3-D Chess / Noughts & Crosses

The Rulers

“He saved others; let him save himself, if he be Christ, the chosen of God.”

The Soldiers

If thou be the king of the Jews, save thyself.”

The Thief

If thou be Christ, save thyself and us.”

(from Luke 23:35-39)

The test:  if He was God, Jesus should save Himself.  He didn’t — He failed the test.

The Angel

“He shall save His people from their sins.”

(from Matthew 1:21)

Their test was the wrong test.
He wasn’t there to save Himself.
He was there to save His people.

You can’t set tests for God.

It is wrong to set tests for God.  We have no right to demand He act in a particular way, to insist He must do X, Y, and Z for us.  I have no right to appoint myself as His judge.

It is foolish to set tests for God.  We don’t have a clue.  The “tests” of Luke 23 show we might demand the exact opposite of what is necessary.  If He did what they demanded, we would have no Saviour.  He is playing chess, and we’re playing checkers.  Scratch that.  He is perfectly playing a million simultaneous games of 3-D chess, and we’re playing noughts & crosses (tic-tac-toe, X’s and O’s) and can’t even see the game board very well.

You can’t set tests for God.

Yesterday:  Luke’s Unique Account

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Luke’s Unique Account

Yesterday, I preached on Christ’s crucifixion as recorded in Luke 23.  Luke’s account has some significant differences from the other Gospel accounts, and I found it helpful to list them to get a better handle on what Luke was emphasising.

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On Grief

My cousin passed away yesterday.  Even though we knew it was coming, even though we had the opportunity to see him when we were in the States last October, this still hit me harder than I expected.

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Benefits for Cats

(My apologies to those who somehow received this post in a very incomplete form in your email yesterday.)

A woman was cleared of benefit fraud after failing to declare her £50K inheritance from her mother.  She spent the money on her mother’s cats and continued to receive benefits.

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Paying Tribute to a Lie

On Monday, I had the dubious pleasure of sitting in a waiting room for over an hour and having my ears afflicted by someone’s questionable choice of a 70s radio station.  I used to listen to the Carpenters back in the 70s, so when they played Karen Carpenter singing “Top of the World,” I knew the song, and I knew who it was, and I knew what happened.

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Biblical Blogging

Continuing to clear out my notes of things I’ve meant to get around to, here’s two articles on how we should interact on the ‘net if we are Christians.  First:

When it comes to the things we say on the internet, are we content to judge the sins of others without really considering how much our lust for attention, our pride and self-righteousness are coming in to play in our pontificating and posturing?

From God, Gossip, and Internet Discussion Boards, by Pastor Don Johnson writing at Proclaim & Defend.

Second, I’m sometimes disappointed by things from The Gospel Coalition.  However, in late August, Dr Bryan Chapell wrote something that was excellent in many respects, taking the Scripture in the form of a machete and slicing through the overgrown jungle of unbiblical speech that inhabits Christian websites.

The judgment of charity binds us not only to tell the truth but also to seek to interpret other’s statements and actions in the best light (Mt 7:12; 1 Cor 13:6-7). We are also obligated to protect the reputations of others against slander, innuendo, false implication, and even the damage to truth caused by inappropriate silence (Zech 8:16; Prv 17:15; 1 Tm 6:4; 2 Tm 4:16).

And:

The Bible does not allow us to publish what we think is true if we cannot prove it.

And:

For example, if we cannot prove the motive for an action, then we cannot publish speculations or assertions about motive without being guilty of spreading unsubstantiated gossip.

And:

Secular law will not allow the distributing information (even if it can be proven true) that damages without purpose—and neither will Scripture.

And:

Respectful communication is driven by the awareness that our comments and critiques are always directed toward those made in the image of God (Gn 1:26-27; Jas 3:9).

There is a lot more.  If you ever participate in on-line discussion, I hope you will read and consider these articles.

Dr Chapell has given us a very, very thorough Biblical treatment of how we should engage in these discussions and used the hammer of Scripture to pulverise many of the sorry excuses people use for ungodly behaviour.  I found his article very challenging.  He tells us what the Scripture says about how we should be behave.

Pastor Johnson’s article is an excellent companion to it because he challenges us to think about the heart issues that often lead us to violate those Scriptural principles.  Although I am sure these were written independently (Pastor Johnson’s article preceded the other by five days), they fit together beautifully.

Somewhat related previous posts:

Just Because…
Sound and Fury
Scorching the Truth
What WWW Means
A Thought for Internet Discussions
A Thousand More Words on Internet (and other) Communications
A Proverb for Today — Proverbs 6:16-19
A Proverb for Today — Proverbs 10:19
A Proverb for Today — Proverbs 18:13

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Intentional Sin is Costly

When you intentionally do what you know to be sin, you can get in a lot more trouble than you thought.  It doesn’t matter whether you know you are breaking the law or not, if you know you are sinning and you go ahead and do it.  Don’t expect sympathy for not knowing the law when you know you are sinning.

At least he admitted to what he had done, and admitted it was sin.  Whether that was because he is truly repentant, or because he simply got caught and recognises he can’t dodge it, is something for the One with  more omniscience than me to sort out.  But sadly, some so-called pastors, even when the evidence is incontrovertible will still deny what they’ve done.  Whether out of true repentance or bad motives, honestly admitting the sin is better than lying about it.

We can sit around and point our fingers at this man and say things about those who do such things, or we can actually take something profitable for ourselves from it.  As I said before, “How often in your life has a single sin led to various kinds of stupidity?”

Just don’t sin.  There is nothing more destructive.  It will always take you further than you intended.  You can either serve God or serve sin.  Don’t serve sin, just don’t do it.

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