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Attempts at Honesty

Reflections on the interplay of the Bible and Culture

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Tim Keller on Christian Preaching

Posted on October 19, 2016 Written by Mark McIntyre 1 Comment

PreachingChristians are either engaged in the act of preaching or will regularly hear preaching in their churches. While the following paragraphs are written with the intent of challenging those who preach, those of us who listen can also be encouraged by them.

“So there are two things we must do. As we preach, we are to serve and love the truth of God’s Word and also to serve and love the people before us. We serve the Word by preaching the test clearly and preaching the gospel every time. We reach the people by preaching to the culture and to the heart.

Then there is what God must do. He brings the Word home to our hearers through the ‘demonstration of the Spirit and of power’ (1 Corinthians 2:4). According to Paul you can preach with genuine spiritual power only if you offer Christ as a living reality to be encountered and embraced by those who listen. This means to preach with awe and wonder at the greatness of what we have in Christ. It means to exhibit an uncontrived transparency, showing evidence of a a heart that is being mended by the very truth you are presenting. It entails a kind of poise and authority rather an an insecure desire to please or perform. So your love, joy, peace, and wisdom must be evident as you speak. You should be something like a clear glass through which people can see a gospel-changed soul in such a way that they want it too, and so that they get a sense of God’s presence as well.

How do all these things happen? they all happen as we preach Christ. To preach the test truly and the gospel every time, to engage the culture and reach the heart, to cooperate with the Spirit’s mission i the world – we must preach Christ from all of Scripture.”

These paragraphs are taken from Tim Keller’s book, Preaching: Communicating Faith in an Age of Skepticism.

If these paragraphs are not descriptive of the preaching that you hear on a regular basis, then I challenge you to find a means of sitting under a preacher that does follow them.

Filed Under: Quotation

Thoughts on the upcoming election

Posted on October 18, 2016 Written by Mark McIntyre Leave a Comment

Election 2016For the first time in my adult life, I don’t like either candidate that the major parties have put forward for the office of President of the United States. I see more harm than good coming from either candidate being elected to that office.

I wish we could have a do-over for the primary elections, but alas we cannot.

So, what to do about it?

I don’t have a great answer to that. It seems that the only three options are:

  1. Pick whichever of the major candidates makes you less nauseous, hold your nose and vote for him/her.
  2. Pick a third party candidate as a protest vote (which does nothing to bring change in a two party system)
  3. Don’t vote at all

Of the three, at this point, option #1 seems the best to me, but I wouldn’t blame anyone for choosing one of the other two options.

But, the one thing that we should not do is fret or panic over this.

I challenge you to search the letters of Paul in the New Testament and find any complaint, lament or critique of the government. You will search in vain to find one. Paul wasted no ink on the Roman government. Zip. Zilch. Nada.

When he mentions the government at all, it is to encourage Christians to obey the government.

Here is the interesting tidbit in this. Do you know the name of the Emperor who was in power when Paul wrote his letters (with the possible exception of the book of Galatians)? That Emperor was Nero. When Paul appealed to Caesar, he was appealing to Nero. Yes, that Nero, who had no sympathy for Christians and the one who ultimately had Paul killed.

My point is that no matter who wins the election, God remains in control and his plan for us (individually and collectively) cannot be thwarted.

Taking this perspective will allow us to do two things:

  1. Let go of the panic about our less liked candidate getting into office. The world will not end if your preferred candidate does not win.
  2. Allow us to take stock of the candidates more objectively. There is much to criticize in what we know about both candidates. We don’t have to turn a blind eye to the shortcomings of the one we would prefer to be in office. We are called to trust God and to speak the truth in love.

God will not abandon his church not matter who is in office. Remember, the promise to Peter was that God will build the church, if he did so under Nero, he can certainly do so under Hillary or Donald.

I’m not saying that it won’t be painful or disruptive, but it will not be outside the plan of God.

Take a deep breath, pick your candidate and trust God for the rest.

Filed Under: Commentary Tagged With: Clinton, Donald, election, Hillary, Nero, Trump

On the Command to Keep the Sabbath

Posted on October 17, 2016 Written by Mark McIntyre 1 Comment

Sabbath
Copyright: enterline / 123RF Stock Photo

Not long ago, I was challenged to clarify my thoughts with regard to the Fourth Commandment of the Decalogue. The Fourth Commandment is found in Exodus 20:8 where it says, “Remember the sabbath day, to keep it holy” (NASB). The results of my investigation appear below.

I apologize in advance for the length of this post; it is more than twice as long as what is normally published here. I tried to be brief, but did not want to leave out what I considered important to the discussion.

The first question

The first question that needs to be addressed in considering the fourth commandment is whether the command is strictly a part of the Mosaic Law or if the practice of Sabbath predates the receiving of the law on Mt. Sinai.

Some have argued that with the initiation of the church age, the Sabbath is no longer relevant to Christian life and practice. Lewis Sperry Chafer is one example of an author in my library that would take this position.

There are two main arguments argue against Chafer’s position. The first is the language of Genesis 2:3 and the second is the inclusion of the Fourth Commandment in the Decalogue.

Genesis 2:3

In the NASB, this verse reads, “Then God blessed the seventh day and sanctified it, because in it He rested from all His work which God had created 1and made.” The natural implication is that by sanctifying the day (declaring it holy or set apart – the idea of separation) the seventh day is different from the other six.

While Scripture does not give specific instances of Sabbath observation before the Mosaic Law, the implication is that God established a principle that the seventh day is to be set apart for rest and worship from the beginning of time.

The Decalogue

The Ten Commandments are generally considered to be a succinct overview of the moral law. The moral law being such that it is applicable to all men, without distinction of race, culture or gender. Few, if any, conservative scholars would conclude that the other nine commands in the Decalogue have been abrogated by the death and resurrection of Jesus. For this reason, I find it impossible to believe that the command to honor the Sabbath is any different than the other nine.

Based on these two arguments, I conclude that the Fourth Commandment is part of the moral law that is universally applicable to all men.

Sabbath in the Church

The Apostle Paul tells us that we have died to the law and that the ceremonial law as presented by Moses is no longer operative for the Christian. From this, we conclude that any rules regarding the Sabbath that are part of the ceremonial law are no longer applicable to Christians.

But how do we maintain that Sabbath keeping is part of the moral law but the Sabbath regulations stipulated by God through Moses no longer apply? How can we separate which commands regarding the Sabbath are ceremonial and which are moral? Or to put it another way, how can we keep the fourth commandment without falling into legalism against which Paul argues in the book of Galatians?

Help from John Calvin

In his Institutes, Calvin says this about the Forth Commandment, “Still there can be no doubt, that, on the advent of our Lord Jesus Christ, the ceremonial part of the commandment was abolished. (Book II, Chapter VIII, Paragraph 31)” He uses Col. 2:16-17 in support of this statement. In comment upon this passage, Calvin writes that “Christians, therefore, should have nothing to do with a superstitious observance of days.”

Calving goes on to say that even though the Mosaic laws surrounding Sabbath keeping are nullified, there are two things that should be practiced by Christians to fulfill the moral law associated with this commend. He writes,

“there is still room among us, first, to assemble on stated days for the hearing of the word, the breaking of the mystical bread, and public prayer: and secondly, to give our servants and laborers relaxation from labor. It cannot be doubted that the Lord provided for both in the commandment of the Sabbath” (Paragraph 32).

Help from Charles Hodge

In his discussion of the Fourth Commandment in his Systematic Theology, Hodge writes:

“It is admitted that the precepts of the Decalogue bind the Church in all ages; while the specific details contained in the book of Moses, designed to point out the way in which the duty they enjoined was then to be performed, are no longer in force. The fifth commandment still binds children to obey their parents; but he Jewish law giving fathers the power of life and death over their children, is no longer in force. The seventh commandment forbids adultery, but he ordeal enjoined for the trial of a woman suspected of that crime, is a thing of the past. The same principle applies to the interpretation of the fourth commandment. The command itself is still in force; the Mosaic laws respecting the mode of its observance have passed away with the economy to which they belonged. “

Hodge goes on to give two rules to guide our thinking about what is and what is not appropriate with regard to how the Sabbath is to be observed. He writes:

“The first is, the design of the commandment. What is consistent with that design is lawful; what is inconsistent with it is unlawful. The second rule is to be found in the precepts and example of our Lord and of his Apostles.”

He identifies two main categories of what is consistent with the design of the Sabbath. Here, he follows Calvin. The first is “rest from all worldly cares and avocations.” The second is that “God should be properly worshipped, his word duly studied and taught, and the soul brought under the influence of the things unseen and eternal.”

With regard to the second rule, Hodge provides three case studies. The first is based on Christ’s statement that “the Sabbath was made for man.” From this he concludes that the life, health and well-being of a man are higher ends than any regulation and therefore doing good to others is in keeping with the moral law.

The second case study is where Jesus states that “the priests in the temple profane the Sabbath and are blameless (Matt. 7:5).” Hodge states, “From this we learn that whatever is necessary for the due celebration of religious worship or for attendance theron, is lawful on the Sabbath.”

The third case study is based on the story found in Luke 14 where Jesus attends a dinner on the Sabbath. From which Hodge concludes, “Christ, therefore, thought right, in the prosecution of his work, to attend on such entertainments on the Sabbath.”

These are some examples of how the example of Jesus should inform our understanding of what it means to keep the moral command regarding the Sabbath.

My understanding of the Sabbath

From all this, I conclude that the moral implications from the Fourth Commandment are still valid for the church today but the ceremonial aspects are not. Therefore, I find three categories in which our obedience to the Fourth Command should be comprised:

  1. Rest
  2. Assembling together for worship and instruction
  3. Doing good works for the benefit of others

The danger is that we can become legalistic in our application of these categories to ourselves and others. An activity that one person finds restorative, another may think to be in violation of the principle of rest. Each of us should be certain of his own calling with regard to keeping the Sabbath and allow freedom to others to form their own convictions.

Secondly, there is a difference of opinion among conservative scholars with regard to how Col. 2:16-17 should be applied to the practice of both individual believers and the church at large. This difference of opinion should caution us against formation of rules regarding Sabbath keeping.

Thirdly, there is silence in the epistles about how the moral law regarding the Sabbath should be applied in the church, therefore care should be taken in creating and applying rules.

Filed Under: Bible Reflection Tagged With: commandment, rest, Sabbath

If you are discouraged about church . . .

Posted on October 13, 2016 Written by Mark McIntyre 2 Comments

Discouraged about Church
Copyright: enterline / 123RF Stock Photo

If you are discouraged about church, it may be that your expectations are too high.

Church is not a gathering of the mature. Church is not a gathering of the wise. Church is not a gathering of the beautiful.

Church is a gathering of those who have been redeemed by Jesus Christ.

A long while back (it was the 70’s, I think), there was a popular phrase going around in churches that said, “Please be patient with me, God is not finished with me yet.” The point was to remind us that we are all works in progress.

Not only are those who attend church works in progress, but so are the leaders. The question is not whether the leaders are flawed. The question what are they doing about those flaws? Or more correctly, what are they allowing God to do about those flaws?

Does the leader of your church allow others to speak into his blind spots? Do the elders encourage members and visitors to provide feedback? Does the pastor give a sense that God is actively working in his life to transform his understanding and his behavior?

At all times, we have to keep in mind that the way we want church to be is not necessarily what God wants for us. God is less interested in our comfort than he is in our growth in relationship to him.

Also, our background and gifting may see things in the church that should be changed, but the church may not be ready for those changes. Do you trust God enough to bring about those changes in his time? Will you be content to pray for those changes until he does bring them about?

There is a caveat that I should bring up. The understanding that we are a work in progress does not give us an excuse for spiritual or intellectual laziness. The fact that there are so many commands in the New Testament (verbs in the imperative mood) is an indication that effort on our part is required to achieve progress in the Christian life.

We come to church and find imperfection and by being there we add to the pile.

But that is OK. God is powerful enough to use our imperfection to accomplish his plan.

The point of church is not to parade our perfections, but to solicit the help of others as we navigate our own imperfections. We help and encourage our brothers and sisters along the way.

Filed Under: Christian Life Tagged With: Church, discouraged, expectations

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