4:7-8 is a quote from David, it’s a passage that the Jews knew about and believed in, too. They believed that the man to whom the Lord would not impute sin was any Jew that was circumcised, kept the Sabbath and feasts, and offered sacrifices.

They believed this was true even if that Jews lived in an otherwise unrighteous manner, cheating, drinking, and generally living a corrupt lifestyle.

Justin refutes this from the Scriptures. Here’s how he does it:

If they repent, all who wish for it can obtain mercy from God, and the Scripture foretells that they shall be blessed, saying, "Blessed is the man to whom the Lord does not impute sin."
     That is, having repented of his sins, he may receive remission of them from God. It is not as you deceive yourselves, and some others who resemble you in this, who say that even though they are sinners, but know God, the Lord will not impute sin to them.
     We have as proof of this the one fall of David … which was forgiven when he mourned and wept as described in the Scriptures. If even to such a man no remission was granted before repentance, and only when this great king, anointed one, and prophet mourned and conducted himself as described, then how can the impure and utterly abandoned, if they do not weep, do not mourn, and do not repent, entertain the hope that the Lord will not impute sin to them? (Dialogue with Trypho, a Jew, ch. 141)

The Scripturalness of the Early Christian Position

Perhaps you noticed that Justin accused the Jews of deceiving themselves in this matter. I’ve already pointed out that Paul tells us at least twice not to deceive ourselves about this.

John does so as well …

Little children, let no one deceive you. The one that practices righteousness is righteous just as he is righteous. (1 Jn. 3:7)

John apparently believes that there is some element of works in the blessedness of being one to whom the Lord will not impute sin. First he tells us that such a blessed person is one that walks in the light (1 Jn. 1:7) and now he tells us that such a blessed person is one that practices righteousness (1 Jn. 3:7).

How Can This Possibly Harmonize with Paul’s Statement That This Blessedness Is Apart from Works?

Note that it is not that John disagrees with Paul. Paul also tells us repeatedly—we’ve only covered a small percentage of the many verses from Paul’s letters addressing this—that there are consequences for sins that Christians commit.

How can this possibly harmonize with his statement that this blessedness is apart from works and given by the One who justifies the ungodly? (Rom. 4:6).

Well, that’s what I’ve been getting to this whole time. I believe the answer is critically important and immensely satisfying for those of us who have struggled with exactly that question for years.

My thanks to N. T. Wright, whose book ,What Saint Paul Really Said, brought brilliant, wonderful light on this matter.

But, since I’m already over 1200 words, it’s going to have to wait for tomorrow …

Posted in Gospel, Modern Doctrines | Tagged , , , , , , | 3 Comments

Should Gentile Christians Keep the Law?

Here’s my take on the Law:

We keep the Law in its full, spiritual sense. We are supposed to be spiritual people, and it is the part of teachers to give the spiritual interpretation of the Law.

Divorce, Remarriage, and Adultery

Jesus did this in Matthew 5. He took the matter of divorce, remarriage, and adultery further than the Law of Moses. Don’t even look on a woman. Don’t divorce.

Oaths

He also took the law of oaths further, but it looks like he completely got rid of it. The Law says to fulfill your oaths. Jesus said don’t even make oaths. But what he really meant was, fulfill your every word, thus making oaths superfluous.

The Sabbath

It’s the same with the Sabbath. God doesn’t care about our flesh resting once per week. That was for old Israel. They were a fleshly people, and they needed fleshly reminders about God. We are a spiritual people. We can rest in Christ every day, and we can live daily with our eyes on our King in heaven.

Thus, we do keep the Sabbath. We do that by entering into the Sabbath rest of Christ (per Hebrews 4). That is keeping the Sabbath. Resting on Saturday is not keeping the Sabbath.

The Law was like a balloon that was not blown up. It couldn’t be blown up because there were no new creatures, sons of God rather than sons of Adam, that could live with the fullness of the Law.

Now, however, there are such creatures, and we can keep the fullness of the Sabbath, which is to sanctify each day and live in the rest of Christ.

Another great example is the law about oxen. Even though Paul says God doesn’t care about oxen, he doesn’t throw out that law (1 Cor. 9). Instead, he applies it to what God does care about, that those who labor do not labor in vain.

Clean and Unclean Foods

Food is another such example. God doesn’t care about food. Food for the stomach, and the stomach for food, but God will destroy both it and them.

However, that law is not thrown out; it is brought to fullness (Matt. 5:17). Chewing the cud means to ruminate on the Word of God, and splitting the hoof is to part from the world. If we wish to be clean, we must meditate on the Word, and we must part from the world.

Eating is fellowship. Our fellowship is not with what is unclean. Even in the New Testament it says, “Come out from among them and touch not the unclean thing, and I will receive you.”

Our fellowship is to be with those who ruminate and part the hoof.

Our ministry can be to the unclean, so that they might be saved, but our fellowship is with light, not darkness. Bad company corrupts good morals, Paul said, and he adds that we must put the wicked out from among us.

Thus, we do not keep the food laws of the Jews, but we do keep the food laws of the Law of Christ, which is the Law of Moses brought to fullness. We do so by meditating on the Word, parting from the world, and being in fellowship with those who do the same.

Posted in Modern Doctrines | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Why Do We Allow Musical Instruments When the Early Churches Did Not?

You may not realize that the early churches, at least the ones in the 3rd century and later, did not allow musical instruments.

The denomination that calls itself Church of Christ and claims not to be a denomination also claims that the Bible disallows musical instruments because you can’t do anything the New Testament doesn’t expressly say you can do.

Of course, I have trouble understanding, then, why they have church buildings, parking lots, pulpits, bathrooms in their church building, hymnals, etc., etc., etc.

Anyway, here’s my reasons for believing that we should not follow that early church tradition. (Rose Creek Village’s reasons would be different. As a village, we’ve never thought about it because nothing in the Bible would remotely hint that you should forbid musical instruments … and the Spirit of God likes them.)

The Early Christian Writings and Musical Instruments

This one really throws me.

The NT says nothing of musical instruments. The 2nd century writers say nothing about musical instruments. Come the 3rd century, Origen says the reason the churches don’t use musical instruments is because they are used to lead armies into war.

The OT, however, is effuse with praise for musical instruments, and the Book of Revelation says there will be instruments in heaven.

My thought is that there were no musical instruments in the Gentile churches because they were persecuted. Their meetings were secret, and playing music would only arouse attention.

After a few decades or a century of such stealth, I’m guessing, it became tradition not to use musical instruments.

I’m not very confident of that guess, but I have several reasons for promoting the use of musical instruments.

  1. They help us sing collectively with our hearts focused on God (versus nervous singing by people who are not confident, drawing everyone’s eyes to the awkwardness in the room).
  2. The OT recommends them highly.
  3. God seems to like having musical instruments around his throne.
  4. The NT references to musical instruments seem positive enough, even though they’re references to people making mirth rather than songs of worship.
  5. There are no references to musical instruments not being used by the church until the 3rd century, when the churches were already getting larger and liturgical.
  6. I see no spiritual benefit or additional spiritual life in those who forbid musical instruments compared to those who allow it. In fact, I see the opposite. Spiritually strong people tend to allow musical instruments. Pharisees and nervous, fearful Christians tend to disallow them.
Posted in Bible, Church, History, Modern Doctrines | Tagged , , , , , , | 17 Comments

Why Do I Disagree with the Early Churches on Procreation?

Anyone familiar with the early Christian writings knows that from a very early date the churches began to oppose sex, even in marriage, for any other purpose than having children.

I think they were influenced by Greek philosophy, not apostolic teaching. Why?

I’m not sure what to say about this except that it seems that from Justin on—there’s not much to work with before him (c. A.D. 150)—there is an aversion to sex, even in marriage.

To me there’s nothing scriptural about that, and there’s some direct disagreement from Paul and the writer of Hebrews, assuming Paul didn’t write Hebrews. 1 Cor. 7 says once that a person struggling with passion should marry, and it says once that a woman shouldn’t deny her husband and vice versa. Hebrews 13 says the marriage bed is undefiled.

How much more clear can that be? And there’s just nothing to the contrary.

I know the early Christians got more and more against sex in marriage for pleasure. I think they got that from Greek philosophy, not from the Scriptures.

Posted in Bible, History | Tagged , , , , | 5 Comments

Why Do I Commune With Remarried Christians?

I’m a student of the early church. Many people who study the early church take a very strong stand against divorce, even saying that all remarried people are living in adultery.

I don’t take that stand because such an attitude is sinful, wicked, and pharisaical.

I understand wrestling with such a doctrine, but those who stick to it are hard-hearted and separated from the Spirit of God, who is strongly opposed to such an attitude. May God grant them to repent of their bondage to intellectualism and carnality and become open to the love of God that is shed abroad in the hearts of those who follow Christ and are not Pharisees.

Clear enough?

Here’s my argument that the early churches did not have such an attitude, and that those who interpret their writings that way are mistaken …

Why the Early Church Did Not Teach That All Remarriage Was Adultery

We believe that life begins at the new birth. Everything else before that dies, including remarriages.

As far as I’m concerned, it’s clear that the early churches agreed with this. Tertullian (c. A.D. 200), even as a Montanist (see side note) stated:

To one who, before believing, had been loosed from a wife, she will not be counted a second wife who, subsequent to believing, is the first. For it is from believing that our life itself dates its origin.

Montanists

Montanists were stricter on many issues than the mainline churches.

They were a sect started by a false prophet (Montanus) whose prophecies were rejected by his church as false. Despite appealing to two other churches, who also rejected his teachings, Montanus refused to repent.

Montanists did not allow remarriage after a person was a Christian even for widows and widowers. They based this not on Scripture, but on the further revelation they claimed from the Holy Spirit.

I don’t know how Tertullian could be more clear. To me, the early church advocates to whom I’ve talked are hypocrites, with evil and dishonest hearts choosing to hold to a doctrine that they know the early Christians do not support.

We don’t allow divorce and remarriage after believing with one exception …

We don’t consider a marriage a marriage until the church has given an amen to it. Thus, if a person arrives married to an unbeliever, and then after a time the unbeliever departs because he or she can’t bear the reality of Christ in his or her spouse, then we consider that person never to have been married. (From 1 Cor. 7, of course.)

There’s an interesting set of verses in 1 Cor. 7.

In verse 8, Paul gives instruction to the unmarried and widows. In verse 10, he gives instruction to the married. Then, in verse 12, he gives instruction to the rest.

The rest???

Who is left after the unmarried, widows, and married?

We believe that the rest are those who have unbelieving spouses, whose marriages have not yet been given the amen from the church.

That seems clear enough from the verse itself. He gives instruction to those with unbelieving spouses that they should live with their spouse if the spouse is willing. If not, then the believer is not under bondage.

Seems clear enough to me, and that’s the position Rose Creek Village holds and that we feel God has blessed.

Posted in History, Modern Doctrines | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

Why Don’t You … ?: Head Coverings

A friend that I’m honored even to know, who always treats me with a respect I don’t deserve, wrote me to ask why I don’t talk about the kinds of things that a lot of other early church fanatics talk about.

The issues he mentioned were: head coverings; second marriages; procreation; and musical instruments.

If you’re wondering what those things mean and what the early church believed about them, then I’m glad. Subscribe to this blog, and you’ll get some in depth comments over the next three days.

I’m so impatient, it’s usually hard for me to write a group of posts over a few days.

Today, though, I found out I can schedule my posts to be published. So I can write these all right now—actually, I already wrote them in an email to my friend—and then schedule them to be published each morning over the next three days.

Awesome.

If you were to support my friend’s missionary work in Mexico and sign up for his newsletter, God would bless you eternally. What he’s doing is better and more necessary than any American can understand unless you’ve been to a 3rd world country.

Head Coverings and Bible Interpretation

Here’s the first one. This always gets me in trouble with the very literal Bible interpreters.

I don’t mind. The very literal, confident Bible interpreters are a problem to themselves and to others. God is often irritated with them and against them, and they’re usually unwilling to look at the problems they cause by their method of Bible interpretation.

Jesus talked about that some (Jn. 5:39-40).

If you’re a new Christian, don’t worry about it. You should be a confident, literal, over-zealous, offensive Bible interpreter. It’s a good thing. Stay honest, learn from your mistakes, and grow up to be a much less confident, much less literal, and still over-zealous and somewhat offensive follower of the Spirit of God, examining your walk by the Scriptures all the time.

Okay, here’s what I wrote:

Why We Don’t Wear Head Coverings

My wife started wearing head coverings back in 1990 or so. We were in Sacramento, and as far as we know, she was the only woman wearing a head covering in the entire city. I’m sure that wasn’t true, but we never met anyone else from Sacramento wearing a head covering in the 3 years we lived there.

We had almost no fellowship back then. We attended churches, Bible studies, and any other church event we could. I paid for a call-in talk radio program for six months that got plenty of calls. Still, we met no one at all with our kind of heart for the Lord.

One year, we even played on a church softball team. She used to play in pants and a long t-shirt that hung to her knees and with a head covering big enough to cover all her hair. As a result, it hung to the middle of her back. She played first base, and she was pretty good at it, too.

Mind you, this wasn’t a Mennonite league. She was the only woman with a head covering that we knew.

When we got to Rose Creek Village in 1995, they were wearing head coverings, too, though smaller. Around about 1998 or 1999, we began to feel God’s Spirit leading us to stop. Since we didn’t think that was scriptural, we didn’t stop.

After two years, though, all of us knew it was time. We told the ladies they didn’t have to wear head coverings anymore, and we were all convinced that God told us to do that.

Maybe we were misinterpreting Scripture. Maybe head coverings were cultural. Maybe God wants one thing in one century and another in another century. I just know we’re convinced God told us no head coverings.

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Harmonization vs. Conflict in the Scripture

In my last post I talked a little about faith verse works. I mentioned that "faith plus works" is not a bad thing in Scripture, but a good thing. It’s only a bad thing in our fundamentalist Protestant tradition.

Why can I say that so confidently?

There are several reasons, but one of the main ones is this …

Any doctrine that pits one set of verses against another is a false doctrine.

Non-Christians can disagree with that principle, but to a Christian it should be self-evident.

Non-Christians can simply say, "No, a doctrine that pits one set of verses against another is proof that the Bible contradicts itself."

For Christians, however, that believe the Bible gives one consistent message, it follows logically that if we believe a doctrine that is contradicted by even one or two verses, then that doctrine is false.

Verbally, that is what we believe. Everyone would argue that what they believe is never contradicted in Scripture.

Practically, however, Christians have a practiced habit of interpreting the Bible in such a way that it contradicts itself.

Difficult Verses

Long ago I listened to a call from an unknown caller to a radio program called The Bible Answer Man, hosted by Hank Hanegraaff—a close-minded, 3-point Calvinist with no knowledge of Christian history pretending to be an open-minded, non-denominational Christian defending "the historic Christian faith." He can’t defend that faith, however, because he doesn’t know what it is.

Anyway, the caller suggested that 2 Peter 2:20 should be interpreted to mean that Christians can lose their salvation.

Hank Hanegraaff’s tradition doesn’t allow him to agree with that, so he quoted John 10:28 and explained that John 10:28 is a "clear" verse, while 2 Peter 2:20 is a "difficult" verse.

Not long after that, someone called Bob George’s radio program with a question. Apparently, Bob had made an unusual statement about the Trinity, and the caller felt it violated 1 Cor. 15:28-29. I don’t remember what Bob had said, but once the caller quoted those verses, it was clear that Bob was wrong.

Bob George, however, was having nothing of being wrong. He borrowed Hank Hanegraaff’s trick, and he said, "1 Cor. 15:28-29 is a difficult passage. We should just set it up on a high shelf until we grow up enough to be able to reach it."

Verses That "Seem" To Disagree

Bob George and Hank Hanegraaff are not atypical in their method of interpreting the Bible. Picking one set of verses over another is normal in Protestant circles.

The first time I ever picked up a "systematic theology," I turned right to the eternal security chapter because I was involved in some arguments about that subject.

Systematic theologies are books that explore doctrinal issues one at a time. Usually, they have very intellectual-sounding names for their chapters, like ecclesiology, soteriology, or eschatology. Other, less "educated" Christians would refer to those subjects as "the church," "salvation," and "end times prophecy."

This particular book did have a chapter on eternal security, which I don’t think is typical. I don’t read such books much, especially after my experience with that first one, so I can’t be certain on that.

Anyway, at the end of the chapter on eternal security, it said, "There are some verses that seem to disagree with what we’ve taught in this chapter, but study will show that the contradictions are only apparent."

I’m quoting loosely because I don’t have the book in front of me, but that was the point.

They then listed about 80 verses that seemed to disagree with what they’d taught.

I couldn’t believe it. I started laughing. They were dismissing 80 verses with a wave of their hand. Unbelievable!

Oh, Yeah, What About This Verse?

But it’s really not unbelievable. Everywhere around me I found Christians arguing just that way. Someone would quote Galatians 5:19-21 and say that if you practiced drunkenness, you won’t inherit the kingdom of heaven. In return, the other person would quote John 3:16 and say that only faith is required for eternal life. Then the first would quote Colossians 1:23 and say that you have to continue in that faith, not just begin in it. Then the second would quote 1 Cor. 1:8 and say that everyone who begins will continue; God will take care of it.

Back and forth they would go. The first person would find a new verse to argue with, and the second person would add to his verses.

Neither would stop to give a sensible explanation for how his theology fit into the others’ verses.

Don’t get me wrong. Both would have explanations for the others’ verses. Neither would have sensible explanations. Any explanation, it seemed, would do, no matter how nonsensical it was.

For example, almost no modern Protestant can endure James 2:24. It reads …

You see, then, that a man is justified by works and not faith only.

That is such a clear refutation of the Protestant version of salvation by faith alone that Martin Luther himself said that no one would ever be able to reconcile James 2:24 with Paul’s letters.

Martin Luther lived in a different age. Even in the Roman Catholic Church, there was not an official canon. He could just reject James 2:24, and he could call James "an epistle of straw."

Today we can’t do that. Fundamentalist Protestants have to come up with an explanation for James 2:24.

The most common one is, "Man is justified by faith alone but not by a faith that is alone."

Well, now, that’s a nice platitude.

But it doesn’t harmonize James 2:24 with Protestant theology, just with Protestant terminology.

James is saying that if you don’t have works you are not justified. That is not what modern Protestants teach when they say salvation is by faith alone. They teach that your works do not matter for going to heaven. They argue that we can’t judge members of their church who live like the world as lost. Even though they live like the world, they say, they may have real faith and thus be saved.

But James says such faith will not save you, and he says so very clearly. Faith without works is dead, and it will not save you.

Thus, he concludes, we are justified by works and not by faith only.

In the end, there is no way that any modern fundamentalist is going to say what James said. If you go around saying that a man is justified by works and not faith only, you are a heretic. There is absolutely no context in which you are allowed to say that.

But James said it.

And we claim he said it under the inspiration of God.

Harmonization

There is a difference between harmonizing and explaining away.

Harmonizing means you have a good, legitimate, reasonable alternative explanation for the verse that seems to agree with you.

For example, I argue in a page I wrote on the Word of God that the Scriptures don’t use "the Word" as a general reference to "the Scriptures."

2 Tim. 2:15 seems to be an exception, especially the way we modern Christians tend to interpret it. Most of us know it in its KJV rendering:

Study to show thyself approved, a workman that needeth not to be ashamed, rightly dividing the word of truth.

The truth is, however, that the word "study" is a terrible mistranslation. The Greek word spoudazo has nothing to do with studying. It means "be diligent," and it is translated in that sense all 10 of the other times it occurs in the NT.

The point of that verse is the point of other verses that talk about our handling "the Word" in the NT. It is a reference to the Word of God as a life, power, or message within us. It can grow (Acts 6:7), impart new birth (Jam. 1:18; 1 Pet. 1:23), be given from person to person (Jn. 17:14), and it is to be handled by spiritual men who get skillful through practice (Heb. 5:12-13) and diligence (2 Tim. 1:7).

That is a reasonable interpretation of 2 Tim. 1:7 that leaves it saying something.

It doesn’t explain away 2 Tim. 1:7, nor divest it of meaning. In fact, it infuses it with rich meaning and restores a normal translation to it ("be diligent" rather than "study").

This is harmonizing.

It is the same with James 2:24 and the most seeming contradictory verse from Paul, Romans 3:28. James says we are justified by works not faith alone, and Paul says we are justified by faith apart from the works of the Law.

How do we harmonize these without ignoring them?

Well, to anyone who’s not already religious and biased, the answer that will leap out is that Paul and James are talking about different kinds of works. Paul specifically says works of the Law, and James makes no such designation.

That’s a possible interpretation.

Another, which I got from reading the early Christian writings, is that Paul is talking only about our being born again—separated from the world and our old life and brought into Christ—while James is talking about our whole course as a Christian. This, too, makes sense because Paul talks about works all the time when he’s talking about our future judgment (e.g.; Rom. 2:6-8; 2 Cor. 5:10; Eph. 5:5-8).

That is choosing a rational explanation that makes sense, harmonizes both verses, and allows both verses to actually say something to us. We must be born again by faith alone because obviously we who are slaves to sin cannot begin working our way to deliverance from sin. However, once delivered, then we are debtors to the Spirit that by the Spirit we would put to death the deeds of the body (Rom. 8:12-13).

Saying something like “Well, James is just saying that we are saved by faith alone but not by faith that is alone” is just dodging the verse. James is not saying that at all. He is saying that your faith is garbage if it’s not accompanied by works.

While we may admit to that, we don’t admit to his conclusion, which is that we are justified by works.

Yes, justified by works. That’s what he said, so that is what we are allowed to say as well.

Wow, there was a lot of rambling involved above. I hope someone got something out of that because it’s all pretty important … that is, unless we just want to continue holding onto our traditions and only pretending to believe what the Bible says.

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Customs and Traditions

This post was inspired by a quote from Mark Twain:

Laws are sand, customs are rock. Laws can be evaded and punishment escaped but an openly transgressed custom brings sure punishment.

How true this is.

Recently, I wrote a page on baptism. Because I know that just showing Christians the Scripture is never going to be enough—pretty much all Christians prefer their denomination’s traditions to even the plainest teachings of Scripture or historical Christianity—I added a page answering objections to my teaching on baptism.

In response to several Scriptures I reference on the "Baptism Objections" page and dozens on the pages I link to from those pages, one person sent me a one-sentence argument: "If man cannot be saved unless man toils (water baptism), then man cannot be saved without works (faith plus works)."

Faith and Works

What Mark Twain said is so true. For Christians, never mind what the law of Christ is; never mind what the Bible teaches; it’s our traditions (customs) that matter.

Quote dozens of Scriptures, present James 2:14-26 as a concise directed argument that you cannot be saved without works … none of that matters. Our custom says faith plus works is a bad thing.

I have been told many times over the years that we must never "add to faith."

Is that what the Bible says?

I think what the Bible says is, "Add to your faith virtue" and knowledge and self-control and perseverance and godliness and brotherly kindness and love (2 Pet. 1:5-7).

Doesn’t it?

But in most fundamentalist churches, you can deny that verse all you want. You can explain it away using explanations as ridiculous and irrelevant as you want. Your explanations don’t have to make a bit of sense because 2 Pet. 1:5-7 doesn’t fit into our tradition.

On the other hand, use 2 Peter to contradict our tradition, and the hammer will begin to fall.

First, you’ll lose your teaching positions. Second, you’ll lose your welcome. Third, you’ll lose your membership.

Why? Because you violated Scripture?

No, violating Scripture is perfectly acceptable. I was once in a Southern Baptist Sunday School class with three other couples. We were in Matthew 6, and we came to verse 15, where Jesus says that your heavenly Father will not forgive you if you don’t forgive others.

Never mind that this verse is repeated in Mark 11:26. Never mind that the same thought is repeated even more strongly in Matthew 18:35. The real issue is that this opinion of Jesus’ contradicts our custom!

So, all six people in that Sunday School class with my wife and I came to the conclusion that what Jesus said isn’t true. Our heavenly Father will forgive us even if we don’t forgive others.

I was shocked. My wife was shocked. We almost couldn’t talk.

What Jesus said isn’t true???

Recently I heard Charles Stanley say the exact same thing.

Now, mind you, Charles Stanley is more theologically trained than the Pharisees/Southern Baptists who were in Sunday School class with us. So he added some fancy word to forgiven in order to distinguish the forgiveness of all our sins through the death of Jesus from whatever vague, undefined forgiveness Jesus meant in Matthew 6:15.

Nonetheless, Charles Stanley was making the same tradition over Scripture choice that our friends in the Sunday School class were making. He just did it more diplomatically. In some temporary, unimportant way, we don’t feel forgive on earth if we don’t forgive others, but of course, we are forgiven in the eternal and most important way because of Jesus’ death.

Just more Scripture dodging.

Let’s be real: we prefer our traditions to what Scripture teaches.

What Mark Twain said is true in modern Christianity. You can get away with violating the laws of Christ and the Scripture, but you cannot get away with violating custom.

Try telling someone in your Baptist church that they are not forgiven by God because they won’t forgive someone else. You will face justice for it. You will be called before someone, whether it’s the deacon board or the pastor.

I once dropped a note to an acquaintance who had dodged Galatians 6:7-8 in a Sunday School class he was teaching. That verse says that if you sow to the Spirit you’ll reap eternal life and if you sow to the flesh you’ll reap corruption.

Here’s how he taught that verse. He took his class to 2 or 3 other Scriptures, emphasized that we are eternally secure, and then he went on to ignore v. 9 and water down and miss the point of v. 10.

I dropped him a note saying that Paul’s purpose was clearly to present a warning to the Galatians. I asked this Sunday School teacher whether he felt he had passed on that warning to his Sunday School class or whether he had basically just skipped those verses. Even if eternal security is true, surely it would have been good to pass on some warning to the class. Isn’t that true?

He turned my note in to the pastor, and I was called into the office.

I was called into the office.

Why wasn’t he?

Whether or not I was correct was never discussed. All I was asked was why I was sending notes to Sunday School teachers.

Now, keep in mind, I’m not helpless. I was not raked over the coals by the pastor. If you’re a pastor, a supposed guard of God’s sheep, and you’re going to rake me over the coals, you’d better have at least some good reason, or I’m going to verbally and politely dump you on your head.

I did that. The pastor was speechless and embarrassed, especially because he was corrupt and intimidating people was his standard method for dealing with them.

I say that to tell you I’m not complaining about my ill treatment. I’ve suffered through very little ill treatment as human being. I’m simply pointing out what’s true.

What’s true is that it is violating custom that will get you in trouble in modern churches, not violating Scripture or the will of God.

My hope is that someone will read this and be brave enough to get in trouble with man by respecting the Word of God over the traditions of men.

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