What WILL They Think of Next?

I knew I shouldn’t have read the news.

Amazing, simply amazing.  If it really mattered (I’m taking CAP’s word for it that it doesn’t) this would be tragic, but I guess it’s just ludicrous.  Full points for imagination, I guess, as those wishing to suppress any public manifestation of Christian faith continue their campaign with one of their most ridiculous ideas yet.

Christians Against Poverty, a Christian debt advice charity, has been shown the door by AdviceUK, a charity umbrella group, because they offer to pray with the people they advise.  Steve Johnson, the head of AdviceUK, says the offer to pray is an “emotional fee” that clients are expected to “pay” to receive services.  CAP says it “has never made prayer a condition of its free service,” but that doesn’t matter.

It’s shocking, I think, that a Christian organisation should, well, act like Christians.  I’m certain that no one who goes for help to an organisation with “Christian” in the name would ever expect such a thing.  Some of the people who work there probably go to church, too.  They might own Bibles — they might even READ them once in a while!  Who would have guessed? 🙂

Advice UK says, “Our diverse membership places us in a unique position to influence Government departments and other bodies.”  (I guess “diversity” includes “people of faith” only if they aren’t “people of prayer”. ;))  Since CAP says its counselling service will be unaffected, it is probably better off out of such a group.  Christian organisations are better off depending on God and serving Him than messing around trying to influence Government departments. 

I’ve never yet found the verse in the Bible that tells me that charity consists of lobbying the government to try to get it to spend money that it has taxed from my neighbours.  Charity is supposed to be something I do, not something I try to get the government to do with money it has taken from someone else.  There is a lovely scam going on in some UK “charities”.  Government money goes to charities, and charities use money to hire lobbyists to get the Government to spend money on their issue (which, naturally, includes giving more money to the charity).  But I’m getting off topic — someone really needs to moderate around here before this blog spins out of control. 🙂 But first, full disclosure — our church receives no government funds through Gift Aid or anything else.

I read something a couple of years ago, I don’t remember where.  From a country where Christians are persecuted, a believer asked, “What do Christians in Western Europe do with II Timothy 3:12?”  Indeed, “All that will live godly in Christ Jesus shall suffer persecution” IS rather troubling to the conscience of a soft, materialistic “Christianity” that never disturbs anyone by proclaiming the Gospel of Jesus Christ or by living lives of holiness and charity that convict the hearts of those around us.  Lots of Christians don’t see much persecution, and as a result have to ask the uncomfortable question, “Is that verse wrong, or are we not really living godly in Christ Jesus?”

But because the world hates Jesus Christ (John 15:18-19), even the watered down Western European version of Christianity is too much to tolerate for some.  So persecution increases as even groups with “Christian” in their name are expected to leave Christianity out of what they are doing.  No surprises here, then, they’ll continue to come up with amazingly creative excuses to try to silence Christianity.  This “emotional fee” thing is something I certainly never would have thought of, but where there is a will to try to silence Christians, there is a way, I guess.

****

The “emotional fee” thing is a real problem for me.  If you live in Glenrothes, I’m afraid I’ve made you pay an “emotional fee” without either of us knowing it.  You see, in the last eleven years, I’ve put at least one leaflet in the letter box of every door in town (and in most cases, far more than one), and I’ve prayed for you when I did it.  I didn’t even ask you if you wanted me to pray for you!  I’d never heard of Steve Johnson.  I didn’t know I was making you pay this “emotional fee”.  You didn’t know, either, though a few of you might have guessed that our church might be praying for the people in this town.  Churches do that kind of thing, or at least some churches do, and our church is that kind of church. 

We pray for people.  We pray for people like Steve Johnson of Advice UK, for the youths who vandalise our church building, for politicians of all parties (including those who try to pass laws restricting religious freedom), for the police, for rich people and poor people, for sick people and well people, for young and old, for Christians and non-Christians.  We don’t see “emotional fees” in the Bible, but we do see prayer.  I don’t see any of that changing anytime soon.  We follow Jesus Christ.

Wherever you are, Glenrothes or somewhere else, keep praying, keep serving, keep following the Lord, keep being a witness for Him.  Persecution may will come.  Don’t get upset, don’t get angry, don’t get discouraged.  It’s far better than having the kind of “Christianity” that isn’t even worth persecuting.

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A Proverb for Today — Proverbs 6:7

“Which having no guide, overseer, or ruler” (Proverbs 6:7).

OK, we HAVE to look at this verse in context, or it’s meaningless.  Proverbs 6:6-11:

6 Go to the ant, thou sluggard; consider her ways, and be wise: 7 Which having no guide, overseer, or ruler, 8 Provideth her meat in the summer, and gathereth her food in the harvest. 9 How long wilt thou sleep, O sluggard? when wilt thou arise out of thy sleep? 10 Yet a little sleep, a little slumber, a little folding of the hands to sleep: 11 So shall thy poverty come as one that travelleth, and thy want as an armed man.

It’s not that long ago I posted about the sluggard’s excuses, but this time, I’ll post on the sluggard’s education — he is to learn from the ant. 

Verse 6 is a very famous verse.  If you had Biblically literate parents growing up (and maybe even if you didn’t), you probably heard this verse in one of your lazy moments.  And the lesson to learn from the ant is to work hard in the summer, because winter is coming — to work when you can, when work needs to be done, to be ready for the future.

Well, that’s pretty easy to understand, though not so easy (for those of us who like to claim we are genetically predisposed to laziness) to actually do.  But my summary there jumped from verse six to verse eight without a pause, cruising right past verse seven as if it isn’t even there.  That seems to be the way this passage is usually treated — call someone a sluggard to get their attention, tell them to be wise like the ant, and then cut to the good stuff in verse eight as quickly as you can.  If you notice verse seven at all, notice it quickly and move on!  Since all Scripture is given to us to equip us for every good work, perhaps we shouldn’t just act as if the Holy Spirit inspired this verse to even out the number of verses, or something.  There are lessons here in verse seven for the sluggard.

NO GUIDE

The Hebrew word is qatsiyn, which means “guide” or “leader”.  It is connected to the Arabic root “to judge”, and Bruce Waltke says this “signifies the chief who preserves order.”  The word is used  in Isaiah 1:10, and refers to those who organise religious observances (v. 13) and are expected by God to ensure justice (v. 17).  This would perhaps be comparable to a supervisor who watches over the workers all the time to make sure they are accomplishing the desired purpose.

NO OVERSEER

The Hebrew word here is shoter, which means an officer or administrator.  The root meaning has to do with one who is writing or listing personnel.  We might compare this to the mid-level executive who makes sure the supervisors have the work crew and equipment they will need to accomplish their task.

NO RULER

The ruler (moshel) appears to designate the “big boss”.  He’s the one to whom everyone answers.  He’ll hire you and fire you, make sure there are funds to pay your wages, and make sure the whole endeavour is rolling along.  He decides what the supervisor is going to tell you to do.

A FEW LESSONS

It would be a mistake to assume that these different words are intended to sharply distinguish between different roles.  That’s not the point here.  The point is that ants have none of them, no supervisors, middle managers, or big bosses — and if a sluggard wants to stop being such a sluggard, he should learn from the ants.  So let’s learn a few lessons from what diligent ants don’t have.

  • They don’t have someone else to “boss them” into getting out of bed in the morning.  If you depend on someone else to get you up and going, it’s time to start thinking about growing up.  Even the ants are showing you up.  This is step number one to killing your sluggardliness (is “sluggardliness” even a word?  I don’t care :)).
  • They don’t need someone else to tell them what to do all the time.  They take initiative.  Instead of sitting around waiting to be told what to do, they find what they need to do and do it.  If you just start training/reminding yourself to take initiative, you are well on the way to winning this battle.
  • Ants don’t fight over who is going to do a job, and ask for a referee to make sure they aren’t doing more than their fair share.  They all just pitch in until the job is done.
  • Ants get to the place where the work is being done without someone reading their name off of a list.  Sluggards are often so allergic to work that they dare not even be in the vicinity, lest someone look at them and say, “Hey, get to work!”  Get to where the work is being done, and you might find something useful you could do.
  • Ants don’t say, “If only someone would hire me, I’d work.”  They don’t need a boss, they just find work to do and do it.  If you are a sluggard, and you want to stop being one, find some kind of work you can do.  God will bless that in many ways.
  • Ants don’t need someone to make them get along with other workers, they just cooperate and focus on the task at hand.  Sluggards often end up in conflict with other workers, either because they aren’t doing their share of the work or because they’ve learned that conflict gives them an excuse to stop working.  If you want to try to stop being a sluggard, focus on the task and cooperate with other workers.
  • An ant doesn’t need someone looking over his shoulder to keep him working.  Instead of needing external accountability, hold yourself accountable.

If you are lazy and don’t want to change, I’m sorry I wasted your time with this post.  Go back to cruising the ‘Net for whatever it is you were looking when you stumbled on this post.  But if you know you are lazy, AND you want to change, the ants have lessons for you.  Forget the sluggard’s excuses, and start working on the sluggard’s education.  Learn from the ant.  Take some initiative, focus on the task, hold yourself accountable.

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Motivated by the Promise of His Coming (part two)

Series Introduction

Motivated by the Promise of His Coming (part two)

Acts 1:9-11

And when he had spoken these things, while they beheld, he was taken up; and a cloud received him out of their sight. And while they looked stedfastly toward heaven as he went up, behold, two men stood by them in white apparel; which also said, Ye men of Galilee, why stand ye gazing up into heaven? This same Jesus, which is taken up from you into heaven, shall so come in like manner as ye have seen him go into heaven.

Brethren, God the Son, God incarnate in human flesh, Jesus the Christ, our Lord and our Saviour is coming again. All throughout God’s Word, the promise is given, “Our Lord shall come again.” Certainly this is a glorious truth as we are “looking for that blessed hope, and the glorious appearing of the great God and our Saviour Jesus Christ.” (Titus 2:13)

Yet the truth of our Lord’s Second Coming is not just a glorious truth. It is also a motivational truth. It is a truth that should motivate us to live aright even now. In fact, this promise of our Lord’s Second Coming is employed as a principle of motivation at least once in every book of the New Testament except Galatians, Philemon, 2 John, and 3 John. Already in the first part of the message, we have considered such passages from the four Gospels: Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John. Now in this second part of the message, let us consider such passages from Acts, Romans, 1 Corinthians, and 2 Corinthians.

In Acts 3:19-21 God’s Word states:

Repent ye therefore, and be converted, that your sins may be blotted out, when the times of refreshing shall come from the presence of the Lord; and he shall send Jesus Christ, which before was preached unto you: whom the heaven must receive until the times of restitution of all things, which God hath spoken by the mouth of all his holy prophets since the world began.

Certainly the promise of our Lord’s Second Coming should motivate any lost sinner to repent of his or her sins and to receive Christ through faith as his or her eternal Saviour.

In Romans 8:16-18 God’s Word states:

The Spirit itself beareth witness with our spirit, that we are the children of God: and if children, then heirs; heirs of God, and joint-heirs with Christ; if so be that we suffer with him, that we may be also glorified together. For I reckon that the sufferings of this present time are not worthy to be compared with the glory which shall be revealed in us.

At the Second Coming of our Lord Jesus Christ, we who are His own shall be glorified together with Him. Yea, “the glory which shall be revealed in us” at that time will be so great that “the sufferings of this present time are not worthy” of any comparison. The present sufferings, as great as they may be, are not even close to being as great as the glory of that time. Therefore, the promise of our Lord’s Second Coming should motivate us to suffer patiently for our Lord’s sake in faithful service for Him without wavering.

In Romans 13:11-14 God’s Word states:

And that, knowing the time, that now it is high time to awake out of sleep: for now is our salvation nearer than when we believed. The night is far spent, the day [that is – the day of our Lord’s Second Coming] is at hand: let us therefore cast off the works of darkness, and let us put on the armour of light. Let us walk honestly, as in the day; not in rioting and drunkenness, not in chambering and wantonness, not in strife and envying. But put ye on the Lord Jesus Christ, and make not provision for the flesh, to fulfil the lusts thereof.

Our Lord could return for us at any time. Therefore, the promise of His Second Coming should motivate us to cast off the works of spiritual darkness and to make no provision for the flesh, “to fulfil the lusts thereof.” On the other hand, the promise of our Lord’s Second Coming should motivate us to put on the armor of spiritual light and to be abiding in our Lord Jesus Christ throughout our daily walk.

In 1 Corinthians 15:22-26 God’s Word states:

For as in Adam all die, even so in Christ shall all be made alive. But every man in his own order: Christ the firstfruits; afterward they that are Christ’s at his coming. Then cometh the end, when he shall have delivered up the kingdom to God, even the Father; when he shall have put down all rule and all authority and power. For he must reign, till he hath put all enemies under his feet. The last enemy that shall be destroyed is death.

To this verses 51-58 add:

Behold, I shew you a mystery; We shall not all sleep, but we shall all be changed, in a moment, in the twinkling of an eye, at the last trump: for the trumpet shall sound, and the dead shall be raised incorruptible, and we shall be changed. For this corruptible must put on incorruption, and this mortal must put on immortality. So when this corruptible shall have put on incorruption, and this mortal shall have put on immortality, then shall be brought to pass the saying that is written, Death is swallowed up in victory. O death, where is thy sting? O grave, where is thy victory? The sting of death is sin; and the strength of sin is the law. But thanks be to God, which giveth us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ. Therefore, my beloved brethren, be ye stedfast, unmoveable, always abounding in the work of the Lord, forasmuch as ye know that your labour is not in vain in the Lord.

At our Lord’s Second Coming, the last enemy death will be “swallowed up in victory.” Yea, at that time we who are our Lord’s own shall enter into eternal victory through our Lord Jesus Christ. Therefore, the promise of our Lord’s Second Coming should motivate us to remain steadfast and unmoveable in our service for the Lord. Furthermore, the promise of our Lord’s Second Coming should motivate us to continue always abounding in the work of our Lord. Finally, the promise of our Lord’s Second Coming should assure us that none of our labour in and for the Lord shall be in vain.

In 2 Corinthians 4:14-18 God’s Word states:

Knowing that he which raised up the Lord Jesus shall raise up us also by Jesus, and shall present us with you. For all things are for your sakes, that the abundant grace might through the thanksgiving of many redound to the glory of God. For which cause we faint not; but though our outward man perish, yet the inward man is renewed day by day. For our light affliction, which is but for a moment, worketh for us a far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory; while we look not at the things which are seen, but at the things which are not seen: for the things which are seen are temporal; but the things which are not seen are eternal.

At our Lord’s Second Coming, we shall be raised up ever to live with our Lord in His eternal glory. Therefore, the promise of our Lord’s Second Coming should motivate us not to faint during the time of affliction. Furthermore, the promise of our Lord’s Second Coming should motivate us not to set our focus upon the circumstantial afflictions of this life that are just for the moment of this short life. Rather, the promise of our Lord’s Second Coming should motivate us to set our focus through faith upon the “far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory” that we shall enjoy in the eternity of the life to come.

For the Excellency of the Knowledge of Christ Jesus our Lord,
Abiding in Christ, and Christ in us,
Pastor Scott Markle
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Something I was Thinking About….

….thinking about it, while preparing for my message tomorrow.

In the history of God (if we can even speak of such a thing), what is the greatest “crisis”?  Is it when Christ hung on the Cross, bearing our sins, and the Holy One became sin for us, and He cried out, “My God, my God, why hast Thou forsaken Me”?

Or is it in the Garden of Gethsemane, when Jesus said, “Not My will, but Thine be done?”

Or was it when He said, “I delight to do Thy will,” and “took upon Him the form of a servant”?

Or do we go all the way back to Creation, to another garden, the Garden of Eden?  Back when Almighty God, even knowing what Adam would do, knowing that sin and death was going to come into the world, and knowing what a loving and holy God would do in response, knowing all those things, He said, “Let us make man in our image”?

If we can even properly talk about “when” an eternal God makes decisions in terms of time, we might go back before Creation, and ask, “How and why did He even start this whole thing rolling, knowing where it was going?  Why did He make us?”  The simple answer that He loved us seems so insufficient, when we didn’t even exist, and our future held rebellion against Him.  Why did He love us, then?  The only answer is that He chose to.  He chose Creation and the Cross, not because of anything in us, but because He chose to love.

And then we are amazed again at the grace that made us, in our need rescued us, keeps us, and does His work in us until the day He takes us all the way home.

Maybe we can’t really talk about a “crisis” for God, certainly in the sense that we think of a crisis.  But we can see “decisions” He has made, if it is even appropriate for us to call them that, and stand in awe of how much He loves us.  We’ll not fully comprehend all of His wonder and His grace, but we can praise Him, and we must.

Maybe this all sounds somewhat incoherent, but if someone wants to accuse me of not being able to find the right words to talk about God’s grace, I plead guilty.  After all, it will take us all eternity to praise His grace, so we shouldn’t expect to handle it sufficiently here and now.

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One Reason for Standards in Music

We don’t have an “anything goes” music standard in our church.  Music in the church should be about the Lord, and what pleases Him, not what is popular in society today.  It isn’t about being cool, or faddish.  It isn’t about what makes me feel good.

There are other reasons besides that illustrated in the following for being careful about music.  But the article which niddriepastor links is illustrative of one of the dangers of pursuing “cool”.  I don’t know Mez McConnell or anything about him, so I can’t tell you how sound his teaching and ministry is, but I do know he is absolutely right on this point.  First, his comment:

A post for all you saddos who were into ‘cool’ (not) Christian music groups with a salutary warning that the gospel of Christ will always outlast the latest fads. Read it here. I was in prison at the time and was probably better off in solitary than listening to half the stuff that Christian musicians and bands were trying to do at the time.

The tragic conclusion of the article to which he linked:

Despite all the affected teenage rebellion, I continued to call myself a Christian into my early twenties. When I finally stopped, it wasn’t because being a believer made me uncool or outdated or freakish. It was because being a Christian no longer meant anything. It was a label to slap on my Facebook page, next to my music preferences. The gospel became just another product someone was trying to sell me, and a paltry one at that because the church isn’t Viacom: it doesn’t have a Department of Brand Strategy and Planning. Staying relevant in late consumer capitalism requires highly sophisticated resources and the willingness to tailor your values to whatever your audience wants. In trying to compete in this market, the church has forfeited the one advantage it had in the game to attract disillusioned youth: authenticity. When it comes to intransigent values, the profit-driven world has zilch to offer. If Christian leaders weren’t so ashamed of those unvarnished values, they might have something more attractive than anything on today’s bleak moral market. In the meantime, they’ve lost one more kid to the competition.

We’re often told that we need to have music that “appeals to kids”, because it works.  (It’s usually adults that tell us this, by the way.)  Pragmatism is a flawed basis on which to make ministry decisions, anyway.  But this gives at least one example of why the modern Christian music industry and approach doesn’t always work so well, either.

“Authenticity” (the author’s word) just means “Truth”.  If we have it, we don’t need to be “cool” — the power of God will work.  If we aren’t proclaiming the truth, it doesn’t matter how “cool” we are.  And if we try to mix “cool” and truth, to use “cool” as a way to get people to listen to truth, we’re diluting our message (and is that really honest, anyway?).  If people walk away thinking “cool”, they are thinking about the wrong thing, no matter how true our words were.  We’ve shifted the focus from truth, if “cool” comes into it.

II Corinthians 4:2-6:

2 But have renounced the hidden things of dishonesty, not walking in craftiness, nor handling the word of God deceitfully; but by manifestation of the truth commending ourselves to every man’s conscience in the sight of God. 3 But if our gospel be hid, it is hid to them that are lost: 4 In whom the god of this world hath blinded the minds of them which believe not, lest the light of the glorious gospel of Christ, who is the image of God, should shine unto them. 5 For we preach not ourselves, but Christ Jesus the Lord; and ourselves your servants for Jesus’ sake. 6 For God, who commanded the light to shine out of darkness, hath shined in our hearts, to give the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ.

We don’t have to try to get people to like our message.  They aren’t going to “like” the truth, anyway.  Their eyes have been blinded.  Their only hope is for the light of the knowledge of the glory of God to shine in their hearts.  “Cool” doesn’t come into it.

 

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Isn’t it About Time to Go?

In Newburgh, just 14 miles north of here, the Dundee Courier reported this week that the local Church of Scotland minister intends to “marry” her lesbian partner (edit:  dead link removed, see update below).  For some reason, the Courier chose to quote one of the most extreme voices in Scotland on this topic, the Rev Dr John Cameron.

Dr Cameron stated, “It is actually against the law to discriminate against gay people … and the church must obey the law.”  Perhaps Dr Cameron should inform himself before pontificating.  Issued by the Government Equalities Office (ed: link fixed 5 Sep 2011):

In the case of Ministers of Religion and other jobs which exist to promote and represent religion, the Bill recognises that a church may need to impose requirements regarding sexual orientation, sex, marriage and civil partnership or gender reassignment if it is necessary to comply with its teachings or the strongly held beliefs of followers.

It is not “against the law” for a church to “impose requirements” in this area.  Dr Cameron is an intelligent man, but is wrong, and has been repeatedly wrong on this point for some time.

Nor must the church “obey the law” should the law require us to disobey the clear teachings of Scripture.  From the earliest days of the church, when authorities abused their position to try to forbid obedience to Christ, the answer was direct:  “We ought to obey God rather than men” (Acts 5:29).  We obey the law as completely as we are allowed to do so within the constraints of Scripture, but when human authorities try to dictate to us beyond those constraints, we must obey God.  Is the government the head of the church, or is Christ?

Has Dr Cameron of St Andrews forgotten his own church history?  Would he have told Patrick Hamilton, George Wishart, and John Knox, “We must obey the law”?  Is he a member of the Church of Scotland, or of some other organisation?

Dr Cameron is wrong about the law, and wrong about the Christian response to law.  The early church was full of martyrs who wouldn’t obey the law and worship Caesar.  God has always been and always will be a Higher Authority than human law, and true Christians have always been prepared to live out that truth by obeying God and suffering, if need be, at the hands of abusive authorities.

The article cites Dr Cameron further:

Dr Cameron said it was “spurious” to cite biblical disapproval as grounds for concern.

“The bible, if you go back to the original text in Greek and Hebrew, is actually very ambivalent about the issue,” he continued. “However, many modern translations are from groups that are pretty much homophobic.”

Dr Cameron is wrong on the Greek and wrong on the Hebrew.  He engages in what is known as an “ad hominem” attack against Bible translators, ignoring the substance of whether their work is sound or not by making unsubstantiated and malicious attacks on their character and integrity.

The Bible is not in the least ambivalent.  Dr Cameron may have studied Greek, and if so he knows that the Greek of I Corinthians 6:9 is perhaps more explicit in its condemnation of homosexual behaviour than any English translation, old or modern.  He also knows that the following verses give hope for the homosexual, as with any other sinner, to be forgiven and changed by the power of God.  That is not “ambivalence”, that is redemption and hope.

Dr Cameron is also wrong to call those who leave the Kirk over this issue a “sect”.  A sect can be defined as “a religious group which has developed from a larger religion and is considered to have extreme or unusual beliefs or customs.”  Again, I would remind Dr Cameron of his own church history, in which a religious group “developed from a larger religion” (Roman Catholicism) and was considered by many to have extreme beliefs.

Was the founding of the Church of Scotland a “sect”?  We must accept that the time comes to leave a larger religious group because it has abandoned truth.  That is what Knox and the reformers in Scotland did, and that is what people who leave the Kirk today are doing.

Dr Cameron only gets one thing right in his comments in this article.  “People who cannot accept it really need to go.”

If you have friends in the Church of Scotland who really do believe the Bible is the Word of God, and that it means what it says, it seems it is time for them to go.  Dr Cameron certainly wants them to leave.

The Church of Scotland has made its direction clear, and it won’t be turning back.  The Kirk (according to the Courier article, second page) refused to comment because it is a “private” matter.  The Kirk has completely discarded the Biblical teachings in I Timothy 3 and Titus 1 on the qualifications of ministers.  It is under the control of people like Dr Cameron, who is more interested in how relaxed the younger generation is about this issue than he is about what the Bible says.

Some have already left the Kirk.  More will follow.  If they don’t leave and won’t be silent, eventually they will be pushed out, unless their financial contributions are needed to support the whole corrupt edifice.  The Dr Camerons of the Church of Scotland won’t be content until all voices opposing immorality are silenced.  They run a decaying and dying relic, no longer holding to the truth, but rather “having a form of godliness but denying the power thereof” (II Timothy 3:5).  Why would true followers of Jesus Christ prop it up any longer?

Can anyone really doubt that II Timothy 3:5 describes the Kirk today?  It teaches a form of moralism, but it isn’t a Biblical morality.  It teaches a God of forgiveness, but then implies that actually, you’re ok with what you are doing and there is nothing much really to forgive.  Some ministers are effectively atheists, who simply found a nice job where they don’t have to do much real work.  Many ministers don’t believe that Jesus was the Son of God, or that He actually rose from the dead.  Many would deny parts of the Bible, such as the Creation accounts.  Many would teach, not salvation by grace alone through faith alone in Christ alone, as the reformers (including Knox taught), but a moralistic “do the best you can” salvation.  “If you do the best you can, God will accept you.”  That is what their teaching boils down to, in essence — and it is found nowhere in Scripture.

I only quoted part of that Scripture above, but I’ll give the rest of it now:  “Having a form of godliness, but denying the power thereof: from such turn away” (II Timothy 3:5).

Maybe you have friends in the Kirk.  Maybe you yourself are in the Kirk, and you believe in the authority of the Bible, you believe in the faith of the reformation, you believe that God actually meant what He said in His Word.  Isn’t it time to go, to turn away from those who deny the power of godliness?  Thousands of godly Church of Scotland ministers who have served faithfully through the years, if they were still alive today, would have left long ago.  A church cannot be a holy church, a pure and true church, if it acts as if immorality doesn’t matter, if it ignores false teaching, if it rejects the authority of Scripture.  It ceases to be a church at all, and becomes merely a social club.

This is much more than one woman in Newburgh and her personal actions, and one strident campaigner in St Andrews.  The latest news is only representative of what has been happening for years.  The Kirk has gone further and further down the path of rejecting the Bible, “modifying” the Gospel, watering down morality, denying the power of godliness.  If you are a Biblical Christian in the Kirk, you know this is true.  If you believe the Bible, then you believe there comes a time sometime when you must obey the last part of I Timothy 3:5, and “turn away”.  If the time hasn’t come for you to go, will it ever?  What exactly is needed before you will do what the Scriptures say and “from such turn away”?

Update (11 March 2013):  I’ve just learned that the Courier article cited above is no longer on their website, for some reason.  Most of the text of the original article can be seen on the Scottish Christian News site.

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Inscribing the Arches (part two)

Sunday, continuing in Romans 12, I preached on verses 13-16.

Romans 12 begins with the exhortation to be “living sacrifices” to the Lord (verse 1), and with commands to not be conformed to this world, but to be transformed by the renewing of our minds (verse 2).  Paul then goes on to elaborate on what it means to be a living sacrifice.

Previously we looked at verse nine: “Let love be without dissimulation. Abhor that which is evil; cleave to that which is good.”  I talked of the three-fold instruction in this verse as three over-arching instructions, out of which flows all that follows.  I summarised that message in three parts, part one (Love Without Dissimulation)part two (Abhor Evil), and part three (Cleave to Good).  I used the Roman arch in Orange, France, as an illustration.  I’ve compared the remaining teaching in chapter 12, which gives some of the ways we live out those three main principles/instructions, to “inscriptions” on the arch — features that let us get a more complete picture of these three main principles in action.  Last week, we looked at the teaching of verses 10-12.

This week, in Romans 12:13-16, we have further detail on what I’ve called the central arch (“love without dissimulation”/love sincerely).  The text:

13 Distributing to the necessity of saints; given to hospitality. 14 Bless them which persecute you: bless, and curse not. 15 Rejoice with them that do rejoice, and weep with them that weep. 16 Be of the same mind one toward another. Mind not high things, but condescend to men of low estate. Be not wise in your own conceits.

Some commentators view verse 14 as an isolated command, somewhat unrelated to the surrounding verses and the rest of the chapter.  Obviously, the Scriptures were not written with a view to generate neat outlines for preachers (alliteration and rhymes inherently present in every passage, of course!), but we should hesitate to assume a verse is isolated.  I view these four verses as a unit, elaborating some of what it means to love sincerely, for reasons I’ll explain below.

Generosity (verses 13-14)

Distributing to the Necessity of the Saints.  The word translated “distributing” is usually translated as “fellowshipping.”  We are to join in each other’s needs, which means that our giving is not to be limited to when it doesn’t “hurt”.  If we have needs and hardship because we have given, we are truly joining in and fellowshipping with the needs of others.  This doesn’t mean we are to give to such an extent that we neglect our responsibilities to our families (I Timothy 5:8) or neglect our responsibility to pay our bills (Romans 13:8).  It does mean we are to be prepared to give until it “hurts”, to be generous when our brothers or sisters are in need.

Given to Hospitality.  We don’t always have an understanding of the importance of hospitality in the early church.  Travel was very important, because the churches didn’t have all of the Scriptures yet, so the apostles and their co-workers traveled and taught.  Persecution was already starting (note the next verse), and this would invariably be directed first against the pastors and teachers, so the churches would, at times, be without Bible teachers, and those who were at liberty would travel to aid the different churches.

You couldn’t just pop into the local Holiday Inn Express and show your Visa or MasterCard.  The inns weren’t numerous, and weren’t particularly safe, especially for leaders of a persecuted group.  Hospitality was vitally important, both because the church was new and because of the persecution.  Without hospitality, the church would have suffered greatly.

Paul here is urging his readers to be given to hospitality, to pursue it.  We should not limit this teaching to hospitality, however.  That was the focus in the first century because that was the need of the first century.  Rather, we should recognise the implication.  If your home is to be at the Lord’s service, then really, everything you have and own is to be at His service.

The Greek word is dioko, pursue, a determined, persistent endeavour.  Paul uses another play on words, as he did earlier in the chapter.  It is the same word which is often translated “persecute”, as it is in the next verse.  With the same determination with which your persecutors pursue you, you should pursue a generosity that puts everything you own at the Lord’s service for the benefit of His people.  They pursue us to persecute us?  We will answer by pursuing generosity and hospitality.

Blessing Your Pursuers/Persecutors.  Verse fourteen comes from the teachings of the Lord Jesus in Matthew 5:44 and Luke 6:27-28.  It tells us to have a generous spirit towards those who persecute us, blessing them and not cursing, praying for them rather than against them.  Certainly, our persecutors are opposing the Lord, and they deserve cursing, but we are to have that generosity that prays for them, for their repentance and salvation, and that they might have the true blessings of Almighty God.

This verse differs grammatically from those around it, in that it includes verbs in the imperative mood, a direct command.  Perhaps this is because we can easily understand generosity to other believers, while a generous spirit towards persecutors is more difficult, and so the command is emphatic.  A more likely reason is simply that it is drawn from the imperative teachings of Christ, and Paul is using the wording of the Master.

This verse and the prior one are connected verbally by the use of dioko, but also conceptually, in that they both teach us to be prepared to give beyond what would naturally be considered the right of the recipient.  They are a unit, not isolated instructions.  Both verses teach generosity of spirit, a vital aspect of sincere, unhypocritical love.

Empathy (verse 15)

The Cambridge Dictionary Online defines empathy as “the ability to share someone else’s feelings or experiences by imagining what it would be like to be in their situation.”  That is not too far off what is described in verse 15.

Rejoicing with Rejoicing Ones, Weeping with Weeping Ones.  The Scripture doesn’t talk about “imagining what it would be like” as the dictionary does, but the idea of sharing joys and sorrows is certainly expressed here.  We are to love in such a way that we can begin to feel what others are feeling.

This Demonstrates our Care for Them.  When someone rejoices, and we rejoice with them, it often is because we value the same thing they do.  That is a blessing.  A friend phoned this week to tell me his wife is expecting a baby, and we rejoice, because we value children as blessed gifts from the Lord.  He shares that belief, and we rejoice in that together.  But empathy can go beyond that.  One of my sons supports a football team that, to be honest, I couldn’t care less about.  But he likes them, and if they ever win a championship, I’ll be very glad, just because it will bring him joy and I love him.  (Meanwhile, I tease him that I never have to worry about that happening :).)

When we rejoice with someone, and weep with someone, it says something very important.  I’m with you.  Whether I exactly feel the same way about this situation that you do, or not, I’m with you in it.  I’m on your side.  I care about you.  It’s part of loving sincerely.

One Caveat.  Not everyone “weeping” is really weeping.  Sometimes, people will tell us of their horrible experiences to gain our sympathy as a way of manipulating us.  They want us to do something for them, to give them something, to excuse their wrong behaviour, to make them feel important because of their great “sorrow”, etc.  “Weep with those who weep” does not mean “provide a crutch (emotional or otherwise) for bad behaviour.”  True love wants the best for a person, and it is rarely the best for a person to feed their addiction to emotional manipulation, to encourage them to let emotional sorrow rule their lives, or to communicate that horrible stories are a good way to get someone to give you something.  True empathy is an aspect of true love, but empathy is not the goal to overrule true love — it is only part of the picture of what true love is.

Humble-Minded (verse 16)

Paul uses another word-play in this verse, using forms of the word phren (“mind” or “understanding”) three times as he gives another aspect of love, humility towards one another.

Same-Minded Toward One Another.  Usually, when we encounter instructions in the Scripture to be same-minded, it is emphasising our unity, the fact that we are to agree in valuing those things which God values, desiring those things that God desires.  In this case, something different is in focus.  We are to be same-minded “one toward another”.  We are to all want the same things for one another.  We don’t want better things for ourselves than we want for others.  Our love for each other should manifest itself with wanting our brothers and sisters in Christ to have the same joys, the same victories, the same blessings that we want for ourselves.

Don’t Go for the Glory, Go with the Lowly.  Here is a double-barreled instruction — don’t be high-minded, looking for praise or glory for yourself, but “condescend to men of low estate.”  I remember some years ago, when I was playing football, it was a very common thing for some of the young men to “go for glory”.  Instead of making the easy and positive pass, there would be a sliver of daylight between the ball and the goal, and from 40 yards away he’d go for it.  The chances of even being on goal were slim, and the chances of the ball eluding the goalie were nil, but he would “go for glory” — glory for himself.  There’s little glory in a simple pass, but a goal from here?  That would be awesome!!!  We are not to be high-minded, thinking of ways we can “go for the glory” for ourselves.

On the contrary, we are to “condescend to men of low estate.”  When the KJV Bible was translated, “condescend” did not have the same negative connotations it has now.  Now, if you are “condescending”, you are seen as looking down on others and talking down to them, holding yourself above them.  That’s not the idea in this verse at all — quite the opposite.  It just means “go with” lowly men.  Be on their level.  Don’t try to hold yourself above those who are humble and lowly, because that is all you deserve to be, anyway, and that is what you should be — humble and lowly.  That is your proper place.  Don’t go for the glory, go with the lowly.  True love doesn’t exalt one’s self, but rather takes one’s place with the lowly.

Not Wise in Yourself.  This is the third instance of “mind” in this verse.  We are not to be wise-minded in ourselves and our pride.  This is reminiscent of Isaiah 5:21, which says, “Woe unto them that are wise in their own eyes, and prudent in their own sight!”  Perhaps the Holy Spirit brought that verse to Paul’s mind as he was writing.

The person who thinks he is wiser than those around him usually finds a way to let it be known.  The wiser we are in our own eyes and our own conceit, our own looking at ourselves, the more arrogant we are, and the less charitable we become to those who are “less wise than I the wise-minded one am.”

Pride is contrary to true love, whether it be the pride that wants glory, or the pride that wants better for ourselves than for others, or the pride that elevates one’s own wisdom.  When pride takes hold in our lives, any love that survives will be “dissimulated” (hypocritical and insincere) love.

Navigation note:   First in the series:  “Service” in Romans 12:1;  Previous article:  Inscribing the Arches (part one).  Next article:  Inscribing the Arches (part three).

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