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Showing posts with label redemption. Show all posts
Showing posts with label redemption. Show all posts

Consistency

We humans are remarkable creatures in many ways, not all of them good. In particular, we have an amazing capacity to rationalize our morality, seeing others' shortcomings and ignoring our own. It is difficult to “judge rightly,” as the Bible calls it. (John 7:24)

Well targeted was Christ’s command to pull the log out of our own eyes so that we can see clearly the speck in our brother’s. We even judge each other on judging. We quote, “Judge not, lest ye be judged,” but fail to remember the rest of the quote that says we will be judged by the standard we use to judge others.

ADVENTures Before Christmas, Week 2


Each week of Advent has a number of symbolisms, and the following table will be filled as the weeks progress.

Week
Scene
Attitude
People
Action
1st
Journey on a Donkey
Hope
Isaiah/OT Prophets
Expectation/Prophecy
2nd
Bethlehem
Peace
John the Baptist
Annunciation
3rd




4th





Last week I mentioned how Advent starts off in a spirit of penitence. Not only is purple symbolic of royalty, it is symbolic of suffering. Yet, the attitude of this second week of Advent is peace. How do these reconcile?

Foolishness


Sometimes (often) we humans are humourously pathetic. How often have you seen a child or a pet act good in front of you, but you can tell there is mischief in their mind that they plan to jump into as soon as your back is turned?

We adults are no different.

It came to mind tonight about how recently, I had in mind to do something I knew I shouldn’t, but wanted God’s help for something else, so put the first out of mind long enough to pray for the help and get that task done, then went back to entertaining the original thought, as if God could be tricked.

You just want to laugh at the foolishness of it—not so much the choices themselves, but the sheer transparency of it. Ridiculous. We adults may be more sophisticated than kids, but we play the same juvenile games. The worst of it is how we lie to ourselves that we aren’t doing it.

The dirty little secret is that we all do it. No one is innocent of playing these mind games. And all of us think we can get away with it at least sometimes. Fortunately, like a good and loving parent, God forgives both insults (and make no mistake, they are grave insults against His character)—the sin and the hubris.

Thanks be to Christ for the grace that daily redeems us from our own conceit.

SDG

The Consolation Prize of Heaven


“On his arrival, Jesus found that Lazarus had already been in the tomb for four days. Now Bethany was less than two miles from Jerusalem, and many Jews had come to Martha and Mary to comfort them in the loss of their brother. When Martha heard that Jesus was coming, she went out to meet him, but Mary stayed at home. “Lord,” Martha said to Jesus, “if you had been here, my brother would not have died.  But I know that even now God will give you whatever you ask.”
Jesus said to her, “Your brother will rise again.”
Martha answered, “I know he will rise again in the resurrection at the last day.”
Jesus said to her, “I am the resurrection and the life. The one who believes in me will live, even though they die; and whoever lives by believing in me will never die. Do you believe this?”
John 11:17-26

Based on the above context, how do you read Christ’s question at the end of the passage?

One possible interpretation is illustrated by the following story. A woman loses her husband of many years. As she is grieving, Jesus appears, puts His arms around her shoulders comfortingly and says, “My daughter, I am so sorry for your loss. To help, I will introduce you to another man, who will please you so greatly that you will completely forget about the husband you have lost.”

Reboot


My laptop is dying a slow death. The optical drive (CD/DVD) doesn’t work, it starts up about half the time and takes forever the other half, it runs too hot, and today I discovered that the built-in webcam no longer ‘exists’ as far as the computer is concerned.

It is old enough and I’ve made enough upgrades that HP doesn’t want to touch it. I scoured the web most of the afternoon looking for help on the webcam issue because I need it for a project. Found a users forum where two people have the same problem with the same machine and no solutions.

The Loser Celebrates

The Prodigal Son, by Rembrandt van Rijn, circa 1668,The Hermitage Muesum, St. Petersburg Russia, hermitagemuseum.org
I have spent several recent posts discussing the justice and judgment aspects of God’s personality because they are there and all too real. But if it ended there, we miss the climax to the story. God IS just, and His moral character leaves no room for our selfishness. However, for some bizarre reason, He still loves us with a reckless, crazy abandon and therefore He is unable to just leave us to our fate, but pursues and searches for us, wooing us back to Himself. And when we have reconciliation, God celebrates.

Abiding


John 15:1-17 talks about abiding in Christ:
“I am the true vine, and my Father is the gardener. He cuts off every branch in me that bears no fruit, while every branch that does bear fruit he prunes so that it will be even more fruitful. You are already clean because of the word I have spoken to you. Remain in me, as I also remain in you. No branch can bear fruit by itself; it must remain in the vine. Neither can you bear fruit unless you remain in me.
“I am the vine; you are the branches. If you remain in me and I in you, you will bear much fruit; apart from me you can do nothing. If you do not remain in me, you are like a branch that is thrown away and withers; such branches are picked up, thrown into the fire and burned. If you remain in me and my words remain in you, ask whatever you wish, and it will be done for you. This is to my Father’s glory, that you bear much fruit, showing yourselves to be my disciples.
“As the Father has loved me, so have I loved you. Now remain in my love. If you keep my commands, you will remain in my love, just as I have kept my Father’s commands and remain in his love. I have told you this so that my joy may be in you and that your joy may be complete. My command is this: Love each other as I have loved you. Greater love has no one than this: to lay down one’s life for one’s friends. You are my friends if you do what I command. I no longer call you servants, because a servant does not know his master’s business. Instead, I have called you friends, for everything that I learned from my Father I have made known to you. You did not choose me, but I chose you and appointed you so that you might go and bear fruit—fruit that will last—and so that whatever you ask in my name the Father will give you. This is my command: Love each other.

This is one of the densest passages of Jesus’ words, so I want to focus on abiding. This translation renders the word abiding as “remaining in me,” and variants. One of the most striking parts of the passage is the use of passive verbs, primarily ‘bear,’ and ‘remain.’

“Bearing fruit” is a passive activity. A branch is where the fruit is located, but the nutrients and supplies come from the roots via the trunk and from the leaves. This seems to say that our job is to be the conduit of God’s work, rather than straining to ‘produce fruit’ like it was up to us.

Similarly, a branch doesn’t have to work to remain attached to the plant. It can neither leave nor stay of its own accord. Remaining implies continuing in the state in which you find yourself at the time the command is given.

Nearly all active work in this passage is done by God and Christ. Pruning, speaking, throwing away, burning, choosing are all activities Jesus is reserving for the Godhead.

That said, there are two active verbs given for us to perform:  love and keep (obey) His commands. Yet these are given fully and deliberately in the context of our abiding, which is His primary command in the passage. Thus, the ability to follow the active commands comes from following the passive ones.

What’s the point? Someone has quipped that we are called ‘human beings,’ not ‘human doings.’ The command to abide recognizes this, and in a way that no other religion, faith system, or worldview has—that it is God who is the active agent of our redemption and sanctification, not us. Just as a surgeon does not need (nor want!) our help during surgery to remove a tumor, God wants us to get out of His way to remove our sin nature. Once the surgeon has permission from us to cut, our job is to give him complete free reign to do it, and any resistance from us makes the job harder on both him and us. In the same way, once we invite Jesus into our lives as our Saviour, we need to let Him work. He did all of the work on Calvary, and now we need to let the work be completed in us.

Surely it isn’t that easy! Yes, and no. Yes, in the sense that there really is no thing that we can do to improve our position spiritually apart from His gift of salvation. No, because that goes completely against our feeling that we have to do something to earn back favor. But there isn’t. Scripture is abundantly clear on that point. The Laws and commandments provide the proof that we can’t attain to His standards. We are impotent, and our efforts actually get in His way of redeeming us.

So what are we to do? There must be something. Well, yes, but it isn’t what we would expect. Healing and growth occur not by our willing it to happen, but by taking care of ourselves—eating right and exercise, and growth and healing follow from that. Once we are alive (born) we maintain it and the internal systems largely function on their own. However, once our rebirth happens, we are born spiritually as part of a larger organism, union with Christ and other believers. Thus, our maintenance is largely more passive than in biological maintenance. The key activity for maintenance is to abide—to allow sustenance into ourselves and pass on to others in the organism. We do this through things such as Scripture reading, worship and maintaining fellowship with other believers.

But what about evangelism, ministry and all the other ‘oughts?’ If anesthesia isn’t available, a surgeon has the patient distracted by other things, so she can work in a more unobstructed manner. Since God can’t easily just knock us out and cut out our spiritual tumor of sin, He distracts us by focusing our attention on Him and others. Not only do these things distract us from the transformation He’s working in our lives, but it also aids Him, because as we focus externally, we effectively relax our grasp on ourselves. Just as unclenching muscles allows a surgeon to do less damage as the surgery progresses and makes tissues easier to separate from each other, as we focus on others and let go of our agenda, our selfish interests, it is easier for God to separate them from us, and we miss them less when they are gone.

To put it another way, from behavioural psychology, we know that in order to take something away from someone, we must replace it with something else, and hopefully with something better. Thus God removes sin and gives righteousness. He replaces selfish indulgence with selflessness. However, He does not take away self, but redeems it. We are still us, but a re-formed us.

Here’s another cool thing—God is incredibly efficient. When He has us outward focused to complete the redemption of our spirits, He is also working through us to do the same in others, so that His redemption is ‘multiplexed’ if you will, knitting souls back together dynamically and from multiple angles so that the new whole is stronger. It doesn’t matter, really, that we don’t see it with our own experience—We see healing and growth over time, usually through ‘snapshots’ rather than visible changes. In fact, we are more apt to notice it the less we concentrate on it.

Thus, our spiritual growth is accelerated the less we focus on it and the impeded the more we focus on it, which is why Christ calls us to abide, instead of calling us to grow.

In a practical sense, then, this can be achieved by living our lives daily—doing the things we need to do, and open to special instructions when they come, but not trying to ‘over-spiritualize’ things. In fact, the better we get at abiding, the easier it is to see spiritual opportunities He wants to show us.

It is like being an expert driver. A good driver is focused on the road ahead, but also has an high awareness of what is going on around the vehicle in all directions, so that if a sudden change is needed, the driver already knows the available options and can act immediately without having to deliberate. As we are better at abiding, we can be focused on whatever our daily task is, but also aware when a spiritually significant opportunity arises and hear the Lord’s voice directing us to meet it.

A plant doesn’t plan out a strategy to turn its leaves toward the sun—it is aware of where the sun is and moves to maximize light exposure to the leaves, and tracks with the sun. Abiding is being aware of God’s actions around us and moving with them. This is achieved best when we aren’t worrying about if we are tracking with Him or when we aren’t too busy being our own sunlight. When we are tracking with Him, then praying and asking Him to act are actually responses to what He is doing and the direction He is moving, and it becomes a dialogue.

Let me close with this thought. Abiding is passive in a real sense, but there is a reason why Jesus compared us to branches on a vine as opposed to something like an algae bloom. A vine is a single organism, with distinct parts, that is fast growing, flexible, with a structure, and works together for the benefit of the whole. An algae bloom is a chaosed mass of single celled organisms that once formed compete with each other and are solely concerned with their own individual survival and choke off life around it.

Someone once described the Christian as a glove. A glove is completely limp and useless until a hand is inserted into it, at which point the glove becomes as strong and useful as the hand that wields it. So there is a difference between the passivity of abiding and the passivity of apathy, lifelessness, and abdication. It is a mistake to think we have to do enough to earn salvation and reward, and it is a mistake to think we can get away with ignoring the world around us and live in a little bubble unaffected by (and unaffecting) our surroundings.

Abiding is allowing His strength and His purpose to move us and move through us rather than ginning up our strength and purpose. His Life produces much better fruit than ours can, so it is better that we bear His fruit than produce our own.

SDG

Follow up to “I Want Blood!”

About 10 days ago, I attempted to explain, in response to a reader’s question, why God needs a blood sacrifice, and why it had to be Jesus Christ. I also promised to consult with folks who’ve studied theology formally to get an ‘official’ perspective and follow up. I asked four pastors and a friend about the issue, all of whom I respect highly for their thoughtful responses as opposed to ‘party line’ autonomic responses. I have heard back from four of the five, two by email and two by conversation, and the summary is that all of us pretty much have the same understanding. Tonight, I will include the two written responses, edited for clarity.

My current pastor was the first to respond, hurriedly and briefly due to giving his kids a break in caring for a sick grandchild. His first thoughts are as follows:

1. The question of sacrifice is not a "difference maker" for God. By that I mean sacrifice does not change or make a difference in God, There is no need for him to sacrifice. It is a response of man to God as you have indicated in your house analogy. He did create (sole mover) all things but the point of the sacrifice is not God's need to sacrifice. It is man's need of redemption that creates the need for sacrifice. God created us as free, moral choosing beings, and it is our choice to respond to God appropriately, in this case sacrifice, not God's NEED to make a sacrifice.
2. Jesus was not sacrificed by God. Jesus CHOSE to endure the cross and crucifixion for our sins John 15: 12-17; John 19:8-11; John 1:1-5; Philippians 2:5-11  (just a few references) {RJW Note:  yes, Jesus is God, in the person of the Son, but was not ‘made’ to sacrifice Himself by God the Father. I know, I know, the whole Trinitarian idea of 3 Persons yet 1 Being is a tough one. For purposes of this discussion, think of the Trinity as 3 independent persons whose will is completely unified in inseparable purpose. Yeah, it’s still clear as mud. Let’s move on and see if things clear up as we move downstream.}
3. I am going to give you a web address below just for some reading. Like all things on the internet, I don't agree with everything in this response (even most things) but it is a good foundation on the background of the sacrificial system and the need for sacrifice. http://www.crivoice.org/sacrifice.html

I will try to get more from him this week. The second respondent was my pastor in another town, and a former engineer with a passion for thinking things through. He and I are a lot alike, though he would cringe at the idea! :P He says:

Before getting to the blood sacrifice itself, a couple of preliminary remarks:
(1) We must begin with God's character. If He is righteous, just, merciful, gracious, holy, etc., whatever he does must align with His character, or He is no more than the mythological pantheon of gods who are not consistent, and who are not perfectly righteous, etc. If His character is not perfect, it seems foolish to worship Him other than in fear of what He might do to us.
(2) We must understand the seriousness of sin. Sin is intentionally violating God's character (e.g., if we lie, we act contrary to His character of truthfulness). And, we must understand that we are fallen creatures to our core (i.e., we sin because we are sinners, not the other way around). We sin often and repeatedly.
(3) Now, because of God's character and our character, a "great gulf" exists. As Habakkuk cries out to God, "You are of purer eyes than to behold evil, And cannot look on wickedness... " (Hab. 1:13). God must do something about this gulf. He can
(1) ignore it, and consign us to our fate,
(2) ignore it, and pretend nothing really happened (essentially, universalism), or
(3) deal with it justly.
We know because of His character, he cannot choose either option (1) or (2)
(4) The next key issue is, how serious is the crime? Even if we ignore the death penalty in our culture, a person who murders once is usually sentenced to life imprisonment ("usually" allows for the limitations of our legal system). So, is the scope of the crime God must deal with greater than or less than a single murder? I would argue it is much greater because (a) we ultimately are replacing God with ourselves (idolatry) and (b) Jesus tells us that if we hate another, we've committed murder in our heart. So, I would argue, the crime is much greater, so it is reasonable, based on our own morals, to expect the penalty to be much higher. So,
(5) To satisfy His justice, the penalty for the sin must be paid. At the same time, God is gracious and merciful, so how can He act to perfectly satisfy all His attributes? The cross - Jesus endured the full brunt of our sin, thus the price has been paid. Because he is God, He alone could endure the high price. So, in His death, the price was fully paid legitimately. Because he was man, He legally represented mankind and could substitute Himself for us. His blood, ultimately, implies a life was given as penalty for the severe nature and penalty of the crimes (sin). But, in Jesus, the blood is not the end - the price was fully paid, but Jesus alone, as the sinless sin sacrifice, was raised from the dead. A life was paid because of God's justice, He was raised "for our justification", i.e., showing God's perfect graciousness.

All "blood sacrifices" prior to Jesus portray the ultimate sacrifice of Jesus, but could not pay the required price because the sacrifice was not of a perfect being and was not of a legitimate substitute for man. The blood sacrifice symbolized, however, the high requirement God's justice demands for our sinfulness. The ones making the sacrifice realized (or should have!) that a life was required for life.

I hope this is of help to folks. If there is interest, as I hear more, I’ll share it. Like I mentioned above, the two with whom I discussed this in person shared similar thoughts.

SDG

Repairing the Unfinished Masterpiece


This evening, I went over to some friends’ to tutor their 8th grade daughter in prep for a physical science test. The assignment was a simple fill-in-the-blank worksheet with the answers scattered through the textbook chapter. It was genuinely simple and mostly straightforward, but she was really struggling with it.

As I helped her by showing how to find the answers, I was trying to figure out the source of her trouble. I realized that this kind of assignment could sort of be compared to a treasure hunt. I asked her if she liked treasure hunts and she said, “not really.” Ahhh.

When she was out of the room, I asked her mom what the girl’s strengths were, apart from the swimming team I knew she was on. Turns out she’s very artistic with a good eye for color, design, fashion, audio/visual—pretty much anything creative.

Thus, when we finished the worksheet, I complemented her on some of the touches she had her parents make in designing their kitchen remodel and other things I knew she had done. Then, I sympathized with her lack of interest in science, and tried to help her see that eventually, what she learned in science would help her understand materials and colors even better, and that what she now knew intuitively, she would understand later more deeply and it would help her talents shine more brightly. She smiled, but it may have just been an effort to placate me.

Nonetheless, now that I understand her better, I think it will help me pitch the science at a more interesting level for her, and she will hopefully struggle less.

We all have different talents, and different kinds of intelligence, with a different balance of skills and intuitions. One of the keys to educational breakthroughs is to find each student’s nugget of strength and help them see how the lesson will guide them to their mother lode. It’s much easier one-on-one, and nearly impossible to do on the wide scale of the mega classes we often teach at the undergrad level. Still, being aware that there are different styles of learning and different priorities for learning can make us better educators.

Interestingly, Scripture has taught this for thousands of years. Jesus treated Mary and Martha differently when they said nearly identical words to Him. The trials and travails of saints throughout Scripture, and God’s interaction with each of them reveal a Father who knows His children intimately and meets them where they are, to bring them where He desires them to be.

Being Christlike is not some cookie cutter image of a felt board Jesus—it is the full expression of our individuality in honor of His creativity strengthened by a character redeemed from sin.

Imagine if you will, a masterpiece painting in progress, but with a rotten or soiled canvas. God’s redemptive power both finishes the unique painting and restores the canvas underneath so the whole is sound and all it was Intended to be. He completes and repairs together, both sanctification and redemption are His aims. And He accomplishes what He sets out to do.

SDG

Universalism?

Yesterday, I suggested that God gives some information to some folks and not the complete story, then gives other, but equally incomplete information to others, with the idea that we pool our knowledge to find more complete understanding and thus bring glory to God. It is an understandable step, then, from that to ‘all roads to God are one,’ so that the exclusivity of the Gospel is weakened.

I do not take that step.

Rather, I see the revelation of God (the Scriptures) to the people of Israel as the linchpin or key to the general revelations that the rest of the world’s cultures have been given. Without something to use as an anchor or framework to hold human knowledge and understanding together, we face the certainty of getting things put together incorrectly, and increasing conflict when the pieces don’t fit together.

I do not believe it is an accident that God placed Israel in the Middle East, near the cradle of civilization, at the crossroads of three continents, so that every culture, whether through trade or war, had to go through that area to reach elsewhere. Israel is at the heart of information exchange for the vast majority of human history, leaving the opportunity for the Jews to witness to the special revelation of God, and in turn apply it to the wisdom and understanding of the nations, and re-disseminate it back to them.

Did they take advantage of the opportunity? Not so well, but not so incompletely either, as their influence has been so much larger than one postage stamp sized country has ever had a right to.

Not only are they placed strategically, but God chose that place for His incarnation, and at a time when the dominance of the Romans lead to an overall peace like the world had never seen, the Pax Romana, with good roads to facilitate a quick spread of the message. There was relative peace, which left people with the luxury of time to consider higher things than mere survival, and the freedom to travel relatively unobstructedly throughout the known world to share it.

Finally, God in the Scriptures repeatedly declares His intent to redeem nations, tribes and tongues; in short, cultures, wisdom, knowledge and understanding. Perhaps, then, we as Christians need to do more listening to others, and filter what we hear through the Scriptures and the indwelt Spirit. Perhaps God is less concerned with conversion and more with redemption. Perhaps if we trusted God’s leading more, and feared going astray less, the power of the Gospel would be more evident, and we would see what real transformation looks like.

Perhaps.

SDG