Wednesday, November 09, 2022

About "Issues"

 I'm skeptical of "issues."  They primarily serve the purposes of politicians, who manufacture them at every opportunity.

Manufacture them because issues are a guaranteed way to get people to take "sides:" the work-of-the-flesh that Galatians 5:20 calls "factions."  As I've noted many times here, the Greek word is haireseis, from which we get our English word "heresy."  Strong's glosses haireseis as "a self-chosen opinion:"

If scripture classes "factions" as fleshly sin, we must know it has no place in a Christian's life.  The fact it manifests "self-chosen opinion" should tell us where taking "sides" about issues positions us in regard to Christ, The Word and The Truth.

Capital punishment has been one such "issue" in our society all my life.  I was thinking about it today: thinking especially that the worst thing that ever happens to a moral question is that it be framed as an "issue," subject to politicians' self-serving manipulation.  The worst thing we do with a moral question is take it on politicians' terms, and take a partisan "side" towards it according to our "self-chosen opinions."

I certainly have an "opinion" about capital punishment, and probably most people do.

But I was thinking of the times I hear a news-story about some murderer's sentencing.  In their "victim-impact statement" to the Court, it's surprising how often families of murder-victims use that opportunity to tell the murderer they forgive him.

More than once, I've heard family-members say they forgive because "I have to," as did some family-members of the nine Bible-study victims of white-supremacist murderer Dylann Roof.  Their desire to obey Jesus compelled them to forgive others, as they know they are forgiven in Him.

More than once I've heard families of murder-victims even ask that the Court not sentence the murderer to death.

When that happens, it's delusional to respond by "opinion," or even think opinions matter.  At such times, followers of Jesus will be powerfully moved in their spirit by the manifest working of His Spirit.  Amen.


Sunday, October 30, 2022

Quaker Worship

 

"What is the outcome then, brethren? When you assemble, each one has a psalm, has a teaching, has a revelation, has a tongue, has an interpretation. Let all things be done for edification." 

                                                                                                                                --  I Corinthians 14:26

Thus Paul begins his summary of instruction on the charismata (grace gifts) of the Spirit: by highlighting their normative operation in Christian worship-services, "when you assemble."

I think we have to understand, therefore, that God's absolute intent is that He ALONE structure our praise-giving, and Alone determine its content.

It's certainly not possible to know the innermost heart of every "worship-leader" and pastor, of course: but it's probably safe to say that few of our "evangelical" churches (even formally "pentecostal" churches) prepare for their Sunday service without some planned "order-of-worship" and sermon-topic.

And we can all testify that God can, and certainly does, work through even the most rigid and traditional orders-of-worship.  In addition to their edification of believers, Paul writes that our services of worship must be "done properly, and in an orderly manner" (v. 40).

But I've always admired the raw faith of traditional Quakers that God is "not a God of confusion" (v. 33), and will Himself Sovereignly order our worship in the "Spirit and Truth" He desires of His worshippers.  I've often thought a few Quakers sitting together in silence, listening for God to give one of them a word to speak to their waiting hearts, may please God more than any other Christian worshippers.

We often speak of our worship as "waiting on God."  How pleasing can it be to The Holy One that our "waiting on God" involves no waiting on God, and rather pre-empting Him ?


Sunday, September 25, 2022

Trinity

I cannot understand the doctrine of the Trinity.  Cannot understand, or even very well picture, how our One God is in three Persons.  Saint Patrick's example of the shamrock is probably the closest I've ever come to understanding this Mystery at the center of all things.

And I doubt any of the greatest theologians have ever, or can ever, truly understand.  That inevitably follows from the fact we all experience, know, and believe, that man and his abilities are less than God's.  In every honest theology, "I AM" IS Mystery except as God is pleased to reveal Himself

I only know and believe, in my personal experience...probably the only place, and only way, any theology can ever be honest...that except in loving Jesus and knowing His love for me, I could never know The Father, nor have The Spirit.

Amen.

Saturday, June 18, 2022

Worldviews

"For as a man thinketh in his heart, so is he..."    Proverbs 23:7

People see the same event different ways.  It all comes down to each person's “worldview,” what criteria he brings to interpreting reality.  And what criteria a person chooses tells you a lot about what he "thinketh in his heart."

Right now, I'm hearing people, even some Christians, say the January 6th hearings are all about politics.

That’s not the worldview of anyone who agrees in God's commands that human beings do right and not wrong, that they speak truth and not lies.

And no Christian will ever consider any worldview but God's definitive.

Wednesday, June 08, 2022

Today's Confession

"Jesus said...“I am the way, and the truth, and the life; no one comes to the Father except through Me."

                                                                                                                            --  John 14:6

 

I believe Jesus Christ IS The Life, as He said.  So I will do no violence to others by word or deed, nor follow the ways of murderers.  Amen.

I believe Jesus Christ IS The Truth, as He said. So I will not lie, nor deceive myself, nor follow the ways of liars.  Amen.

I believe Jesus Christ IS The Way, as He said, and the only Way to the Father.  So I will follow no other way, and I renounce satan and all his ways.  Amen.

 

I believe Jesus, so I will follow Him.  What He said I will do.  This is my confession today.  Amen, and Amen.

Friday, June 03, 2022

At the Moment

 

Our Bible-study teacher often started the class by asking “What jumped out at you in this chapter ?”  There were always some folks in the class who had read and meditated on the chapter, and had “heard” a word there from the Spirit that they were eager to talk about.

The hour of discussion that followed usually gave us insights, questions, and challenges enough to ponder all week.  I appreciated the teacher’s wisdom in opening the class that way: it encouraged us to hear the Spirit speaking in scripture, and fed our spirits all week.

Not every student heard exactly the same word, of course: God doesn’t make robots.  There were even times people heard seemingly-contrary things in scripture.  Those times, it seemed folks in the class were able to practice spiritual discernment…another opportunity for us to hear the Spirit…and sort out differences, so they weren’t problems.

But usually our “differences” were like the blind men describing an elephant: our limited perceptual abilities “touching” the totality of God’s Wisdom at the different places we could individually reach.  When we realized that, I think it renewed, and increased, our awareness of God’s active UNITY, in His Spirit and His Logos.

It was amazingly frequent, too, that God confirmed something we’d been discussing in Bible-study, in the pastor’s sermon.  He didn’t sit in on our Bible-study, and had prepared his sermon some days previous; but it often turned out the pastor spoke on the same topic we’d talked about in Bible study that morning: sometimes exactly the same scripture: or a related topic that tied-in, or gave nuance, to what we’s discussed in Bible-study.

When that happened, it was exciting, and impossible to miss that God was actively guiding us.  It felt like His verification that we were hearing Him aright in our studying the Bible, and the pastor in preparing his sermon.  It gave us a powerful sense of God’s approval, that the church-body was walking in His Way.

Church leadership decided a few months ago to start on a year-long study-program of the Bible’s major teachings.  Among other things, the program co-ordinates the topics for Bible-study classes and the pastor’s sermon each week. 

Praying about it later, I was hearing that the program was not the way to go, and twice asked the pastor and a couple church-leaders to pray about it again.  My understanding of I Corinthians 14:29 is that private words from the Spirit should be submitted to the judgement of others who hear Him, and these brothers do.  They affirmed the program, however; so I have to think the word I heard was personal direction for me.

My wife said I’d still be able to hear the Spirit in the new Bible-study, as I do in the pastor’s “co-ordinated” sermons; and she’s right.  Anyone who’s listening for the Spirit will hear Him, in whatever way or place He chooses to speak.

My wife’s argument is tempting, and I greatly miss being in the Bible-study.  Miss most of all the sense of God’s immediacy and approval when He verifies the word we hear by His “co-ordination.”  If I was the least bit uncertain of the word I was given…that it’s not the right thing, at least for me…I’d act on her argument.

But I’ve spent years practicing to discern the Spirit’s voice: practicing, most of all, to distinguish His voice from the voice of self-will we all have to deal with.  I’ve learned that when I get it wrong (a normal part of any learning-process), He’s gracious to give me credit for asking, and for doing what I thought I heard from Him.  Learned too that if I continue listening to Him, He’ll correct me in anything I get wrong.

So I don’t doubt the new program is “good,” or that the Spirit will work through it.  I also don’t doubt His word of personal direction, that it’s not the way I should go.

It’s an uncomfortable place to be, for the moment: I miss Bible-study.  But it's the place God wants me to be, for the moment.  I’m eager to see what He has for me next.

 

Sunday, May 22, 2022

Son of God, sons of the devil

 

"You are of your father the devil, and you want to do the desires of your father. He was a murderer from the beginning, and does not stand in the truth because there is no truth in him. Whenever he tells a lie, he speaks from his own nature, because he is a liar and the father of lies."

                                                                                --  John 8:44

I have no doubt Jesus IS the Son of God.  So when He tells us how He recognizes the children of satan, we have to pay attention.  He would know.

They are first of all plural, and clearly they were already around in Jesus' lifetime.  There were still many sons of the devil around when Jesus' disciple John wrote about them some years later:

"Children, it is the last hour; and just as you heard that antichrist is coming, even now many antichrists have appeared; from this we know that it is the last hour" (I John 2:18, my emphasis) 

You're right to be aware The Anti-Christ is coming, says John: but be aware too that his little spiritual brothers and sisters are already here, and will be until The Lord returns to settle accounts.

(Which is certainly not to diminish the centrality of The Anti-Christ in satan's scheme.  Just as Jesus Christ is the Incarnate and Only Son of God, here present in human flesh, anti-Christ will be the unique, full-on, counterfeit of Christ, satan's own son, present on earth in human flesh.)

Many of us are convinced we're living today in what John calls "the last hour."  If so, Jesus' major teaching on the "end-times," in Matthew 24, must be of critical relevance to us.  And that discourse is notable for Jesus' repeated warnings to His disciples not to be misled, and not to be deceived, even by the "many [who] will come in My name" (v. 5).

So Jesus again emphasizes that the children of satan will be on the scene, that they will be "many," and that they will be busily spreading their father's lies: for how else are people "misled" and "deceived" than by lies ?

Jesus warns that the "many antichrists" of the end-times will even be spreading "Christian" lies ("in My name").  Indeed, those whom Jesus called children of satan to their face appeared to be "Christians:" they had followed Jesus in Person, and "had believed Him" (John 8:31; for even liars must admit Jesus is speaking truth).  So Jesus' command in Matthew 24 is that we discern, as He discerned, the children of satan by the fact they do satan's characteristic deeds.

(My opinion is that in our day we especially need to heed Jesus' warning, "do not believe them" (Matthew 24:23,26), regards the many "Christian" teachers of "end-times prophecy."  Jesus flatly says that no man knows God's timing (v. 36); and that world-political events and natural disasters are NOT primary prophetic signs of the end-times (vv. 6-7).  In broad characterization, many of today's "Christian" interpreters of "end-times prophecy." predicate their teaching exactly on those things Jesus proscribes.)

We therefore know that satan's children can be discerned by their lies.  And we certainly know what lies are: statements contrary to fact, and reality: statements contrary to Truth, Who Jesus says He IS (John 14:6).

(I often hear people try to excuse themselves from obeying Jesus' command with the complaint that "it's hard these days to know what's true."  That excuse is itself a lie.  In these days of the internet, it's easier than ever to verify, from multiple official, news, or fact-checking websites and "citizen-journalist" sources, what someone has actually said, or if an event actually happened...often with on-scene video of what was said or done.  The only relevant question is if a person loves truth enough to search for it...more properly, Him.)

Jesus says the other "spirit" by which we should discern satan's children is their desire to "murder."  Our varying systems of human criminal-law have rather muddied our understanding of what constitutes "murder:" but Jesus gives us His definition in Matthew 5:21-22.  Jesus says that angry, violent, contempt for others is murder...whether or not blows are struck, or lives lost.

America's experience has verified Jesus' definition.  Violent contempt for others, which has become...rather, has been made...a dominant spirit of national politics, has repeatedly produced in our country horrific mass-murders which meet even humans' legal definitions.

We've also seen that the greatest spouters of violent contempt have also made lies a dominant spirit of American politics, to an extent never before seen.  And it's not hard to see that this change has taken place because lies and murder...Jesus' checklist of "sons of satan"...have been politically successful, tactics for them.

Incredibly, even some Christians have followed the politicians whose ways are, relentlessly and always, lies and murder.

So this blog is my plea to those Christians to repent, and quickly turn back in these last days from following those Jesus has warned us are "children of the devil."

Amen.

Friday, May 20, 2022

Biden Preaches the Gospel

 

A few days ago President Biden went to Buffalo to meet with and console the folks who'd lost family in the mass-shooting there.  Afterwards, he made a speech to them and the nation.

Biden's not a great intellect.  He's not a great orator.  That's not what made his speech notable.

Joe Biden is a man who genuinely cares for people.  An American President should care for the people whom God's put in his charge: so Biden was in Buffalo.

He's also a man of faith, a man with a "moral compass," as his speech showed.

“…evil will not win. I promise you. Hate will not prevail." -- Joe Biden

Biden spoke SPIRITUAL truth to those who are suffering, in Buffalo, and throughout our nation.  In all the hatred, and death, and destruction that assail us, “evil will not win.”  The comfort he offered those survivors, and all of us who grieve for our nation's suffering, is the good news that our King sealed to reality by His life and His death, that evil will not win.”  The comfort Biden offered those survivors, and all of us who grieve for our nation's suffering, is that in Jesus' rule we have hope that will not be disappointed.

I was also impressed that Biden stands to gain no political advantage by his speech.  The "spiritual discernment" we see manifested by America's "conservative Christians," it's doubtful any of them will hear Christ's comfort or hope in Biden's words: and unlikely any of them will turn back from their delusional adulation of the liars and haters they follow.

Bumper-stickers and The Mind of Christ

 

It's not an perfect metric, of course.  Not every driver wants to publicly state his or her personal opinion, or feels strongly enough about some issue to do so: but bumper-stickers are probably a good indicator of the thoughts of those who do.

Or perhaps better, "attitudes."  Some bumper-stickers are indeed only "attitude," and probably minimally indicative of thought.  Someone whose car is plastered with bumper-stickers like "You'll Only Take My Guns From My Cold Dead Hands" is probably not open to thoughtful (or calm) discussion of the meaning of the Second Amendment.

Most other bumper-stickers presumably indicate the driver has considered his or her viewpoint/opinion/preference on "issues" or candidates.  When that's the case, a bumper-sticker can be an insight to the driver's personal thoughts.

Which sometimes we don't want to know.

I recently had to park in a distant part of the church parking-lot...behind a car with a "Trump 2024" bumper-sticker.  When I left after church I literally prayed I wouldn't see which of my fellow-parishioners drove that car: how could I not think less of that person's moral character and intelligence, knowing those were his or her political thoughts ?

But what's most been on my mind these days is if we should remain at our current church after we move, or go to a church nearer our new living-place.  It has seemed that God may be saying, in the latter eventuality, we should test our Spiritual discretion in choosing a church, and see if we are attuned to His will: able to be "guided by His eye."

So God's metric for a church has been a recurring meditation.  And bumper-stickers may also be relevant there.

As I wrote in an earlier blog, the Great Commission's "make disciples" has seemed to me Jesus' absolute metric: so my question has been what Jesus deems a bona-fide disciple.

The Greek word there is literally "learner:" appropriate for one who follows and listens to the Teacher.  I don't doubt that Jesus also means His disciples will be, in today's phrase, "life-long learners:" since that's how long we are to follow and listen to Him.

And He means more.  His teaching, and that of those He commissions, is that "all nations...obey..." His commands: not merely hear to His teachings, but act on them.  That's considerably more than "evangelizing." which is how the Great Commission is usually preached.

The meaning of our English word "disciple" is undoubtedly enriched by the fact that the Latin word for "learner," discipulus, has also given us the word "discipline."  (And Latin is, of course, one of the first translations in which the gospels spread.)  In regard to preparing those who hear the gospel to act on it, I think we'd be on the mark to connect "making disciples" with teaching people the disciplines that Jesus taught.

Having "the mind that is in Christ" (Philippians 2:5, I Corinthians 2:6, and elsewhere) is undoubtedly one such discipline.  Not natural to us: we must learn it...learn, in the title of one of my teacher Derek Prince' most powerful series, "agreeing with God"...and practice it, to make it our absolute habit-of-mind.

The old saying was that someone was "as nervous as a whore in church."  If a church is making disciples, and its people hear the gospel, I have to think anyone who prefers to hear satan's lies (such as those of the above politician) would be even more uncomfortable in that church: and wouldn't go there at all.

It's not an perfect metric, of course.  But in discerning if a church is "making disciples" according to Jesus' command, driving through the church' parking-lot might provide some insight into whether or not its members' thoughts manifested "the mind of Christ."