Category: APOLOGETICS

Response to TULIP

In the early seventeenth century, Jacob Arminius, professor of theology at the University of Leiden, came under suspicion by the more orthodox Dutch Calvinists. Arminius was viewed to have seriously deviated from the orthodox doctrines of justification and election. Charges of Pelagianism were made, and the matter quickly escalated.

Pelagius was a British monk who taught for a short time in Rome toward the close of the 4th century. He fled to North Africa in 410 (preceding the invasion of the Goths) and there engaged in his dispute with Augustine, the famous Bishop of Hippo. He later went to Palestine and then disappeared from history. In his treatise on Free Will Pelagius said;

  1. Men are born morally neutral with an equal capacity for either good or evil.
  2. Whereas previously he spoke of divine grace as merely providing help, here he seems to assert it is necessary for salvation.
  3. He finally admits that Adam’s sin did adversely affect his posterity, but only by way of setting a bad example.
  4. He discusses certain texts in Paul that appear to say we are driven to sin by the corruption of our flesh, a doctrine he rejects.

Arminius’ views were not, strictly speaking, Pelagian. He did, however, differ from Calvinist orthodoxy on a number of issues.

  1. He denied the doctrine of perserverance and questioned whether grace was necessary for one to come to faith.
  2. He also challenged the Calvinist doctrine of predestination. The desire of Arminius was to uphold the goodness and mercy of God. He was concerned that Calvinist doctrines made God the author of sin and wanted to stress the importance of faith and holiness in the Christian life.

His untimely death provided only a temporary reprieve. The fires were soon rekindled by his followers. Under the leadership of John Uytenbogaert, the Arminians met in 1610 to draw up what was called a remonstrance. It was simply a petition for toleration and a summation of their views in five points.

  1. They modified the doctrine of unconditional election, asserting that God did not elect individuals.
  2. They argued that God’s election was more general and had reference to that group of men who exercised faith.
  3. Like Arminius, they also denied perseverance of the saints, saying God’s gift of faith could be resisted by man.
  4. Finally, the Arminians affirmed that Christ died for the sins of every man.

The orthodox Calvinists responded with a seven—point statement called the counter—remonstrance. The government tried to settle the controversy with a series of ecclesiastical conferences. But matters only grew worse. Riots actually broke out in some areas of the Netherlands. Finally, amid a battle between political rivals, Prince Maurice and Oldenbarnveldt, a national synod was called to settle the controversy.

The synod convened in 1618 in the Dutch city of Dordrecht [Dort]. To insure fairness, the Dutch Calvinists invited delegations from Reformed churches throughout Europe. Simon Episcopius represented the Arminian position at Dort. The rejection of Arminian theology was unanimous. Five theological points were formulated to answer the Remonstrants.

1. The Canons of Dort declared that fallen man was totally unable to save himself [Total Depravity];

2. God’s electing purpose was not conditioned by anything in man [Unconditional Election];

3. Christ’s atoning death was sufficient to save all men, but efficient only for the elect [Limited Atonement];

4. The gift of faith, sovereignly given by God’s Holy Spirit, cannot be resisted by the elect [Irresistible Grace]; and

5. Those who are regenerated and justified will persevere in the faith [Perseverance of the Saints].

These doctrines have been called the five points of Calvinism and are often symbolized by the well-known “TULIP.” However, they are not a full exposition of Calvin’s theology. To be sure, these doctrines do reflect Calvin’s viewpoint in the area of soteriology. For example, the synod of Dort does not address. Calvin’s devout commitment to Scripture, nor does it say anything about the Trinity or Christ. The doctrines of Dort are more properly viewed in their historical context as a theological response to the challenges of seventeenth-century Arminianism.

True Religion

Three Places Where Religion Does Not Reside

Scougal identifies three places where religion is incorrectly located.

(1) Theological correctness. Some place religion “in the understanding, in orthodox notions and opinions; and all the account they can give of their religion is, that they are of this or the other persuasion, and have joined themselves to one of those many sects whereinto Christendom is most unhappily divided.”

(2) Moralistic reductionism. “Others place it in the outward man, in a constant course of external duties, and a model of performances: if they live peacably with their neighbors, keep a temperate diet, observe the returns of worship, frequenting the church and their closet, and sometimes extend their hands to the relief of the poor, they think they have sufficiently acquitted themselves.”

(3) Affectional emotionalism. “Others again put all religion in the affections, in rapturous heats and ecstatic devotion; and all they aim at, is, to pray with passion, and think of heaven with pleasure, and to be affected with those kind and melting expressions wherewith they court their Saviour, till they persuade themselves that they are mightily in love with him; and from thence assume a great confidence of their salvation, which they esteem the chief of Christian graces.

Where True Religion Does Reside

Scougal’s point is that none of these are sufficient by itself, and that to isolate one as the essence of true religion inherently distorts both the virtue and the reality of the whole.

Those who are acquainted with true religion “will entertain far different thoughts, and disdain all those shadows and false imitations of it. They know by experience, that true religion is an union of the soul with God, a real participation of the divine nature, the very image of God drawn upon the soul; or, in the Apostle’s phrase, it is ‘Christ formed within us.’ . . . Briefly, I know not how the nature of religion can be more fully expressed, than by calling it a divine life.” True religion is “a union of the soul with God, a real participation of the Divine nature, the very image of God drawn upon the soul, or in the apostle’s phrase, ‘it is Christ formed within us.’”

Scougal calls it a life (or vital principle) because of its permanency and stability, its freedom and unconstrainedness.

He calls it a divine life because it stands in a universal and unbounded affection, in mastery over our natural inclinations.

This means that sound doctrine and moral action and affectional engagement are necessary but not sufficient; they are the “particular exercises” of piety, but they the root or source of it. They are outflows of the divine life in the human soul.

Four Forms of the Divine Life in the Life of the Believer

This divine life, Scougal argues, is “an inward, free and self-moving principle . . . a new nature instructing and prompting.” This animating principle takes the following four forms in the life of a believer.

(1) Faith is the root of the divine life. It is “a kind of sense, or feeling persuasion of spiritual things; it extends itself unto all divine truths; but in our lapsed estate, it hath a peculiar relation to the declarations of God’s mercy and reconcilableness to sinners through a mediator. . . .” If faith is the root, then love to God and charity to man, along with purity and humility, are the branches.

(2) Love is “a delightful and affectionate sense of the divine perfections, which makes the soul resign and sacrifice itself wholly unto him, desiring above all things to please him, and delighting in nothing so much as in fellowship and communion with him, and being ready to do or suffer anything for his sake, or at his pleasure. . . . A soul thus possessed with divine love must needs be enlarged towards all mankind . . . this is . . . charity . . . under which all parts of justice, all the duties we owe to our neighbour, are eminently comprehended; for he who doth truly love all the world . . . so far from wronging or injuring any person . . . will resent any evil that befalls others, as if it happened to himself.”

(3) Purity is “a temper and disposition of mind as makes a man despise and abstain from all pleasures and delights of sense or fancy which are sinful in themselves, or tend to . . . lessen our relish of more divine and intellectual pleasures, which doth also infer a resoluteness to undergo all those hardships he may meet with in the performance of his duty: so that not only chastity and temperance, but also Christian courage and magnanimity may come under this head.”

(4) Humility is”a deep sense of our own meanness, with a hearty and affectionate acknowledgment of our owing all that we are to the divine bounty; which is always accompanied with a profound submission to the will of God, and great deadness to the glory of the world, and the applause of men.” Scougal argues that religion is better understand by actions than by words, “because actions are more lively things, and do better represent the inward principle whence they proceed.” Scougal points to the divine life of our Savior as exemplifying divine love, express in his diligence to do his Father’s will, his patience in bearing affliction, his constant devotion, his charity to men, his purity, and his humility.

The Excellence and Advantage of True Religion

In Part 2, Scougal considers the excellence and advantage of religion. The worth and excellency of a soul is measured by the object of its love, and the way to grow in holiness is to behold divine excellence. This alone can bring us true happiness. It is impossible for God to deny his love to a soul wholly devoted to him. Horizontally, nothing can be more satisfying than a heart enlarged to embrace the whole world. Impure delights are unsatisfying. Finally, contrary to the world’s expectations, there is a sweetness in being lowly and self-abased through humble service.

Experiential Objections

Having defined the root and the branches of this divine life, along with the advantages of its excellency, Scougal takes a pastoral turn in Part 3, addressing the situation of one who might agree with this understanding and its desirableness, but concludes in sadness that it is impossible to achieve since it requires a new nature instead of just attainable outward observances. Scougal counsels his reader to put aside such unreasonable and discouraging fears, encouraging him to be strong in the Lord, doing what he can and depending on divine assistance. Scougal offers numerous suggestions, both positively and negatively, to cultivate and practice these virtues and qualities. In particular, he encourages the shunning of sin and the use of the means of grace (especially prayer and the sacraments) in following Christ.

An Imperfect Classic

Scougal’s classic deserves all of its praise. It is a book whose profundity far outmatches its length. But as with all books, it must be read critically. J. I. Packer, who lauds and recommends the book highly, expresses one lament about the book, which is worth citing in closing:

One could wish, however, that his exposition had been more explicitly and emphatically Christ-centred.

Like so many seventeenth-century writers, he lets himself assume that his readers know all about Jesus and need only to be told about real religion, the life of faith and faith-full turning Godward as opposed to the orthodoxism, formalism, emotionalism, and legalism that masquerade as Christianity while being in truth a denial of it.

Packer continues:

Had Scougal elaborated on the Christian’s union with Christ, which the New Testament sees as regeneration by the Holy Spirit;

had he explained incorporation into the Saviour’s risen life, whereby Jesus’s motivating passion to know and love and serve and please and honour and glorify the Father is implanted in sinners so that it is henceforth their own deepest desire too;

had he thus shown, in black and white, that imitating Jesus’s aims and attitudes in serving God and mankind is for the born-again the most natural, indeed the only natural, way of living, while for the unregenerate it is hard to the point of impossible;

[then] his little treatise would have been immeasurably stronger.

As it is, Scougal’s profile of divine life in human souls is much more complete than his answer to the question, how do I get into it?—or, how does it get into me? This is a limitation.

C. S. Lewis once offered advice to modern readers:

It is a good rule, after reading a new book, never to allow yourself another new one till you have read an old one in between. If that is too much for you, you should at least read one old one to every three new ones. . . . The only palliative [to our cultural blindspots] is to keep the clean sea breeze of the centuries blowing through our minds, and this can be done only by reading old books.

Henry Scougal’s The Life of God in the Soul of Man is one such older book worth reading.

 

Doctrine of Christ

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{Rought Draft}

PROPHESIES

The prophet Moses was the first to record a prophecy about Jesus Christ. It was a prediction about Jesus’ birth. The prediction occurred at least four thousand years before Jesus was born.

Genesis 3:15 is the first prophecy about Jesus Christ. It says that Eve will have a descendant and he will defeat Satan (“crush your head”). Eve was the great, great, great . . . grandmother of the Messiah who is Jesus the Christ is the first prophecy about Jesus Christ.

 

PROPHECY OF  4000 B.C.

And I will put enmity between you [Satan] and the woman, and between your offspring and hers; he will crush your head . . . (NIV)” Genesis 3:15

FULFILLED 2 B.C.

But when the time had fully come, God sent his Son, born of a woman . . . to redeem those under law (NIV).” Gal. 4:4

. . . So Jesus is not ashamed to call them brothers . . . Since the children have flesh and blood, he too shared in their humanity so that by his death he might destroy him who holds the power of death—that is, the devil— (NASB). Heb. 2:11, 14

The God of peace will soon crush Satan under your feet. The grace of our Lord Jesus be with you. Rom. 16:20 (NASB)

 

2066 B.C.

And through your offspring [seed] all nations on the earth will be blessed, because you have obeyed Me (NIV). Genesis 22:17-18

 

1859 B.C.

The scepter will not depart from Judah, nor the ruler’s staff from between his feet, until he comes to whom it belongs and the obedience of the nation is his .(NIV) Genesis 49:10

700-681 B.C. Prophecy

“Therefore the Lord Himself will give you a sign: Behold, a virgin will be with child and bear a son, and she will call His name Immanuel” (NASB) Isaiah 7:14

“For a child will be born to us, a son will be given to us; and the government will rest on His shoulders; and His name will be called Wonderful Counselor, Mighty God, Eternal Father, Prince of Peace. “ (NASB) Isaiah 9:6

Fulfillment

Before Jesus was born we are told, “BEHOLD, THE VIRGIN SHALL BE WITH bCHILD AND SHALL BEAR A SON, AND THEY SHALL CALL HIS NAME IMMANUEL” which translated means, “GOD WITH US.” Matt. 1:23 (NASB)

The first prediction is authenticated in Matthew 1:23 where Isaiah 7:14 is quoted. It reveals that Jesus was and is God. The second prediction by the prophet Isaiah merely says that a unique mark of the Messiah would be that the Holy Spirit of God would rest on Him. John the Baptist and others tell us the Holy Spirit did rest on Jesus.

 

The Virgin Birth of Christ
The virgin birth foretold in the Old Testament
The historic fulfillment of the prophecy
The virgin birth is taught in the Scripture
The purpose of the virgin birth – to revealed the father, to bridge chiasm between man and God (I Tim. 2:5); to save man – the basic purpose that brought Christ to earth (Heb 2:14); to rescue the whole creation (Romans 8:19-22);
The importance of the doctrine of the virgin birth – Modernist and liberals attack this doctrine as they attact the depravity of man. The only way Jesus could be sinless is to be born by a virgin. Salvation is closely linked with this doctrine. If Jesus was not born by a virgin then I am and you are a lost sinner. The bible teaches virgin birth. It stands with scripture and does not change with changing thoughts and theories of mankind. It is an urgent truth, essential to the plan of salvation. It is a mystery hidden in God, unknown truth (I Cor 4:1). Be good stewards of God’s mysterious, unconditional and supreme truths. A man without a sin nature was born by a virgin. His names means God with us.
The significance of the virgin birth – Jesus was a real human being. Phil 2:7. He became our elder brother. He was God concieved of the Holy Spirit. He was sinless- being born of the virgin
Objections to this doctrine – only found by a few scriptures – isaiah, mathew and luke. Jesus did not  claim, but infered in John 6:51. Scientist don’t except it because it is biologically true. Others reject it because it is miraculous. Modern theologians do not accept the doctrine. But it is taught in the scriptures, prophecies and history.

The Deity of Christ
Introduction – fundamental doctrine consistently attacked by Jehovah’s witness, mormoms, etc. Belief in deity of Christ is essential to salvation. Romans 10:9. Jesus was merely a good man, but God in flesh.

Jesus Christ is Referred to as Lord:

Psalm 110:1 “ The Lord said unto my Lord, Sit Thou at my right hand until I make Thine enemies thy footstool.- Jesus referred to this passage in Matthew 22:41- 46 (NKJV)
41While the Pharisees were gathered together, Jesus asked them, 42 saying “What do you think about the Christ? Whose Son is He?” They said to Him, “ The Son of David” 43 He said to them, “ How then does David in the Spirit call Him ‘Lord,’ saying:
44 ‘The Lord said to my lord, “Sit at My right hand, Till I make your enemies Your footstool”’. 45 “ If David then calls Him ‘Lord.’ how is He his Son?. 46 And no one was able to answer Him a word, nor from that day on did anyone dare question Him anymore.Mark 12:35-36 (NKJV)
35 Then Jesus answered and said, while He taught in the temple, “How is it that the scribes say that the Christ is the Son of David?”36 “For David himself said by the Holy Spirit: ‘The Lord said to my lord, “Sit at My right hand, Till I make your enemies Your
footstool”.Luke 20:39 – 44 (NKJV)
39 Then some of the scribe answered and said, “ Teacher, You have spoken well,” 40 But after that they dare not question Him anymore. 41 And He said to them, “ How can they say that Christ is the Son of David? “ Now David himself said in the book of psalms:
43 ‘The Lord said to my lord, “Sit at My right hand, Till I make your enemies Your
footstool”. 44 “Therefore David calls Him ‘Lord’; how is He then his son?”

Peter referred to it in his sermon at Pentecost, Acts 2:34 – 35. It is very important.
Acts 2: 34 – 35 (NIV)
34 For David did not ascend to heaven , and yet he said, The Lord said to my lord, “Sit at My right hand, until I make your enemies a footstool for your feet”. 36 “ Therefore let all Israel be assured of this: God has made this Jesus, whom you crucified, both Lord and Christ.”

** The prophecy was the Messiah-Savior would be the Divine Lord Himself**

The Virgin Birth would be God coming to Live with Men

Isaiah 7:14 (NIV)
Therefore the Lord himself will give you a sign: The virgin will be with child & will give birth to a son, and will call him Immanuel. ( This is the Savior that was coming).

Matthew 1:23 tells us that Immanuel means “ God with us.” This came true at Bethlehem.
The Messiah, the Lord Jesus Christ was Given Divine Names in Prophecy

Isaiah 9: 6 – 7 (NIV)
6 For to us a child is born, to us a son is given, and the government will be on his shoulders and he will be called Wonderful Counselor, Mighty God, Everlasting Father, Prince of peace. 7 Of the increase of his government and peace there will be no end. He will reign on David’s throne and over his kingdom, establishing and upholding it with justice and righteousness from that time on and forever. The zeal of the Lord Almighty will accomplish this.

Wonderful – Only God is truly wonderful
Luke 18:19 “Why do you call me good? Jesus answered. “ No one is good – except God alone.
Counselor – Only the omniscient God could be perfect counselor.
Psalm 16:7 – I will praise the Lord, who counsels me; even at night my heart instructs me.
The Mighty God – The One prophesied to be the Messiah was to be God Himself
The Everlasting Father – John 10:30, Jesus said, I and My Father are one.

The Christ who was prophesied to come was to be from “Everlasting”

Micah 5:2 But you Bethlehem Ephrathah, though you are small among the clans of Judah, out of you will come for me one who will be ruler over Israel, whose origins are from of old, from ancient times.

God and Christ both Gave their Personal names as “I AM”

Exodus 3:14 God said to Moses, “ I AM WHO I AM. This is what you are to say to the Israelites, I AM has sent me to you.
John 8:58 “Jesus said unto them, Verily, Verily, I say unto you, before Abraham was, I AM.
** Jesus is the great I AM**

Jesus Christ Forgave Sins

Mark 2:5 When Jesus saw their faith, he said to the paralytic, Son, your sins are forgiven.
Mark 2:7 Why does this fellow talk like that? He’s blaspheming! Who can forgive sins but God alone.
In forgiving sin Jesus either blasphemed or was God. Jesus was God and could forgive.

Jesus Claimed Equality with the Father and the Holy Spirit.

Matthew 28:19 Therefore go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit.
2 Corinthians 13:14 May the grace of the Lord Jesus Christ, and the love of God, and the fellowship of the Holy Spirit be with you all.

Jesus Claimed Omnipresence

To be omnipresent is a characteristic of God Almighty only, not with angels and men.
Matthew 18:20 For where two or three come together in my name, there am I with them. ( Jesus promise to be anywhere, everywhere ay one and the same time.)

Jesus Claimed Omniscience

Omniscience is to know all things and is a characteristic exclusive of God Himself.
Mark 11: 2 – 6 2 Saying to them, Go to the village ahead of you, and just as you enter it, you will find a colt tied there, which no one has ever ridden. untie it and bring it here, 3 If anyone ask you, Why are you doing this? tell him, The Lord needs it and will send it back here shortly. 4 They went and found a colt outside in the street, tied at a doorway. As they untied it, 5 some people standing there asked, “ what are you doing, untying that colt, 6 They answered as Jesus had told them to, and the people let them go.

Matthew 12:40 For as Jonah was three days and three nights in the belly of a huge fish, so the Son of Man will be three days and three nights in the heart of the earth.

** Read Matthew 24: 3 – 31** Jesus exercised the gift of prophecy.

Jesus Claimed Omnipotence

Omnipotence, all power, is another exclusive attribute of the Lord God Almighty.
Matthew 28:18 Then Jesus came to them and said, ‘ All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me.

Jesus Christ had Creative Power

To bring something into being from nothing, creation, is possible only to God. Jesus Christ was active in creation and continues to maintain the world.

John 1:1-3 1 In the beginning was the word, and the Word was with God, and the word was God. 2 He was with God in the beginning. 3 Through him all things were made, without him nothing was made that has been made.

Hebrews 1:3 The Son is the radiance of God’s glory and the exact representation of his being, sustaining all things by his powerful word. after he had provided purification for sins, he sat down at the right hand of the Majesty in heaven.

Jesus Christ Received Worship due only to God

John 9:38 the men who had been healed of blindness recognizing the Savior, said, “ Lord, I believe. And he worshipped Him.” Jesus as God rightfully accepted this worship.

Luke 4:8 Jesus said to Satan at the time of temptation, “ Get thee behind me satan: for it is written, thou shalt worship the Lord thy God and him only shalt thou serve.” To worship anyone but the Lord God is a terrible sin.

** When Jesus accepted worship, He was saying to the world, “ I am the Lord.”

Jesus Accepted the Testimony of Thomas

John 20:28 And Thomas answered and said unto him, my Lord and my God.

If Thomas had made a mistake, misstatement or overstatement Jesus would have corrected it. Thomas had told the truth for Jesus was the Lord God, the eternal preexistent one.

The Fact of Jesus’ Resurrection

This is the strongest and supreme argument that Jesus is God.
Romans 1:4 “ And who through the spirit of holiness was declared with power to be the Son of God by his resurrection from the dead: Jesus Christ our Lord.
** This verse specifically states that the resurrection declare Jesus as the Son of God.

According to Romans 6:4 “ We were therefore buried with him through baptism into death in order that, just as Christ was raised from the dead through the glory of the Father, we too may live a new life. ( it was the Father God, Himself, that raised Jesus from the dead.)

** The Father God thus proclaims conclusively to the world the deity of Jesus Christ**

Reference: One Hundred Bible Lessons
By: Alban Douglas

FIFTEEN PROOFS of the DEITY OF CHRIST

  1. Jesus Christ is referred to as Lord – Paul in Acts 9:5 recognized Jesus as Lord; John 9:35 – 38 – the account of the blind man who worships him. To deny the deity of Christ is to rob man of a savior and condemn us eternally. Psalm 110:1 -referenced in  Mathew 22:41; Mark 12:35-36; Luke 20:29; Acts 2:34; Messiah Savior would be the divine Lord himself.
  2. The virgin birth would be God coming to live with men – Isaiah 7:14 – Mathew 1:23
  3. The Messiah, the Lord Jesus Christ was given divine name in prophecy – Isaiah 9:6-7; Luke 18:19 ( wonderful); psalm 16:7 (counselor); mighty God, the everlasting father.
  4. The Christ who was prophesied to come was to be from “everlasting” – Micah 5:2
  5. God and Christ both gave their personal names as “I Am” – Exodus 3; John 8:58; Leviticus 24:
  6. Jesus Christ forgave sins – Mark 2: 5, 7,
  7. Jesus claimed equality with the Father and the Holy Spirit – Baptistmal formula is Mathew 28:19; 2 Cor 13:14;
  8. Jesus claimed omnipresence – not true of angels or humanity (Mathew 18:20)
  9. Jesus claimed omniscience – Mark 11:2-6; Mathew 12:40
  10. Jesus claimed omnipotence – Mathew 28:18; John 1:1; Hebrews 1; Col 1:16
  11. Jesus Christ had creative power
  12. Jesus Christ the true God had power over the elements – Luke 8:24; Mark 4:39- says peace be still… .Matthew 14:25-26
  13. Jesus Christ received worship due only to God – John 9:38; Luke 4: if you are truly the son of God
  14. Jesus Christ accepted the testimony of Thomas – John 20:28;
  15. The fact of Jesus’ resurrection – Romans 1:4. Resurrection declares Jesus as the son of God. Romans 6:4;

Conclusion – Jesus is God for he posses ten attributes of God – ETERNAL (Micah 5:2); John 8:58; Col. 1:17; Rev. 1:8; UNCHANGEABLE Hebrews 13:8; OMNIPOTENT- still tempest Luke 8:24; Mathew 28:18; OMNIPRESENT – Mathew 18 (there I am in the midst of them); John 4:48 OMNISCIENT – all knowing Mark 11:6; Mathew 24; John 2: 24-25; Luke 5; HOLY – Mark 1:24; I Peter 2:22; John 19:4; JUST – John 2:14-17; Acts 17:31; LOVING – John 15:13; John 11:36; MERCIFUL – Titus 3: FAITHFUL – 2 Tim 2: 13 – creation, preseveration, forgiveness, raising the death and judging (John 5:22) are attributed to Jesus. Luke 7:48
LESSON # 4 The Deity of Christ (Arguments Against It)

Introduction – Deity of Christ is mercilessly attacked in this country.
Twenty arguments against the deity of Christ examined

. because He had flesh and bones, & God – being a spirit – has neither flesh nor bones – John 4:24; Luke 24:39
Answer: Jesus Christ as man had both flesh and bones but as God He was spirit. This objection arises from the problem of the dual nature of the Savior.
– In order for the invisible God to become visible He must become flesh and bones.
– 1 Timothy 3:16 “ God was manifest in the flesh,” in the person of Jesus Christ.
– 1 Timothy 2:5 Jesus is a dual personality, “ The man Christ Jesus,” ( man and God)II. Because Christ had a beginning, and God had no beginning – John 8:42;
Psalm 90:20
Answer: Jesus as a man had a beginning when He was conceived of the Holy Spirit but Spirit but Jesus as God is without beginning and without end.
John 8:56-59; Colossians 1:17; John 1:18; Isaiah 9:6III. Because He has been created, and God has no beginning. Colossians 1:15; Revelations 3:14
Answer: A true of Revelation 3:14 is something like this, “ He was the witness of the beginning of the creation of God,” not a creation but a witness of the creation. Proverbs 8:22-23 speaking of wisdom personified in the person of Christ,” Christ was from everlasting, from the beginning or ever the earth was.”IV. Because Hosea 11:9 says that God is not man, while Ezekiel 28:2 says that man is not God.
Answer: Hosea does not say that God could not assume human form of body and flesh. Nothing is too hard for God, Jeremiah 32:17-18, and He can be manifest in the flesh.

V. Because He called God His Father – Matthew 27:46 and John 20:17
Answer: Jesus as the human Person called God His Father. God in Hebrew 1:8 calls Jesus “God”, but that does not lessen the Father’s position of deity.

VI. Because the Father sent Him to earth – John 8:42
Answer: The Father sending the Son to earth ( Jesus volunteered to come) does not lessen His position as being the Almighty God. Luke 19:10; 1 Timothy 1:15; Galatians 4:4-5.

VII. Because He appeared with flesh – 1 John 4:23; 2John7. Since Jesus is flesh, bones & blood, He is merely a man and no more.
Answer: Jesus assumed flesh, bones and blood merely for the incarnation. As God He is eternal but to be our Redeemer it was necessary that He become partaker of Humanity.

VIII. Because He is called man – John 8:40; 1Timothy 2:5
Answer: Jesus was both true God and true man in one person without an intermingling of the two natures. Emmanuel means “ God with us”

IX. Christ is not God, but He is a Son of God, just as we may become sons of God.
Answer: By conversion we become a “son of God” (John 1:12), but Jesus Christ is the “ only begotten Son of God” ( John 3:16), a unique and special position.
God’s Son is equal to the father, Philippians 2:6, and the saint becomes an heir with Christ.

X. Because the Father gave Him power – Matthew 28:18
Answer: In Philippians 2:5-8 the Son surrenders this power and God restores or returns it to Him after the resurrection. It was always His but He voluntarily yielded it.

XI. Because He was made Lord by God – Acts 2:36
Answer: It is not made in the sense of a promotion for though He always was God, the Father takes this opportunity to proclaim this fact to all humanity.

XII. Because Christ died and God is immortal & cannot die – 1 Timothy 1:17; Luke 23:46 & Acts 2:32
Answer: Jesus as man died but Jesus as God could not and did not die, Hebrews 2:9 – 14. It is the physical body that dies. the spirit does not die for it returns to God.

XIII. Because He was conceived by the Holy Spirit – Matthew 1:18-20. As a creature of the Holy Spirit He is therefore neither God nor Creator
Answer: The Humanity of Jesus Christ was conceived of the Holy Spirit. The deity of Christ has always existed, John 1:1-2. Jesus existed long before the Virgin Mary.

XIV. Because He said “ I ascend unto my Father and your Father: and to my God and your God” – therefore the two must be quite distinct – John 20:17
Answer: The Father and Son are two persons but one God, “ I and My father are one, “ John 10:30. See John 17: 11, 21 & 22.

XV. Because He prayed to the Father and addressed Him as the only true God – John 17:3 & 1 Corinthians 8:6.
Answer: This Objection ignores the fact that the Son co-exists with the Father. They are one. They are one in nature (eternal Spirit), but distinct as to office & responsibilities. The Father & Son are indivisibly linked together, Matthew 11:27; Luke 10:22; John 12:45.

XVI. Because He was only an “idea”, “will”, or “purpose” of God. having no material existence or material form in the beginning.
Answer: This is perhaps a ply on the words in John 1:1-2, but verse 1 answers it definitely & authoritatively, the word ( Jesus) was God.

XVII. Because He says, “My Father is greater than I” – John 14:28
Answer: This refers to His position & certainly not to His being or nature.
Positionally Jesus has chosen a position in subjection to His Father God.

XVIII. Christ is not God, because though He is One with God, that refers merely to Pastoring (shepherding), Teaching & Judgment, but not Godhead.
Answer: The Father & Son are one God (but two persons), co-existing as one Jehovah God.
The Father was the Jehovah of the old testament, Psalm 23:1, Jesus in the New testament, John 10:11; Hebrews 13:20; 1 Peter 2:25; Revelation 7:17.

** If you want to know more about this material and more Bible study guide, The name of this book is One Hundred Bible Lessons by: Alban Douglas. available at Christian book store.**

Conclusion

The Relationship of the Son to the Father
Introduction
Jesus Christ as God is equal to the Father
Jesus Christ as man is subordinate to the Father
Conclusion

The Humanity of Christ
Introduction
Jesus was given human names
Jesus had human ancestry
Jesus possessed a physical nature
Jesus was subject to the laws of human development
Jesus was moved by the instincts of normal human beings
Jesus possessed body, soul, and spirit
Jesus died
Conclusion

The Sinlessness of Christ
Introduction
The meaning of the sinlessness of Christ
The fact of the sinlessness of Christ
Testimony regarding the sinlessness of Christ
Arguments against the Savior’s sinlessness
Consequences of denying of Christ’s sinlessness
Result of Christ’s sinlessneses
Conclusion

The Character of Christ
Jesus Christ was holy
Jesus Christ was loving
Jesus Christ’s love for souls
Jesus Christ was compassionate
Jesus Christ was prayerful
Jesus Christ was meek
Jesus Christ was humble
Conclusion

The Teaching of Christ
Introduction
Jesus’ teaching about salvation
Jesus’ teaching about daily Christian living
Jesus’ teaching Pharisees and false teachers
Jesus’ teaching about stewardship
Jesus’ teaching about Heaven and Hell
Jesus’ teaching about fruit bearing
Jesus’ teaching on prophecy
Conclusion

The Command of Christ
Introduction
Twenty commands of Christ examined
Conclusion

The Miracles of Christ
Introduction
Definitions of the word “miracle”
Uniqueness of Jesus’ miracles
The scope of Jesus’ miracles
Credibility of Jesus’ miracles
Objections to Jesus’ miracles
Values of Jesus’ miracles
The possibility of miracles today
Conclusion

The Death of Christ
Introduction
The Doctrine of His death
Objections to the substitutionary death of Christ
Conclusion

The Resurrection of Christ
Introduction
Evidence of the resurrection
Explanations of Jesus’ resurrection
His resurrection body
Results of the resurrection
Conclusion
IVX. The Ascension of Christ
Introduction
The story of the ascension
The ascension was prophesied and taught in the Scriptures
The ascension occurred forty days after the resurrection
The manner of the ascension
The necessity of the ascension
The purpose of the ascension
The results of the ascension
Conclusion

XV. The Intercessory Work of Christ
Introduction
Christ’s atoning work was finished on earth
Christ met the conditions of becoming a priest
Christ was made a priest after the Aaronic pattern
Christ offered Himself as the sacrifice on Calvary
Christ now appears in the presence of God for us
Christ is our advocate now
Christ offers to be your intercessor today
Conclusion

XVI. The Second Coming of Christ
Introduction
Prophecies of Christ’s second coming
Time of Christ’s coming
Purpose of Christ’s coming
How is Christ coming?
Where is Christ coming to?
Manner of His coming
Signs of Christ’s coming
Conclusion

XVII. The Result of His Return
Introduction
With regard to God
With regard to the church
With regard to Israel
With regard to the nations and unregenerate individuals
With regard to society as a whole
With regard to the antichrist and the Devil
With regard to the physical universe
Conclusion

Bibliography

Wilmington’s Guide to the Bible
Author: Harold L. Wilmington
Publisher: Tyndale House
Pages: 1009
Price estimate: $27.95

Handbook of Today’s Religions
Author: Josh McDowell and Don Stewart
Publisher: Thomas Nelson/Word
Pages: 576
Price estimate: $19.95

The Kingdom of the Cults
Author: Walter Martin
Publisher: Bethany House Publishers
Pages: 703
Price estimate: $19.95

God’s Answer to Man’s Question
Author: Alban Douglas
Publisher: Cause and Effect Ministries, Inc.
Pages: 304
Price estimate: $11.95

WAS LUTHER A CALVINIST?

The answer, of course, is no. Calvinism didn’t emerge until the end of Luther’s life. Arminianism emerged long after Luther had passed away. So Luther himself never engaged the controversy that divided Reformed Protestantism after the Reformation.

 Calvin was called a Lutheran in the early years of his ministry. And there are notable similarities between the two. But as the Reformed movement grew, it grew apart from Lutheranism in some noteworthy ways. And as Lutheran thought developed during and after the Reformation, Lutherans leaned toward Arminians more than Calvinists on a few of the doctrinal issues that divided the latter groups.

So perhaps it’s worth a minute or two to walk through the ways in which Lutherans came down on the five “points” of Calvinism. We should all understand by now that there’s far more to Calvinism than five simple points, that the five points themselves were sharpened after Calvin’s death, and that some think that Calvin himself did not affirm them all. So Calvinist friends, hold your fire. The goal here is not to oversimplify your faith, but to scan the ways that leading early Lutherans addressed the matters fought about most fiercely at the Reformed Synod of Dordt (1618-1619), and in the subsequent debates between Calvinists and Arminians.

Four Branches

Before we attack this matter directly, let me take just a minute to remind us that, technically speaking, the debate between Calvinists and Arminians really divided but a minority of the early Protestant world.

Despite the tendency of some to assume that all evangelicals fall somewhere on the continuum between Calvinism and Arminianism, it is important to remember that there were four main branches of the Protestant Reformation—

  1. Lutheran
  2. Reformed
  3. Anabaptist, and
  4. Church of England–

Calvinists and Arminians were on the same branch (though their controversy would captivate the Church of England as well, and was foreshadowed by developments in the doctrine of the English Reformation).

These branches parted gradually over the course of the 16th century. It wasn’t until the mid-to-late 16th century, for example, that the lines between the Lutherans and the Reformed were drawn clearly. And it wasn’t until the late 16th and early 17th centuries that the lines were drawn starkly between the Calvinists and Arminians.

Arminianism emerged on the Reformed branch of Protestantism. Arminius and his followers considered themselves to be Reformed. They said they wanted to reform Reformed Protestant theology in response to what they deemed unhealthy Calvinist extremes.

Nevertheless, the Synod of Dordt changed the equation once and for all—and eventually affected people all over the Protestant world. So without any further ado, here’s where the Lutherans came down on the poorly named five points of Calvinism.

Lutherans and the Five Points of Calvinism

I’ll take this question point by point, offering evidence from reliable and accessible translations of classic Lutheran texts and confessions: the American edition of Luther’s Works, ed. Jaroslav Pelikan, Helmut T. Lehmann et al. (Concordia Publishing House and Fortress Press, 1957); the latest English edition of the Lutheran Book of Concord, ed. Robert Kolb and Timothy J. Wengert (Fortress Press, 2000), which contains all the authoritative Lutheran confessions, such as the Augsburg Confession and the Formula of Concord; and Heinrich Schmid, The Doctrinal Theology of the Evangelical Lutheran Church, 3d ed., trans. Charles A. Hay and Henry E. Jacobs (Augsburg Publishing House, 1899), a compendium of Lutheran scholastic theology. These are exceptionally important Protestant theological sources, which should be read and used frequently by evangelical leaders.

Bear in mind that we are barely scratching the surface in this article. This is a skeletal presentation based on selected representatives of early Lutheran thought. Most Lutherans use the Lutheran confessions when interpreting Bible doctrines such as these. But there is diversity of opinion on the relative weight and authority of the other materials I quote below.

Total Depravity

Yes, but let’s be careful to articulate this point carefully:

Augsburg Confession (1530), Art. 2: “since the fall of Adam, all human beings who are born in the natural way are conceived and born in sin. This means that from birth they are full of evil lust and inclination and cannot by nature possess true fear of God and true faith in God. Moreover, this same innate disease and original sin is truly sin and condemns to God’s eternal wrath all who are not in turn born anew through baptism and the Holy Spirit.”

Formula of Concord (1577), Epitome, Art. 1: “original sin is not a slight corruption of human nature, but rather a corruption so deep that there is nothing sound or uncorrupted left in the human body or soul”

Formula of Concord, Solid Declaration, Art. I: “we . . . reject and condemn those who teach that human nature has indeed been greatly weakened and corrupted through the fall but has not completely lost all good that pertains to divine, spiritual matters.”

The Lutherans continued to distinguish between human nature itself (as created) and human nature as fallen and harmed by devastating sinful qualities. After a debate surrounding the quirky views of Lutheran Matthias Flacius, they concluded that original sin should not be described as the formal/forming substance of fallen human souls, but as an accidental quality of them (most Calvinists agreed): “as far as the Latin words substantia and accidens are concerned, the churches should best be spared these terms in public preaching to the uninstructed, because such words are unfamiliar to the common people.” Nevertheless, “when someone asks whether original sin is a substance (that is, the kind of thing that exists in and of itself and not in another thing) or an accidens (that is, the kind of thing which does not exist in and of itself but exists in something else and cannot exist or be simply in and of itself), necessity compels us to confess clearly that original sin is not a substance but an accidens.”

Again, though, the 16th-century Lutherans insisted that original sin has tragically distorted our souls: “the use of the word accidens, when explained on the basis of God’s Word, does not minimize original sin. . . . Luther used the word accidens and also the word qualitas, and he did not reject them. But with the use of these words he very carefully explained and clarified in as many ways as possible what a horrible quality and accidens it is that not only made human nature impure but also so deeply corrupted it that nothing pure and uncorrupted remained in it.”

Unconditional Election

Yes and no (and not double predestination).

Luther, Bondage of the Will (1525), 7.18: “I frankly confess that, for myself, even if it could be, I should not want ‘free-will’ to be given me, nor anything to be left in my own hands to enable me to endeavor after salvation; not merely because in face of so many dangers, and adversities, and assaults of devils, I could not stand my ground and hold fast my ‘free-will’ . . .; but because, even were there no dangers, adversities, or devils, I should still be forced to labor with no guarantee of success, and to beat my fists at the air. If I lived and worked to all eternity, my conscience would never reach comfortable certainty as to how much it must do to satisfy God. Whatever work I had done, there would still be a nagging doubt as to whether it pleased God, or whether he required something more. The experience of all who seek righteousness by works proves that; and I learned it well enough myself over a period of many years, to my own great hurt. But now that God has taken my salvation out of the control of my own will, and put it under the control of his, and promised to save me, not according to my working or running, but according to his own grace and mercy, I have the comfortable certainty that he is faithful and will not lie to me, and that he is also great and powerful, so that no devils or opposition can break him or pluck me from him. . . . Thus it is that, if not all, yet some, indeed many, are saved; whereas, by the power of ‘free-will’ none at all could be saved, but every one of us would perish.

Formula of Concord, Solid Declaration, Art. 11: “Our election to eternal life does not rest upon our righteousness or virtues but solely on Christ’s merit and the gracious will of his Father, who cannot deny himself . . . . Therefore, it is false and incorrect to teach that not only the mercy of God and the most holy merit of Christ but also something in us is a cause of God’s election, and for this reason God chose us for eternal life.” However, the Formula continues, “this teaching gives no one cause either for faintheartedness or for a brazen, dissolute life. For this teaching excludes no repentant sinners. Instead, it calls and draws all poor, burdened, and troubled sinners to repentance, to the recognition of their sins, and to faith in Christ. . . . Accordingly, whoever conveys this teaching concerning the gracious election of God in such a way that troubled Christians gain no comfort from it but are thrown into despair by it, or in such a way that the impenitent are strengthened in their impudence, then it is undoubtedly certain and true that this teaching in not being presented according to God’s Word and will.”

Formula of Concord, Epitome, Art. 11: “A Christian should only think about the article of God’s eternal election to the extent that it is revealed in God’s Word. . . . In Christ we are to seek the Father’s eternal election. He has decreed in his eternal, divine counsel that he will save no one apart from those who acknowledge his Son Christ and truly believe in him.”

As we move from Luther himself and the Lutheran confessions toward more modern Lutheran thinkers, some teach that election is conditioned on foreseen faith.

David Hollaz (1646-1713, of Jacobshagen and Colberg), as quoted in Heinrich Schmid, Doctrinal Theology of the Evangelical Lutheran Church, p. 272: “Predestination is the eternal decree of God to bestow eternal salvation upon all of whom God foresaw that they would finally believe in Christ.”

Johann Quenstedt (1617-1688, of Wittenberg), as quoted in Schmid, pp. 288-89:

Faith, and that, too, as persevering or final faith, enters into the sphere of eternal election, not as already afforded, but as foreknown. For we are elected to eternal life from faith divinely foreseen, apprehending, to the end, the merit of Christ; (b) Faith enters into election not by reason of any meritorious worth, but with respect to its correlate, or so far as it is the only means of apprehending the merit of Christ; or, in other words, faith is not a meritorious cause of election, but only a prerequisite condition, or a part of the entire order divinely appointed in election.

Early Lutheran disagreements on the doctrine of election were debated famously in late 19th- and 20th-century America, where Lutherans divided from one another over whether God elects “unto” faith or “in view of” faith. This American debate usually revolved around the questions whether and how God elects intuitu fidei (in view of faith, or in view of the faith that God himself grants to those he saves). Lutherans of the Ohio Synod, led by F. A. Schmidt of the Ohio Synod Seminary in Columbus, maintained the teaching of many 17th-century Lutheran scholastic theologians that God elects in view of the faith that he foresees in the repentant. Lutherans of the Missouri Synod, led by C. F. W. Walther and Franz Pieper, argued that election is not based on or conditioned by anything that we do, nor any merit of our own. The Ohioans blamed the Missourians of crypto-Calvinism, and of teaching that God does not desire the salvation of all or even seriously/effectively offer his saving grace to the lost. The Missourians accused the Ohioans of works righteousness.

Limited Atonement

No (though Luther himself was inconsistent).

Luther and other early Lutherans usually taught a general doctrine of the atonement (a view codified in the Book of Concord).

Early in his life, during his lectures on Romans (1516), Luther made a famous statement affirming a limited atonement, one that Calvinists like Timothy George have used to argue that Luther was with Calvin on this issue. As we have seen above, moreover, Luther believed in unconditional, particular election. He believed that the elect alone would be saved on the basis of the atoning work of Christ. But his usual tendency, especially later in his life, was to stress the Scripture promise that whosoever repents and believes will be saved, that it is not salutary to seek the hidden decrees of God, and that the atoning work of Christ was broad and powerful enough to cover the sins of the whole world. He worried far more often about biblical consistency and pastoral utility than about logical precision. Modern Calvinists have often charged him with logical inconsistency (though he was certainly not the first to favor an asymmetrical layout of these issues).

Here’s the famous early affirmation of limited atonement:

Luther, Lectures on Romans (1515-1516), from the scholia at Rom. 15:33 (“Now the God of peace be with you all,” LW 25:375–76): “The second argument [against predestination] is that ‘God desires all men to be saved’ (1 Tim. 2:4). . . . these verses must always be understood as pertaining to the elect only, as the apostle says in 2 Tim. 2:10 ‘everything for the sake of the elect.’ For in an absolute sense Christ did not die for all, because he says: ‘This is my blood which is poured out for you’ and ‘for many’—he does not say: for all—‘for the forgiveness of sins’ (Mark 14:24Matt. 26:28).”

Here are some later, more definitive statements of Luther:

Luther, Bondage of the Will (1525), 4.12: “We say, as we have said before, that the secret will of the Divine Majesty is not a matter for debate, and the human temerity which with continual perversity is always neglecting necessary things in its eagerness to probe this one, must be called off and restrained from busying itself with the investigation of these secrets of God’s majesty, which it is impossible to penetrate because he dwells in light inaccessible, as Paul testifies [1 Tim. 6:16]. Let it occupy itself instead with God incarnate, or as Paul puts it, with Jesus crucified, in whom are all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge, though in a hidden manner [Col. 2:3]; for through him it is furnished abundantly with what it ought to know and ought not to know. It is God incarnate, moreover, who is speaking here: “I would . . . you would not”—God incarnate, I say, who has been sent into the world for the very purpose of willing, speaking, doing, suffering, and offering to all men everything necessary for salvation. . . . It is likewise the part of this incarnate God to weep, wail, and groan over the perdition of the ungodly, when the will of the Divine Majesty purposely abandons and reprobates some to perish. And it is not for us to ask why he does so, but to stand in awe of God who both can do and wills to do such things.”

Luther, “Sermon for the First Sunday in Advent, 1533,” in Day by Day We Magnify You: Daily Readings for the Entire Year Selected from the Writings of Martin Luther, rev. ed., p. 10: “[Christ] helps not against one sin only but against all my sin; and not against my sin only, but against the whole world’s sin. He comes to take away not sickness only, but death; and not my death only, but the whole world’s death.”

Luther and Melanchthon to the Council of the City of Nürnberg, April 18, 1533, a letter that speaks into the controversy in  Nürnberg over private vs. public confession of sins in the church,  in LW 50:76-77:

Even if not all believe [the word of absolution], that is not reason to reject [public] absolution, for each absolution, whether administered publicly or privately, has to be understood as demanding faith and as being an aid to those who believe in it, just as the gospel itself also proclaims forgiveness to all men in the  whole world and exempts no one from this universal context. Nevertheless the gospel certainly demands our faith and does not aid those who do not believe it; and yet the universal context of the gospel has to remain [valid].

Luther, Sermons on the Gospel of St. John (1537), at John 1:29, in LW 22:169: “There is nothing missing from the Lamb. He bears all the sins of the world from its inception; this implies that He also bears yours, and offers you grace.”

Now the Lutheran doctrine as codified later on:

Formula of Concord, Solid Declaration, Art.11: “if we want to consider our eternal election to salvation profitably, we must always firmly and rigidly insist that, like the proclamation of repentance, so the promise of the gospel is universalis, that is, it pertains to all people (Luke 24:47). Therefore, Christ commanded preaching ‘repentance and the forgiveness of sins in his name to all nations.’ ‘For God so loved the world that he gave his only Son’ for it (John 3:16). Christ has taken away the sins of the world (John 1:29); his flesh was given ‘for the life of the world’ (John 6:51); his blood is ‘the atoning sacrifice for . . . the whole world’ (1 John 1:72:2). Christ said, ‘Come to me, all you that are weary and are carrying heavy burdens, and I will give you rest’ (Matt. 11:28). ‘God has imprisoned all in unbelief, that he might have mercy on all’ (Rom. 11:32). ‘The Lord does not want any to perish but all to come to repentance’ (2 Peter 3:9). He is ‘Lord of all and is generous to all who call on him’ (Rom. 10:21). ‘Righteousness’ comes ‘through faith in Christ’ to all and ‘for all who believe’ (Rom. 3:22).’This is the will of the Father, that all who . . . believe in Christ shall have eternal life’ (John 6:3940). . . . We should never regard this call from God, which takes place through the preaching of the Word, as some kind of deception. Instead, we should know that God reveals his will through it, namely, that he wills to work through his Word in those whom he has called, so that they may be enlightened, converted, and saved.”

Johann Quenstedt, as quoted by Schmid, p. 363:  “The personal object [of Christ’s satisfaction for sin] comprises . . . each and every sinful man, without any exception whatever. For he suffered and died for all, according to the serious and sincere good pleasure and kind intention of himself and God the Father, according to which he truly wills the salvation of each and every soul, even of those who fail of salvation.”

Johann Gerhard (1582-1637, of Jena), as quoted in Schmid, p. 363: “If the reprobate are condemned because they do not believe in the Son of God, it follows that to them also the passion and death of Christ pertain. For otherwise, they could not be condemned for their contempt of that which, according to the divine decree, does not pertain to them.”

Bear in mind that, as shown in recent work by Jonathan Moore, Richard Muller, and other scholars (who disagree amongst themselves regarding the finer points at issue), early Reformed understandings of the scope of the atonement were more complicated than many people assume. There were so-called hyper-Calvinists and, later, some promoters of what in the United States was called “Gethsemane doctrine” (because of Jesus’ prayer in Gethsemane “not for the world, but for them which thou hast given me,” John 17:9) who denied that Christ intended to die for any but the elect. But most early Calvinists tried to affirm at least the “sufficiency” of Christ’s atoning work to cover the sins of the whole world. Many others were hypothetical universalists who taught unconditional election and unlimited atonement simultaneously. See Jonathan D. Moore, English Hypothetical Universalism: John Preston and the Softening of Reformed Theology (Eerdmans, 2007); Richard A. Muller, Calvin and the Reformed Tradition: On the Work of Christ and the Order of Salvation (Baker Academic, 2012); and Douglas A. Sweeney, Nathaniel Taylor, New Haven Theology, and the Legacy of Jonathan Edwards (Oxford University Press, 2003), p. 107.

Irresistible Grace 

In Bondage of the Will, 2.8, Luther denies that God compels or forces people to convert:

When God works in us, the will is changed under the sweet influence of the Spirit of God. . . . it desires and acts, not of compulsion, but of its own desire and spontaneous inclination.” But, of course, the most famous (or notorious) thing about his Bondage of the Will is Luther’s denial that we initiate this change:  “our salvation is not of our own strength or counsel, but depends on the working of God alone.” Further, “man’s will is like a beast standing between two riders. If God rides, it wills and goes where God wills . . . . If Satan rides, it wills and goes where Satan wills. Nor may it choose to which rider it will run, or which it will seek; but the riders themselves fight to decide who shall have and hold it” (2.8).

Toward the end of his life, Luther tried to clarify a misunderstanding regarding language such as this in his Bondage of the Will. Early in 1542, while lecturing on Genesis 26:9, he digressed from the verse itself in the following manner:

I hear that here and there among the nobles and persons of importance vicious statements are being spread abroad concerning predestination or God’s foreknowledge. For this is what they say: “If I am predestined, I shall be saved, whether I do good or evil. If I am not predestined, I shall be condemned regardless of my works.” I would be glad to debate in detail against these wicked statements if the uncertain state of my health made it possible for me to do so. For if the statements are true, as they, of course, think, then the incarnation of the Son of God, his suffering and resurrection, and all that he did for the salvation of the world are done away with completely. What will the prophets and all Holy Scripture help? What will the sacraments help? Therefore let us reject all this and tread it underfoot.

Luther went on to say that people should stop attempting—arrogantly—to plumb the depths of the mind of God, and should focus instead on the way of salvation God has graciously revealed. He warned that the devil often leads us to despair of our salvation by prompting us to ponder predestination. But God’s thoughts are not our thoughts, he said (Is. 55). His ways are not our ways. So we should trust and obey the things that he has condescended to give us. “God reveals his will to us through Christ and the gospel. But we loathe it and, in accordance with Adam’s example, take delight in the forbidden tree above all the others.”

Beginning in the last year of Luther’s life (1546), a similar caveat was added to the Bondage of the Will, although we don’t know for sure if Luther authorized it:

I could wish indeed that another and a better word had been introduced into our discussion than this usual one, “necessity,” which is not rightly applied either to the divine or the human will. It has too harsh and incongruous a meaning for this purpose, for it suggests a kind of compulsion, and the very opposite of willingness, although the subject under discussion implies no such thing. For neither the divine nor the human will does what it does, whether good or evil, under any compulsion, but from sheer pleasure or desire, as with true freedom. . . . The reader’s intelligence must therefore supply what the word “necessity” does not express, by understanding it to mean what you might call the immutability of the will of God and the impotence of our evil will, or what some have called the necessity of immutability though this is not very  good either grammatically or theologically.

The best book in English on this thorny set of issues in early Lutheran dogmatics is Robert Kolb, Bound Choice, Election, and Wittenberg Theological Method: From Martin Luther to the Formula of Concord (Eerdmans, 2005).

Formula of Concord, Solid Declaration, Art. 2: “people resist God the Lord with their will until they are converted. . . . they resist the Word and will of God until God awakens them from the death of sin and enlightens and renews them. Although God does not force human beings in such a way that they must become godly (for those who persistently resist the Holy Spirit and stubbornly struggle against what is recognized truth, as Stephen said of the obdurate Jews inActs 7:51, will not be converted), nonetheless God the Lord draws those people whom he wants to convert and does so in such a way that an enlightened understanding is fashioned out of a darkened understanding and an obedient will is fashioned out of a rebellious will. Scripture calls this creating a new heart. . . . God makes willing people out of rebellious and unwilling people through the drawing power of the Holy Spirit, and . . . after this conversion of the human being the reborn will is not idle in the daily practice of repentance but cooperates in all the works of the Holy Spirit that he accomplishes through us.”

Leonhard Hutter (1563-1616, of Wittenberg), as quoted in Schmid, p. 475:

There have been those who asserted that the will of unregenerate man in conversion is in a hostile attitude, so that the Holy Spirit effects conversion by violent drawings, or by a kind of force, in those who are unwilling and resisting. This opinion has elements of both truth and falsehood in it. For it is true that the natural man can do nothing of himself but resist the Holy Spirit. . . . Thus it is also true, that some have been converted when they were violently raging against God. But what is hence inferred is most false, viz., that they were converted while repugnant and reluctant. For it is most certain that they in whom this resistance does not cease never are converted to God. . . . Others answer, that man in conversion not only does nothing, but is converted while unconcerned and not knowing what is being done with him. This opinion manifestly savors of Enthusiasm. . . . For, although unregenerate man cannot know of himself and of his own powers what is being done with him, yet the Holy Spirit removes this stupor and illuminates his mind, so that now he knows what is being done with him and yields his consent to the Holy Spirit.

Perseverance of the Saints

No, not in the way that many assume.

Luther, Smalcald Articles (1537), 3.3: “it is necessary to know and teach that when holy people—aside from the fact that they still have and feel original sin and also daily repent of it and struggle against it—somehow fall into a public sin (such as David, who fell into adultery, murder, and blasphemy against god), at that point faith and the Spirit have departed.”

Formula of Concord, Solid Declaration, Art. II:  “if the baptized act against their conscience, permit sin to reign in them, and thus grieve the Holy Spirit in themselves and lose him, then, although they may not be rebaptized, they must be converted again”

David Hollaz, as quoted in Schmid, p. 465: “The grace of regeneration is lost when sins subversive of conscience are deliberately committed (1 Tim. 1:19). But regeneration lost may be recovered by the penitent (Gal. 4:19). Men regenerate, aided by the preserving grace of God, should be carefully on their guard, lest, by the malicious repetition of sin, they do injury to conscience; but if, nevertheless, they are overcome by the machinations of the devil, the enticements of the world, and the suggestions of the flesh, and fall three or four times, or oftener, into mortal sin, they need not at all doubt of the converting and regenerating grace of God.”

For Lutherans, the elect will certainly persevere in faith. God is not impotent to carry out his decrees respecting salvation. But not everyone who is born again is among God’s elect. It is possible for regenerated people to apostatize. So perseverance is largely a matter of walking in step with the Spirit, persevering, and encouraging other people to do the same.

Conclusion

The wrong thing to conclude from this evidence is that Lutherans are hesitant Calvinists, or two-and-a-half-point Calvinists, or imperfect Arminians. Lutherans are Lutherans. Their theological frame of reference is not closely related to the Calvinist-Arminian continuum. Lutherans have their own theological history, one that has contributed in major ways to the evangelical movement. In fact, the Lutheran tradition, even more than the Reformed, is the one from which groups like the Evangelical Free Church and the Covenant Church have come—though few would guess this anymore, as even leaders in these groups pay more attention to the history of Reformed Protestantism than the kind of Lutheran Pietism from which they first came.

I hope this article can play a role in connecting evangelical Protestants to the Lutheran Reformation once again.

By Douglas A. Sweeney, professor of church history and the history of Christian thought and director of the Carl F. H. Henry Center for Theological Understanding at Trinity Evangelical Divinity School.

The Doctrine of Hypostatic Union

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Jeremias 31:22;

“The Lord has created a new thing upon the earth: A woman shall compass a man”.

Mathew 1:18

Mary “was found with child, of the Holy Ghost.”

 Jesus took a real human body and soul. Trinity did not become incarnate. God the Son, take on human flesh while still remaining fully God. Mary brought forth that which was of God in her womb.

The hypostatic union is the attempt of finite human minds to grasp the infinite nature of Jesus Christ.

The English adjective hypostatic comes from the Greek word hupostasis. The word only appears four times in the New Testament—maybe most memorably in Hebrews 1:3, where Jesus is said to be

“the radiance of the glory of God and the exact imprint of his nature.”

Here the author of Hebrews uses the word in reference to the oneness of God. Both the Father and the Son are of the same “nature.” Jesus is “the exact imprint of his nature.”

In early church discussions, the word hupostasis came to denote not the sameness in the Godhead (God’s one essence) but the distinctness (the three persons).

The hypostatic union is the Christian doctrine that in the one person of Jesus there are presently two distinct natures, the divine and human.

  • Jesus is God in flesh (John 1:1, 14, 10:30-33, 20:28, Phil. 2:5-8, Heb. 1:8).
  • He is fully God and fully man (Col. 2:9), thus, He has two natures: God and man.
  • He is not half God and half man. He is 100% God and 100% man.
  • He never lost His divinity. He continued to exist as God when He became a man and added human nature to Himself (Phil. 2:5-11). Therefore, there is a “union in one person of a full human nature and a full divine nature.”
  • Right now in Heaven there is a man, Jesus, who is our Mediator between us and God the Father (1 Tim. 2:5).

The hypostatic union is the joining of the divine and the human in the one person of Jesus.

Evangelical

The term Evangelical has its etymological roots in the Greek word for “gospel” or “good news“: ευανγελιον (evangelion), from eu- “good” and angelion “message”. In that sense, to be an Evangelical would mean to be a believer of the Gospel, that is the message of Jesus Christ.

The first published use of the term “evangelical” in English was in 1531 by William Tyndale, who wrote “He exhorteth them to proceed constantly in the evangelical truth.” One year later, the earliest recorded use in reference to a theological distinction was by Sir Thomas More, who spoke of “Tyndale [and] his evangelical brother Barns”. (See “The History of Evangelicalism”Pulpit Magazine. Part 1. }

Martin Luther referred to the evangelische Kirche or evangelical Church to distinguish Protestants from Catholics in the Roman Catholic Church. In GermanySwitzerland and Denmark, and especially among Lutherans, the term has continued to be used in a broad sense.

Dr. J. Ellsworth Kalas, most recent former president of Asbury  Theological Seminary noted;

I remember when there were two kinds of Protestants in America, modernists and fundamentalists.  I remember, too, when we discovered there were other classifications, such as evangelicals, conservatives, and orthodox.  I enjoyed the days when church membership was growing all across America, with new churches in the nation’s suburbs, and with almost every church of any size involved in some sort of building or remodeling program.  And I grieve at how we lost that opportunity, that native hunger for God that we tried to satisfy with fellowship and good will that were not too different from the service clubs.

Then there was that remarkable time when the term “born again” was taken out of quotation marks and became part of the common vocabulary; and in the process became diluted to a point where polls showed that fully a third of Americans had experienced some sort of event that they thought could  be classified as “born again.”  And again, we lost the opportunity.

Now the tide of popular culture is against us.  In much of the public mind, evangelicals are one of the subgroups in political analysis. I suspect there are some bright young pagans on the two coasts who have no idea that “evangelical” is a religious category, or if they do they think of it as an oddment of society like snake handlers, ripe for sociological examination.

Albert Mohler, president of Southern Seminary in Louisville, KY wrote,

An evangelical is recognized by a passion for the gospel of Jesus Christ, by a deep commitment to biblical truth, by a sense of urgency to see lost persons hear the gospel, and by a commitment to personal holiness and the local church. (69)

Mohler recognizes the difficulty of coming to an established view of evangelical identity due to the ongoing nature of the conversation. He admits that “evangelical definition is dependent on a continual conversation and debate among evangelicals, association with evangelical institutions or churches, and identification with core evangelical beliefs” (74). And yet he also believes that “the integrity of evangelicalism requires a normative definition of evangelical identity.”

In developing a “normative definition,” Mohler points toward “Christian believers who seek a conscious convictional continuity with the theological formulas of the Protestant Reformation” (74-75), hence the introduction of the “confessional” aspect of his definition. He writes:

Evangelicalism is a movement of confessional believers who are determined by God’s grace to conserve this faith in the face of its reduction or corruption, even as they gladly take this gospel to the ends of the earth in order to see the nations exult in the name of Jesus Christ. (75)

How does this play out in practice? Mohler believes that evangelical identity is established by directing “constant attention to both the center and the boundary.” The way this takes place is through recognizing that doctrines can be distinguished and categorized in terms of their closeness to the gospel. Mohler’s “theological triage” divides issues into different levels:

  1. First-level theological issues are most central and essential to the Christian faith. (78)
  2. What distinguishes first-level and second-level doctrines is that evangelicals may disagree on the second-order issues, though this disagreement creates significant boundaries between believers. (79)
  3. Third-order issues are doctrines over which evangelicals may disagree and yet remain in close fellowship, even within local congregations. (80)

After recounting his spiritual pilgrimage in Southern Baptist life, Mohler directs his attention to several contested areas of evangelical identity. He begins with the “trustworthiness and truthfulness of Scripture” and then outlines recent challenges to the doctrine of inerrancy. It appears that Mohler goes beyond his mentor, Carl F. H. Henry, in regarding inerrancy to be a first-order issue:

In Henry’s formation, inerrancy should be considered a measure of evangelical consistency rather than evangelical authenticity. But the trajectory of the debate quickly revealed that abandoning inerrancy and a verbal model of the Bible’s inspiration required adoption of some other model that could not undergird evangelical authenticity. Affirming the total truthfulness, trustworthiness, and authority of the Bible is a first-order theological issue. (91)

Mohler also affirms the exclusivity of the gospel and the “integrity of theism” (against open theism) as first-order issues. In writing about justification, Mohler sides with the early Reformers:

Justification by faith alone is an evangelical essential… If evangelical means anything, it means a bold assertion that sinners are justified only on the basis of what the Reformers called an alien righteousness – the righteousness of Christ imputed to all who believe in him. (93)

After having paid attention to the center of evangelicalism and the boundaries, Mohler concludes:

The center of evangelical faith is devotion to Christ and joyful confidence in the gospel. These are and must be the animating energies and passions of evangelicals as individual believers and churches, as well as the evangelical movement as a whole. But evangelicalism is coherent as a movement only if it is also known for what it is not. Attention to the boundaries is as requisite as devotion to the center. (95)

Courage Greatly Needed …..

By Joe McKeever

“The Lord is for me; I will not fear. What can man do to me?” (Psalm 118:6. See also Hebrews 13:5-6)

I read that scripture–especially the Hebrews 13:5-6 incarnation–and smile. Asking “what can man do to me?” is kind of like asking for it, isn’t it? Daring them to “bring it on.” The answer of course is that man can do a great deal to you. But the bottom line–and the point of the scripture–is that ultimately, with God being “for me,” it does not matter.

Nothing matters so much as our being one with the heavenly Father.

Can we talk about courage? This is as rare as plutonium these days, particularly among the very people who should demonstrate it most readily, the followers of the Lord Jesus Christ.

Only two people in the church need courage: the one in the pulpit and the one in the pew.

A. The messenger of God in the pulpit needs courage for a thousand reasons. Here are ten:

1) to preach the whole counsel of God no matter who may disapprove.

–and to sweeten that preaching when his flesh is involved and wants to “lower the boom” on certain people. Graciousness takes courage also.

2) to withstand the pressures to compromise.

–and to compromise when he is feeling headstrong and does not want to budge an inch from his inspired position. Compromising can be courageous.

3) to oppose ungodly church leaders.

–and to support leaders whom he does not necessarily care for or with whom he differs on some matters but who are right on this issue. Recognizing wisdom and standing with it may take great courage.

4) to hold the line on biblical doctrines.

–and to ease up on emphasizing doctrines that are of lesser importance and on which good people differ. Kindness when you are tempted to be judgmental takes courage.

5) to combat his own fears.

–and to give in to legitimate red flags his spirit raises. Withdrawing flawed plans can take great courage.

6) to stand up to his own spouse (sometimes) whose fears have taken over and whose faith is wavering.

–and to hear from his spouse when she is resisting something he really wants to do and he realizes she has a point. Yielding often takes great courage.

7) to believe the Word against many voices to the contrary

–and when his voice is one against the many, to consider that he might be mistaken and seek out more information.  Listening to the counsel of others can be courageous.

8) to speak truth to power

–and to control his tongue when the “power” is simply doing something the preacher does not like but where nothing important is at stake. Silence can also be courageous.

9) to humble himself to wash the feet of the lowliest

–and to keep on washing them when his advisors imply that he is tarnishing his image. Ignoring bad advice from people we trust takes great courage.

10) to humble himself at the feet of Jesus every day of his life

–and to keep on doing it, day after day, year after year. Few things require more courage than “entering into our closet,” as Jesus said (Matthew 6:6), and placing yourself on His altar time and again.

When you pray for your ministers and missionaries, pray the Lord to grant them great courage to do the right things no matter what forces are pressuring them to ease up, back down,or go away.

B. The Lord’s people–the men and women in the pews–need courage also if they are to do the work God has for them:

1) to put the Lord before all other considerations, to “seek first His kingdom.”

–and to remember the Lord’s work is not all inside the church building walls but also in the office, factory, schoolroom, and especially in the home. Courage is delighted to speak up for the right.

2) to trust the Lord to meet his needs when giving to the Lord’s work because he has so many other things he could be doing with this money.

–and to recognize that financial stewardship also means exercising restraint in buying unneeded items or spending frivolously. Courage drives past the places of great temptation without slowing down.

3) to stand up and speak out when a pastor is preaching untruth or trying to lead the church into error.

–and to support the pastor when the truth he preaches is unpopular and people are resisting him.Courage stands up and speaks out when to do otherwise would be safer but cowardly.

4) to speak up when fellow members are doing damage to the Lord’s church

–and to defend the lonely voice of a righteous soul trying to get the church back on track. Courage does not look to see who is standing with it.

5) to say no to a boss asking him to lie or steal or misrepresent or exaggerate.

–and to be willing to pay the consequence for this, even to the point of losing his job or receiving a demotion. Courage can be costly; not everyone is willing to pay the price.

6) to say no to anyone pressuring him to compromise.

–and to suffer the ostracism which may result from refusing to go along. Courage can be lonely; only the strong can be courageous.

7) to compromise on inconsequential things when nothing is at stake and the welfare of the team is at risk.

–and to encourage others who, for the sake of “what I believe,” would sacrifice the entire ministry of the church. Courage does not sacrifice itself for foolishness but for God’s truth.

When you pray for brothers and sisters in Christ, pray the Lord will give them courage to live for Him each day and not just Sundays, the courage to take unpopular stands for right and not just when it’s safe to do so, and the courage to seek out the most vulnerable and defenseless and be their voice.

The Christian life is not for sissies, as they say. That is, not for the cowardly. Anyone doubting that may wish to turn to Revelation 21:8 and see who is leading that tragic parade into hellfire.

“Grant us wisdom, grant us courage, for the living of these days. Amen.”


Joe McKeever is retired missions director for the New Orleans Baptist Association. Before that Mr. McKeever pastored churches in Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana and North Carolina.

 

VOCABULARY

In a recent article, Dr. Timothy Tennent offered 11 examples of how popular culture has strikingly different meanings from the biblical meanings of common Christian words. Timothy C. Tennent is the President of Asbury Theological Seminary and a Professor of Global Christianity. He blogs at timothytennent.com

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SOME OF THE WORDS

1) Love (pop culture) – An emotive feeling someone has towards another person or towards God.

  • Love (biblical) –  A covenantal commitment to live and act in fidelity, loyalty and faithfulness.

2) Judgment (pop culture) – An “out of control” act caused by anger and usually fueled by partisan ideas.

  • Judgment (biblical) – God acting in holy-love to set things right, restore justice and establish peace in conformity with His reign and rule.

3) Marriage (pop culture) – A relationship of convenience between any two people for the sake of personal happiness and sexual fulfillment.

  • Marriage (biblical) – A divinely ordained life-time relationship between one man and one woman of covenantal, self-donating love, which overflows in becoming co-creators with God through the fruitfulness of child bearing, reflecting the beauty of the Triune God.

4) Revelation  (pop culture) – Surprising ideas which are made known in a dramatic fashion.

  • Revelation (biblical) – The record of God’s own self-disclosure regarding himself, ourselves and the world.

5) Inspiration (pop culture) – Mental awakening which produces certain feelings, or causes us to do something creative.

  • Inspiration (biblical) – Process whereby God the Father, through the power of the Holy Spirit spoke through ordinary men and women, restraining them from error, and communicating His revelation to the world.

6) Awesome (pop culture) – A word used for anything one likes, whether a well-cooked hamburger, a sunset, or a worship service.

  • Awesome (biblical) – A description which is used of God alone, due to His exalted holiness and Lordship over all creation.

7) Fear of God (pop culture) – A destructive idea instilled in people in a manipulative way and often caused by inordinate anxiety about sin, guilt and divine judgment.

  • Fear of God (biblical) – A holy reverence for God which is the result of the realization of the God’s absolute sovereignty.  This realization is the beginning of all knowledge.

8) “Good worship” (pop “church culture”) – The feeling we get when our emotions are aroused in the presence of one another and God.

  • “Good worship” (biblical) – The individual and corporate response to the revelation of God.

9) “Moral conviction” (pop church culture) – A personal preference for a particular course of action, but is a moral equivalent of all other preferences which are all viewed as equally valid.

  • “Moral conviction” (biblical) – A truth revealed in God’s word which the church is called to joyfully proclaim, embody and extend into the world.

 

7 Ways Religion Can Mess You Up

Here are 7 ways “Religion Can Mess You Up” by Dan Delzell,  the pastor of Wellspring Lutheran Church in Papillion, Nebrasla, and a regular contributor to The Christian Post.

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Much of what takes place in the realm of religion is actually dangerous to your soul. It leaves you worse off after engaging in it. Check out these 7 ways religion can mess you up:

1) You jump through religious hoops while lacking a relationship with God.

This is the most obvious problem with religion, and the most prevalent. “Let’s see. How can I hope to have God accept me? I will try doing religious stuff. Yeah. That’s the ticket. That should get it done.”

Nope. Not even close.

2) You become proud of your religion.

Pride and religion should not go together. Why then does religion tend to generate so much pride in the heart of man? And why does it often lead people to view themselves as superior to those outside their religious group?

Obviously, we need a connection with God that will actually change our heart and produce genuine humility. It’s a good thing Jesus came to give people such a heart. And boy do we all need it.

3) You become judgmental.

The tendency to look down on others is unfortunately a common problem in religious circles. It’s the opposite of what Jesus taught His followers. But that doesn’t mean every professing Christian got the memo. There are actually plenty of people in every religion who tend to be judgmental. After all, it’s a natural response once you “get a little religion.”

True religion, on the other hand, is not judgmental. And the love of God is the only source of true religion.

4) You gain knowledge but don’t grow in love.

“Knowledge puffs up, but love builds up.” (1 Cor. 8:1) It’s easy to gain knowledge, but not so easy to grow in love. It’s easy to learn facts, but not so easy to forgive. It’s easy to get an education, but not so easy to treat everyone with kindness. Love is often difficult because it doesn’t come naturally to love people unless they love us first. Jesus loved the unlovable, and that includes you and me.

5) You get just enough religion to become miserable.

The initial breakthrough into Christianity comes through repentance and faith. You start out where every Christian begins as a spiritual infant. Your growth is then largely expressed in the way you view others and the way you treat others. As you care for people with Christ’s love, you experience joy in your Christian walk. But when a Christian is less than charitable toward people, he can quickly find himself becoming miserable.

Some of the earliest Christians discovered firsthand that getting stuck in spiritual infancy is a bummer. The apostle Paul wrote to them, “Brothers, I could not address you as spiritual but as worldly – mere infants in Christ. I gave you milk, not solid food, for you were not yet ready for it. Indeed, you are still not ready. You are still worldly. For since there is jealousy and quarreling among you, are you not worldly?” (1 Cor. 3:1-3)

Unless our religion produces a loving heart and a willingness to turn away from sin, we will lack the stability and the contentment believers experience when they grow beyond the infant stage of Christianity.

The eyes, the mind, and the heart are all “vital spiritual organs.” If any one of them is not focused on Christ and His love, it is easy to stray from a close walk with the Lord. This spiritual immaturity produces restlessness rather than peace.

And it’s a big reason Jesus called people to follow Him. He never said, “You can stay right where you are at spiritually, mentally, and with your current priorities.” That stagnant approach doesn’t benefit anyone.

6) You try to live with a foot in each camp.

You would be less conflicted in this life to flat out reject Jesus and live for sin, than to accept Jesus only to live a life of complete compromise. There is only one way to be happy in Jesus, and that is to trust and obey. If I trust in Jesus but don’t yield myself to the Holy Spirit’s leading, I end up living a divided life. This places one foot in Christ’s camp, and one foot in the camp of sinful compromise.

Something has got to give. You will eventually give yourself over to one of the camps. That is, unless you want to keep living a double-minded life with no peace.

7) You ride “the religion train” to hell.

Think how insane it would be if the various religions (which obviously contradict each other) could all deliver your soul from hell and bring you safely into heaven. But that’s not the way it works.

In God’s design, there is truth and there is one path to heaven. Jesus came to earth in order to rescue us from sin, death, and hell. It’s true. Religion cannot save your soul, but Jesus can, and He will as you trust Him and accept His free gift of eternal life in heaven.

The religion train has many passengers. But you don’t have to go along for the ride on that disastrous journey. Instead, you can go with Jesus today. You can trust Him to meet all the needs of your soul, both in this life, and in the life to come. As someone in our church mentioned the other day, Christians have “life after life.” And it begins the moment you accept Jesus as your Savior.

So will you opt for religion, or for a relationship with Jesus instead? There is no need to get messed up by religion, especially since the arms of Jesus are inviting you to a life that will actually satisfy your soul and please your Creator.

Jesus said, “I have come that they may have life, and have it abundantly.” (John 10:10) So if religion is all you have ever known, isn’t it time you meet Jesus and experience spirituality as God designed it?

7 Reasons Man Is Embarrassed of Jesus

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Here are “7 Reasons to Man is embarrassed by Jesus” by Dan Delzell,  the pastor of Wellspring Lutheran Church in Papillion, Nebrasla, and a regular contributor to The Christian Post.

There is something about the name of “Jesus” that causes a lot of people to become embarrassed. If the reaction wasn’t so widespread and so noticeable, you could perhaps just write it off as a fluke. But given the constant reality of this phenomenon, one is led to wonder, “What’s up with all this embarrassment over Jesus?”

Here are 7 reasons man is embarrassed of Jesus:

1) Man, by nature, wants to keep “religion” completely separate from the rest of his daily life and discussions.

Many people feel awkward talking about Jesus, especially if they don’t know Him. It feels to man like religion should be in one compartment, and his “real life” should exist without the “burden” of religion entering those daily discussions. It’s only natural to think that way.

Jesus, on the other hand, is a supernatural Being who produces supernatural changes within those who accept Him as Savior. And that changes everything, including of course this misguided notion of separating religion from the rest of my daily life and discussions.

2) People tend to associate Jesus with “holy rollers,” and that perception is a big turn off.

Whenever the Lord’s name is mentioned, some people instinctively think, “Oh, you’re one of them.” One of the biggest misconceptions held by unbelievers is that “holy rollers” represent biblical Christianity. And it really throws them for a loop.

Perhaps you have known a “holy roller.” He or she may have seemed “way out there.” But have you personally known some Christians who demonstrate the spirit of Christ in their dealings with others? There are literally millions of believers in the world who fit that beautiful description.

Meanwhile, plenty of unbelievers seem embarrassed by a caricature of Christianity. Unfortunately, most of those who get duped by their own faulty thinking on this matter do not even come to realize their error until it is too late. They go to their grave assuming “holy rollers” are a legitimate reason to reject Christ’s offer of forgiveness. How tragically misguided and uninformed.

3) My “right” to rule my own life feels threatened whenever the “King of Kings” is presented as the only Savior and Lord.

It’s embarrassing for us to admit we need God. And it’s embarrassing for us to admit we are “below” God. We tend to live as though the world “revolves around me.” That makes me the king of my universe. And King Jesus is a threat to man’s personal kingdom and personal dominion of his own space.

After all, we are led to believe we “have the right” to do just about anything we feel like doing. That is, as long as it’s not illegal. But wait a minute? What about God’s laws? What about those actions which are “illegal” in God’s kingdom? The worst transgression before God is the rejection of His Son. No other sin is as bad as that one, and no other sin is the source of more embarrassment. The sin of rejecting Jesus keeps people out of heaven for eternity. And that reality is deeply embarrassing to those who write off the biblical teaching concerning heaven, hell, and God’s one road to eternal salvation. (see John 14:6 & Matthew 7:13,14)

4) Man, by nature, is afraid of what others will think of him if they discover he is with Jesus.

Most of us want to be liked by others. And if being a “Jesus follower” makes me unpopular with the world, that places pressure on my mind and my heart. I want people to like me. I want people to accept me. And if I desire their acceptance more than I desire God’s acceptance, I will cower in fear every time the topic of Christianity comes up in a public setting. I will simply refuse to engage with others on this issue because of what they might think of me.

5) The sinful nature within man always resists the idea of Jesus as God and the Savior of my soul.

Everyone resists God. Everyone wants to be their own boss. No one, by nature, runs into the arms of Jesus. But as the Holy Spirit begins to work in a person’s heart, it makes all the difference in the world. A stubborn and unbelieving person is turned into a humble believer who accepts Christ and immediately begins to follow Him as Lord. In fact, millions of people are experiencing that relationship at this very moment.

Are you one of them? If not, “Come near to God and He will come near to you.” (James 4:8)

6) We all tend to be afraid of the unknown.

People who don’t know Jesus often experience fear because it’s an area that is “unknown” in their life. When they hear things about Christ, they are mystified and confused. This confusion can easily turn into fear and embarrassment at the very mention of the Lord.

I can certainly understand why faith in Jesus seems scary to a lot of people. I bet it would seem that way to me too if I didn’t believe the Gospel. It sounds so mysterious. That is, until you come to see how easy it is to accept God’s free gift of eternal life.

Living for Jesus while denying yourself is definitely challenging. But receiving God’s free gift of salvation is a piece of cake. There is no reason to be afraid of a free gift from God, right?

7)The world cannot accept Christ, and therefore it chooses to hate Him.

Jesus said, “If the world hates you, keep in mind that it hated me first.” (John 15:18) Why on earth would people hate Jesus? What did He ever do to deserve such animosity? And yet, scores of people over the centuries have been “haters.” These people were not merely neutral toward Jesus. They actually hated Him. And this hatred led them to hate His followers as well.

There have been more Christians killed for their faith in the past century than in the previous 19 centuries combined. The hatred is real, and the hatred is pervasive. This hostility takes embarrassment to a whole new level. It takes it to a level whereby man is capable of actually crucifying the Son of God.

And yet, that was God’s plan all along. History is “His story” of salvation through Christ. God was not embarrassed to love us enough to send His only Son to be our Savior. Will you accept Him by faith, and then follow Him? Or will you allow your natural embarrassment of Jesus to drag your soul through life without peace, and into an eternity without Christ?

You make the call. But I would be extremely careful at this point if I were you. You need to know that God is not embarrassed of anyone in His family. And so why should you ever be embarrassed to call Jesus your Savior, friend, and Lord? He certainly wasn’t embarrassed of you when He was dying for your sins on the cross. His love for you and me was far too great.

When it comes to Jesus, will you be ruled by fear and embarrassment, or by God’s love? “There is no fear in love, but perfect love drives out fear because fear has to do with punishment.” (1 John 4:18) Jesus bore the punishment you and I deserve, and now everyone who comes to the Father through the Son receives grace and mercy rather than punishment.

So why be embarrassed about the only Person who can provide peace for your soul not only in this life, but also in the next life? There is nothing embarrassing about living in Paradise. With that in mind, would you like to follow Jesus all the way to heaven? Or will you allow your embarrassment to dominate your heart and mind and literally drag your soul in the other direction? Always remember: there are only two destinations available once your earthly body perishes.

Do you find that reality embarrassing, or is it something you know you need to start taking seriously? After all, you are not getting any younger. Oops. There is something else we tend to get embarrassed about. Our age. Go figure.

“Help me Lord to get over myself and begin to love You and the things you love. Apart from you Jesus, I will make an embarrassing mess of my life. Forgive me Lord, and help me to be proud of You as my Savior and what You did on the cross to redeem my soul.”

Now that right there is the best foundation to build your life upon. Will you be the next person to take that step of faith?

Authentic Unity

Authentic unity and rich covenantal relationships are ultimately fruits of the Spirit rather than fruits of correct doctrine, structural sameness,  church rules and law, or even (if Bonhoeffer is to be believed) liking each other. Authentic unity flows from the presence of the Holy Spirit. Authentic unity is incarnated in Christ and made real in the loaf and cup. Authentic unity is expressed in loving God and loving our neighbors.

“Do you love and serve God? It is enough. I give you the right hand of fellowship.”

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*The following message from Bishop Bruce R. Ough was written for and delivered at the 2014 Minnesota Annual Conference clergy session.”

Grace and peace to you from God our Creator and our Lord Jesus Christ, risen and ascended.

I want to share with you this afternoon some very brief thoughts about covenant, schism, and unity.

We are a covenant people. And, everyone in this room is in covenant with each other and the whole.

I recently shared with those to be commissioned and ordained this year that there are multiple facets to our covenant relationship.

First, and foremost, we are in covenant with God—a covenantal relationship initiated by God. This is a covenant maintained by God’s faithfulness toward us more than by our efforts to obey Wesley’s admonition “to stay in love with God.”

Second, we are in covenant with all clergy members of the Minnesota Annual Conference. This covenant is given expression in our Wesleyan rule of life, our United Methodist Discipline, and our own ethical code, written and unwritten.

Third, we are in covenant with all other United Methodist clergy in our global connection and with the Church Universal and all those set apart as pastors and priests in the Church of Jesus Christ.

Fourth, you are in covenant with the bishop, particularly those of you who have been ordained to word, sacrament, service, and order. By virtue of your ordination to order, you extend the “episcopa”—the spiritual and temporal oversight—of the episcopal office to all the various places you are appointed to serve. You are in covenant with the bishop to order the church, maintain the unity of the church, and to preach and teach the apostolic faith.

Although this listing is incomplete, lastly, I want to mention the various covenants you have with spouses, loved ones, family, and friends. Those covenants are also to be maintained and nurtured and are never intended to be sacrificed for the sake of the many other facets and demands of our covenantal lives.

At the heart of our being in covenant with one another is God’s initiating, unconditional, universal, unrelenting, and uniting love and Jesus’ prayer that we will be one “so that the world will believe” (John 17:21-22).

Covenant is relational. It is a gift to be received, a gift we cannot deny. Covenant is Spirit-born and Spirit-driven and Spirit-maintained. Paul got this right when he wrote to the Ephesians:

Accept each other with love, making every effort to maintain the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace. There is one body and one Spirit, just as you were called to the one hope of your calling, one Lord, one faith, one baptism, one God and Father of all, who is above all and through all and in all. (Ephesians 4:2b-6)

And, covenant has a purpose; it is intentional. It not only serves to bind us to the oneGod and to all members of the one body, but it is, in the words of Eugene Peterson inThe Message, to “give the godless world evidence that God sent Jesus and to show that God loves us in the same way God loved Jesus.”

The very nature and purpose or intent of God’s covenant with us is under immense pressure within The United Methodist Church. The talk and actions related to schism have reached a fever pitch, driven by the 42-year-old debate over homosexuality, same-gender marriage, and scriptural authority. This heightened energy around schism is fueled, in part, by the dynamics of our highly political global church polity. Individuals and groups on opposite sides of this debate are actively working for separation. Many are now openly stating that schism has already taken place; all that remains is division—dividing up the people, assets, episcopal leadership, and governing structures. Several formal and informal groups are preparing legislation for the 2016 General Conference to facilitate an amicable division of The United Methodist Church. Others are simply prepared to practice ecclesial disobedience on a scale that would overwhelm the capacity of annual conferences to manage the potential consequences. Some are advocating for more church trials. Others, including myself, view church trials as an affront to discerning a way forward.

In the process, this debate is reducing covenant to purely a governance or political issue. The more conservative folks claim that the covenant is about upholding the current disciplinary language on all matters related to human sexuality and same-gender marriage. The more progressive folks claim the covenant is about biblical obedience to Jesus’ radical love ethic. Both arguments are incomplete and make a mockery of covenant based in the mysterious power of God’s love and Jesus’ prayer for unity.

I have recently read Douglas Hall’s book, Waiting for Gospel:  An Appeal to the Dispirited Remnants of Protestant Establishment. In reviewing the book for The Christian Century, Walter Brueggemann focuses attention on Hall’s claim that both evangelicalism and liberal piety have dumbed down the faith and reduced the gospel to either ethical urgency on the one hand, or pre-occupation with public issues of justice on the other hand. In doing so, they have not paid attention to the mystery of God in the life of persons.

Hall claims the culture around us is waiting for gospel—and that the culture is not waiting for the tired clichés, compromises, and conflicts of the institution, but for the news of God’s transformative grace and mercy. Likewise, he claims the church (or any of its factions) does not possess the gospel, but must always wait to receive it again in fresh, contemporary, radical terms of gift and task.

Schism is the way of the world—of the culture. Schism would be one more example of the disestablishment and demise of the Christian witness, a witness that increasingly offers no compelling response to reality. Schism is unacceptable in the Church of Jesus Christ. Schism is unacceptable in The United Methodist Church!

Last week I was in a judicatory heads’ meeting in which we talked briefly about the 500th anniversary of Luther’s reformation. The ELCA bishops shared their distress because they do not know whether to lead their people into a season of celebration or into a season of repentance for having not maintained the unity of the church.

One reason, among several, that so many covenant relationships and denominations, including The United Methodist Church, are strained or depleted, in decline or despair, is that there is so little reliance on the Holy Spirit. We need some Holy Spirit breakthroughs! It is the mystery—the Spirit-energy—of God’s redeeming work that ultimately unifies, compels, and sends. Authentic unity and rich covenantal relationships are ultimately fruits of the Spirit rather than fruits of correct doctrine, structural sameness,  church rules and law, or even (if Bonhoeffer is to be believed) liking each other. Authentic unity flows from the presence of the Holy Spirit. Authentic unity is incarnated in Christ and made real in the loaf and cup. Authentic unity is expressed in loving God and loving our neighbors.

It makes some of us in this room very uncomfortable, but the boundaries of the Church have always been charismatic, not canonical. Thus, we know where the Church is, but not where it may be operating beyond our sight or knowledge. We have to admit that while we are here this afternoon, the Spirit is at work outside these walls—perhaps outside the Church. The boundaries of the Church will not likely be defined or discovered in this room because we do not control the boundaries of the Spirit’s work.

Increasingly, I have trouble with using the word “unity” to describe what we are trying to maintain. In our Western-world view, unity tends to indicate structural sameness. Perhaps what we are really trying to achieve or maintain is koinonia—Christian community and relationship. Perhaps what we are really trying to achieve or maintain is covenant—being bound to one another through God’s initiating love and steadfastness.

The history of the Church, recorded for us in the Book of Acts, is instructive to me and to our current reality within the Minnesota Conference and The United Methodist Church. Christians and Gentiles came together as one when two conditions prevailed. First, a leader or leaders filled with the Holy Spirit proclaimed Jesus’ expansive, extravagant, and unconditional love. Second, the community of believers, again inspired by the Holy Spirit, affirmed that the poor, the marginalized, the outcast, the “other” would never be forgotten or excluded.

Our own Wesleyan renewal movement is a prime example. It arose, as you know, in response to the deplorable conditions of the poor in mid-eighteenth century England. And, it was led by John and Charles Wesley, formed and inspired by (1) the Spirit’s movement within the Holy Club, (2) at a prayer meeting on Aldersgate Street, and (3) in the decision to preach in the fields, wharfs, and mines.

The witness from Acts, chapter 11, of Peter recounting his vision while in Joppa to the believers in Jerusalem, is instructive to us. You may recall, Peter gets called on the carpet for baptizing some Gentiles in Caesarea. Can’t you hear them saying to Peter, “What do you think you are doing, rubbing shoulders with that crowd, eating what is prohibited and ruining our good name?”

Peter goes on to tell the Council at Jerusalem that when he began to address the “outsiders” in Caesarea, the Holy Spirit fell on “them” just as it did on “us” the first time. And, he recalls Jesus’ words:  “John baptized with water; you will be baptized with the Holy Spirit.” Peter concludes with a penetrating question—a question that often haunts me, but a question that I believe must guide my, and our, efforts to maintain unity, affirm covenant, and express our common witness in Christ. The question is: “If then God gave them the same gift God gave us when we believed in the Lord Jesus Christ, who was I that I could hinder God?” Who was I that I could hinder God?

This question has the same effect that Jesus’ scribbling in the dirt had on the explosive situation where the men were poised to stone the woman caught in adultery. Space is created. Holy space is created. We need such a space in our rush to judgment, schism, and division with The United Methodist Church.

Space enough for us to look again, look deeper for the presence of the Holy Spirit. Space enough to receive the baptism of the Holy Spirit. Space enough to let the Spirit bless us with the gift of one heart, one mission. Space enough for the Holy Spirit to inform our doctrine and our decisions. Space enough for the “other” to be included. Space enough to remember we cannot change or withhold God’s covenantal love toward us or anyone else. Space enough to exercise the pastoral office. Space enough for the reign of God to break forth, so that the world may believe. Space enough to exercise the pastoral office.

I conclude with these prayerful expressions of hope:

Perhaps, just perhaps, our unity and the fullness of God’s covenant grace, will be found in our fire—our passion—for the gospel and what Pope Francis calls the first proclamation: Jesus Christ has saved you.

Perhaps, just perhaps, our unity and the fullness of God’s covenant grace will be found in our ministry with the poor.

Perhaps, just perhaps, our unity and the fullness of God’s covenant grace will be found in remembering it is God’s work, not our political and caucus agendas or theological camps, that we are called to.

Perhaps, just perhaps, our unity and the fullness of God’s covenant grace will be found not so much in knowing and protecting what we believe, but in loving and living what we believe.

Perhaps, just perhaps, our unity and the fullness of God’s covenant grace will be found when we earnestly and collectively pray for, and submit to, the powerful and unifying gift of the Holy Spirit.

Perhaps, just perhaps, our unity and the fullness of God’s covenant grace will be found when the first thought on our minds and on our lips is: “Who am I to hinder God, if God gave the same exact Spirit-gift to them as to us?”

Perhaps, just perhaps, the only question we need to ask one another is the one John Wesley stated in his sermon on The Marks of a Methodist: “Do you love and serve God? It is enough. I give you the right hand of fellowship.”

Bruce R. Ough is resident bishop of the Dakotas-Minnesota Episcopal Area of The United Methodist Church.

Victory will be ours… Thanks Be to GOD

This victory is not a victory we earn; it’s a victory we enter. It is Christ’s victory. This is why victory is assured if we trust Christ. It’s His victory already won. This is why Paul could write, “But thanks be to God, who gives us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ!”

 

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Why following other gods is such a poor choice

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In his final speech predicting spiritual decline, Moses faced the nation of Israel. Among many things Moses spoke are these words:

They made Him jealous with strange gods;
With abominations they provoked Him to anger.
They sacrificed to demons who were not God,
To gods whom they have not known,
New gods who came lately,
Whom your fathers did not dread. 

(Deuteronomy 32:16-17)

Understanding who the gods are and what that awkward name, “Jealous God,” really means can help us avoid Israel’s mistakes.

  • The Bible implies that the word “god” is nothing more than a palatable name that people have been duped into giving to a demonic being. Paul exposed the underlying demonic forces that wait to pounce on those who dabble in idolatry. Canaanite idols were referred to as demons. So, the gang that we call gods and associate with idols is really a gang of demonic spirits that is under Satan’s leadership. There is only one true God with supreme power.

Paul wrote of certain “enemies of the cross,” whose “god is their appetite. Food or anything of which we say, “I must have more,” can be an idol. Now, a craving for chocolate seems harmless enough, and in normal proportions it is, but urges that control us have strayed beyond healthy boundaries. Crossing those boundaries is what it means to succumb to temptation. Excessive desires behave like the worst idols; they hinder our relationships with God. They distract us or slime us with guilt and shame.

Jesus pointed out, “No one can serve two masters . . . You cannot serve God and mammon.” To make His point, Jesus personified riches as Mammon. No one can serve God and riches. Under Satan’s influence, wealth craves power and fights to be lord and master of our hearts.

Paul also said that “elemental things . . . which by nature are no gods” can enslave us. He was referring to legalism and to false religions.

Making God the object of our passion, so that no space remains for other gods, is the best safeguard against spiritual decline.

  • What are we to make of His jealousy? Surely, the name, “Jealous God,” doesn’t suggest that God has a temper tantrum whenever anyone nods at a false god. That might frighten us from idolatry, but it certainly wouldn’t inspire genuine adoration of Him. Some people wince at this name of God, yet it is one of a few specifically stated names of God:

“You shall not worship any other god, for the LORD, whose name is Jealous, is a jealous God.”

God’s jealousy has to do with His affection for His people and His pursuit of the very best for them. Our best lies in intimate relationship with our Creator. Friendship with the world is spiritual adultery. God jealously longs for our spirits to abide in undivided relationship with Him.

Parents who watch their children drift away to a wasted life of pain get a taste of God’s jealousy. When God breathed His spirit into flesh, He created children. He loves us more than the best father imaginable does. Whenever God sees us lured into damaging behavior, a jealous rage fills His heart. Our loving Father says, “I hate watching my children stray. They are only happy and fulfilled when they have a relationship with Me.” His jealousy is a mixture of disappointment and grief. Knowing that the Jealous God has our very best in mind will actually increase our love for Him.

Portions adapted from http://www.biblematurity.com/jealous-god/

Why is evil still at work in the world?

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Two reasons:

  • First, a defeated Satan and his demons continue to fight their last stand while God prepares their final destruction.
  • Second, much of the power of demons is in their propaganda. When they blind our eyes to the truth, they hold us spellbound in their lies.

The message of Moses, Jesus, and Paul exposes those lies and replaces them with the truth of God’s eternal sovereignty. The Living God is the one who can forever say, “I am He,” and who swears to punish His enemies and avenge His people.

Who will we believe?

  1. The forces of evil that claim the upper hand in an apparently deteriorating word?
  2. Or the Living God, who has calmly and clearly sworn His plans and demonstrated His power by raising His Son Jesus from the dead?

Hear the WORD…. again

See now that I, I am He,
And there is no god besides Me;

Deuteronomy 32:39-40

DOCTRINAL PURITY

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Has God called you to be a preacher? Contend for the faith once delivered for all. The worst enemies of Christian doctrine are professing Christians who do not hold to the faith once for all delivered to the saints.

There is a faith once for all delivered to the saints.This faith is worth contending for. The faith is repeatedly threatened from within the church by professing Christians. It is the duty of every believer to contend for the faith once for all delivered to the saints.

When it comes to the actual contending -Jude says in verses 22–23, “And convince some, who doubt; save some, by snatching them out of the fire; on some have mercy with fear, hating even the garment spotted by the flesh.”

PREACHING

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“…unless your heart toward the sheep is like that of a mother …. who walks through fire to save her children—you will not be fit to be a preacher.” Martin Luther

What is the church doing when it’s doing what it does with the Bible?

Public Confession and Repentance for we all have sinned and fallen short of the glory of GOD? YES! Caring for others ~ especially those of the household of faith and treating them well because how we treat others is determined by what we think about God? YES!

None of us are without the mark of Adam; what we would do, we do not, and what we would not do, we do. We often think in irrational terms even though God created as rational beings. Our logic sometimes doesn’t work. Our mental calculus some times leads us to ignore facts. Our memory is faulty. Our thinking is too often influenced by our own prejudices (effect of the fall). Our risk calculator is often broken. We worry about the wrong thing and fail to worry about the things that matter most. We need repentance and forgiveness more often than not.

When the consensus of what’s important relies on the church’s feelings and mental calculus that are disconnected from what the Bible says — then the only legitimate motivation for the consensus is the pressure of society.

The humble heart gives way to God’s word and desire to only shout in joy when Heavens shouts in victory, even when it’s unpopular.

Do you obey the word of GOD? Are you standing on the promises of GOD? Always come to the Bible yielded, with eager ears, hoping for God to sanctify your minds.

Jesus said teach them to obey everything I have commanded you. Take up your cross, let the dead bury the dead, don’t look back. Not turn your back on my word. Not take your fill of popular opinion. Not keep calm and make sure everyone likes you.

Contending for the Faith

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Do you believe that Jesus turned five loaves of bread and two fish into a meal that fed 4 thousand people – or would rather take the stand of liberal theologians that – what Jesus did in Mathew 15 was to simply open people’s eyes to see that they can share what they have – and that is the miracle?

Liberal theologians seek to reconcile Christianity with secular science and modern thinking. But there is a remnant who choose to believe that God can perform miracles that cannot be explained by science or strategized by the best Ivy League brains.

Scripture declares that there are things that only GOD can do. Scripture declares that there is something called SIN and the cure for sin is soul-cleansing by the blood of the Lamb.

Science and modern thinking has it is place. What would we do without science and technology? But the pure gospel cannot be fully reconciled with secular sciences and modern thinking.

Modern thinking and secular sciences sought to stop the raising of Hebrew boys in Egypt, but God send Moses to be raised in the palace that drafted the law… and that is a MIRACLE that cannot be explained by science or human logics. That is DIVINE STRATEGIC INTELLIGENCE at work.

A doctor gives a patient two weeks to live, and ten years later is testifying about the goodness of the LORD – MIRACLE. Peter walking in the water – MIRACLE! And there are many more miracles yet to be seen, experienced, lived, witness and etc.

The Truth is not up for grasp

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What kind of a people march off to bang against the strongholds in the Far Country, while ignoring Satan’s strongholds in the Father’s House?

The most important battles must be first fought and won at home – in the Father’s House. Satanic strongholds of religiosity in the Father’s House have a far greater stranglehold than haunts of evil in the Far Country. At least the younger brother comes back to his Father! The older brother doesn’t.

When Jesus came to Jerusalem, he went first to cleanse the Temple. Before the world can be transformed, the church must be reformed.

Tony Evans once said, “If you took the Holy Spirit out of the Early Church, it couldn’t have survived a second. Take it out
of today’s church and we wouldn’t miss a beat.”

A Korean Missionary returning home after preaching in the USA when asked what he was taking home, said, “I don’t know how they do it in – having church and all forms of conferencing without God!”

In the 1740s America was in a state of theological confusion. Churches were dead. Less than 10% of Colonial Americans attended church. But God raised a man called Jonathan Edward. It is noted that one weekend, Jonathan prayed straight through from Friday until Sunday at 11 am when he went into his pulpit and read his sermon Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God in a monotone voice.

It is noted by many that the sermon was dry, ponderous, and long. But the Holy Spirit fell, and Great Awakening began that morning. In the months that followed, revival spread like wildfire across the Colonies. Thousands were saved, churches were packed, miracles took place, and the Colonies were changed.

Do we dare believe it could happen again?