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Tuesday, February 17, 2015

Jesus the Irritator or God's Unkept Promises

Do you have people that irritate you? Some co-worker or neighbor or even a family member that knows how to push your buttons. They just know what to say to bug you, raise your blood pressure just a little and tempt you to say something better left unsaid. Have you ever thought about how irritating Yeshua (Jesus) was? He knew what people thought and knew just what to say to get a rise out of them. And He wasn't particular. He irritated pretty much everyone at one point or another. Sometimes our lack of understanding keeps us from seeing just how provocative He was during His ministry here on earth. But before we get there we need to address the foundation that leads to this particular confrontation, this particularly irritating exchange with the Sadducees.It deals with God's unkept promises. 

I have heard it said and have reminded people many times that Yahweh and Yeshua are completely reliable. God never fails, He always keeps His promises. It is a comfort and something to hang on to when things seem a bit on the dark side. When life seems unfair or spinning out of control it is always good to know that God will always keep His promises to you. He is not fickle; He does not change, and many of His promises are unconditional. They are based on His sovereign integrity. We can depend on Him and rest in that truth. So what do we do when His Word says He didn't keep His promises? Unconditional promises, bound by a covenant of His design that are then not kept. How do we deal with such apparent horrific news?  Let me explain what I am talking about. The problem is recorded for us in Hebrews Chapter 11. It is a wonderful passage about the remarkable faithfulness of God's servants. Verse 13 says, "All these died in faith (or faithfulness) not having received the promises." Now I know it says they saw them afar off, but seeing from a distance and receiving are two different things.  This passage says they did not receive them.

In Genesis 12 the Lord calls out to Abram and tells him to get out of his country and to go to land God would show him. God promises to make him a great nation with a great name. A great promise. The Promise is of a land that is to be his, the Land of Canaan. This promise is reiterated numerous times. Here are a couple of examples. Genesis 50:24, "... But God will surely visit you and bring you out of this land to the land which he swore to Abraham, to Issac and to Jacob." God says that they will go to their ancestors as well but the promise said, they, Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob would get the land. Exodus 6:3-4, "I appeared to Abraham, to Isaac, and to Jacob, as God Almighty, but by my name, Yahweh, I was not known to them. I have established My covenant with them, to give them the land of Canaan, the land of their pilgrimage, in which they were strangers." God gave His covenant to Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, who never received the promise. It does not say to "you" or their decedents, it says it is to be given to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. A covenant from God that was not kept. So how do we deal with this and be honest to the text?

Fast forward to Matthew 22 where the Pharisees and Sadducees are taking shots at Messiah. Jesus has been irritating them with the things He has been teaching. The Sadducees denied the supernatural. They didn't believe in angels, most miracles, or the resurrection. Their chief theological opponents were the Pharisees, who believed all these were true. The Sadducees set up an absurd scenario about seven brothers who each die, passing the wife on to the next brother; then she dies. They ask Yeshua whose wife she will be in the resurrection. Messiah responds, "Concerning the resurrection of the dead, have you not read what was spoken to you by God saying, 'I am the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac and he God of Jacob' ? God is not the God of the dead but of the living" (Mt. 22:31-32). If you are a Sadducee your are saying, "Ouch" because Yeshua just shot you with an argument from the Pharisees, your arch enemies in the theological world. 

Most of us miss the irritating barb because we don't spend a lot of time reading the Talmud, an ancient Jewish commentary. Here you find Rabbi Simai, a Pharisee, arguing for the resurrection based on the land promises. God has a covenant promise with Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob for them to receive the land of Canaan. They did not receive the promise, just as we read in Hebrews 11, therefore they must raise from the dead to yet receive the promise at some future date. The God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob must receive the land for God to be true, so they must rise from the dead. There must be a resurrection from the dead. Like Rabbi Simai, we too believe that Yahweh and His Son always keep Their promises. Jesus uses the Pharisee's argument to poke the Sadducees concerning the resurrection. How irritating can you get.

Perhaps, just perhaps, Rabbi Simai has something here. We know that all believers will be resurrected, and that includes Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. It appears that God's resurrected followers will be with Him for one thousand years here on earth. So perhaps the promises will yet be fulfilled. Perhaps the covenant to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, will be realized in the days ahead. Seems reasonable, if we believe that God really does keep His promises. It gives us a little more confidence in the God of the covenant promises. Even if we don't see them being fulfilled at this moment. If this is so for Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, then the promises to us will be received, the covenants we partake in will be honored. God is trustworthy, even if He is pretty irritating at times. 

Friday, February 6, 2015

Are You an Amoeba Christian? or "Twern't Me"

What is it in your life that just nags at your heart? One of those things that you know the answer to, but don't take the needed steps to resolve. It doesn't have to be a big thing or some "gross" sin. Yet it is there, and the more you try to ignore it the more the Spirit points out the flaw. You observe it in others and see it in the mirror. And to add to the discomfort, others don't see the issue and are seemingly content in where they are, not understanding the danger in which they place themselves. They don't see the longing in God's heart to make them so much more than they are. Now back to you and me.  We know the truth. We know the blessing. We have experienced God's pleasure in the truth, yet somehow we prefer the desert. We prefer the dry and barren wilderness over the refreshing truth God has revealed in our spirit and through His Word. For me, I even know why the desert is so appealing and why it is so dangerous, yet I find myself there all too often, even when I know it grieves God's heart. The truth is, I want to be an amoeba Christian, An amoeba Follower of Messiah. I want to ignore God's design.

This is not the first time I have addressed this issue, and it is likely not the last. It is so deeply ingrained in our culture and world view that it is just really hard to overcome. We dabble at the edges of reality but avoid immersing ourselves in God's truth. Recently I was reminded of the great danger we place ourselves in when we take on the amoeba role. The amoeba is a single celled, self sufficient organism. It contentedly slithers around absorbing nutrients and occasionally bumps into other amoebas. I first remember observing them in a drop of swamp water on a slide, through a microscope, in biology class. It was pretty cool to see how much life was in a single drop of pond scum. They all seemed quite content just sort of flowing through the ooze that was their world. All too often we, as followers of Messiah, take on the characteristics of the amoeba. We ooze through our spiritual lives absorbing nutrients and occasionally bump into other amoeba believers on Sundays or at church socials. But for the most part, we are content to be our self sufficient selves. Oh we may teach a class or sing or even lead a Bible study, but our cell walls are up and firmly in tact. There is no real connection. In painful times we find ourselves all too alone. In times of joy there are few to share the moment with. However, what we don't often see is the danger our amoeba lifestyles place us in.

Way back in Genesis Chapter 2 God said "It is not good for man to be alone", so God made man a companion perfectly designed for him. God also continued to fellowship with man and to meet with him regularly. It was paradise. Most of us know that it did not last very long. Eve and Adam hung out where they shouldn't have and disobeyed. They then tried to hide from God. They became amoebas. They stood alone, their relationship with God broken, and the same was true with each other. Basically, "Hey, its not my fault, the woman YOU gave me made me do it". So now I want to be alone, estranged from you and the woman. I want to be an amoeba oozing through my existence, alone with my guilt. Sin does that to us. It drives us to be alone. Why do you think we call them "secret sins". Often we are under the illusion that my misbehavior is mine alone. How could it affect the other amoebas? I am an entity that lives unto myself. I am my own person. It is about my "personal" relationship with God. After all He is my "personal" Savior; I am ultimately accountable to no one else. I can pull myself up by my own bootstraps. I don't want to bother anyone else. I am just an amoeba christian with my personal sin and my personal god wallowing in my personal misery and loneliness, all too personally content or dismayed. ( the small "g" in intentional, for this is not the God of the Scriptures) The little amoeba christian is heading for disaster and there is no one who can penetrate his cell wall. No one to call, "Danger, Will Robinson!". No one to provide strength or protection. No one to give comfort or direction.

I have been in Pastoral ministry for over thirty years. I have worked with many couples who are struggling with their relationship. They are at odds and thinking the best thing to do is to separate. If two amoebas can't get along, then certainly complete isolation will be much better. Or maybe there is a nicer amoeba in the petri dish. Every couple has one thing in common with all the other struggling couples. They are alone. They attend a fellowship of believers and many hold some position of responsibility. But they are not connected. No time for a small group. No time for Ladies' or Men's fellowship. No time for a discipleship group or church fellowship. No time to build relationships with other couples that have any substance or meaning. No connection with more mature believers to gain council or wisdom. No time to see how other couples and families interact to learn and grow and even know who to ask for help in a time of frustration or need. So they call the Pastor to fix the other amoeba they have to live with. This is just not God's design. This is not being members with one another. This is not a body nor a spiritual building of living stones. These amoebas live in danger out there on their own. Stress, sin, business, frustration and even just loaded activities can be Satan's way of isolating us. He knows our strength is not just in the Lord, but found in one another. Isolation makes us vulnerable. Isolation keeps us from being who God intended us to be. Isolation is usually by our own design.

Final thoughts.

Relationships are not constant. They seem to ebb and flow. One who was our soul mate a  few years ago drifts away and the intimacy of the friendship is gone. No one is angry or hurt or offended, just not there like it once was. That is reality. The Lord, a marriage partner, and perhaps that BFF are the exception. There are those really cool relationships that just pick up where they left off, even if years of geographic separation occur. Friendships and real community in the Body of Christ takes effort. It is not easy to be vulnerable or available, or to make a commitment to just be there when the Body gathers. The amoeba life just seems easier. Until we suddenly feel that we are alone. The truth is, if we want to be in a right relationship with God we need relationships with His people. So like most good things, this takes effort. Like most good things, Satan will try to convince you that the amoeba life is safer, easier, less stressful. People are messy. You are better off to keep your distance. That is why he is known as the "father of lies".

There are times when you need to be alone with God. Sometimes hours, Sometimes days, and sometimes even weeks. There are times when God needs us to be isolated to accomplish His good work in us. We see those alone times with many in Scripture. Jesus took time alone with the Father. Paul had his 3 year backside of the desert time of preparation. Jacob had his night alone to struggle with the Messenger of God. These times are valuable and necessary for our mental, physical, emotional, and spiritual well being. But these are the exceptions, not the rule. The "I need to be alone with God" times are still tied to community, for the end result is to be a better servant of God and that service pretty much always relates to His family. To your brothers and sisters in Christ.

We are in danger when we are alone. Sin crouches at our door when it is closed to one another. Our isolation will not stop with God's people. It will spread to God as well, and we will find ourselves feeling very isolated and alone. We will ask God, "Where have you gone?" " Why have you left me?" " Why am I so alone?" There is an old story, a bit of folk wisdom I remember from my days in Kansas. It tells of an old farmer driving down the highway in his pickup truck. His wife of many years is with him. A sporty convertible passes them with a young couple out for a drive. The young lady is snuggled up as close as she can be as they cruise down the road. The farmer's wife sighs and says, "Oh, don't you remember those days when we drove like that?" Looking straight ahead the farmer quietly replied, "Twern't me that moved." And so it is with us. God never leaves, He never forsakes. And He has designed His Body to work together. To support one another. To know that we are never alone. But, the amoeba life calls. We move away. We close people out. We isolate ourselves and wonder why we are alone. Well maybe, if we are honest, God and His Body might just be saying, "Well, it twern't me who moved".

So what will it be? Will you be a part of that imperfect, rather messy, sometimes hurtful, but always there Community of Believers that needs you as much as you need them, or will you settle for that amoeba existence that really isn't life at all.                  

Monday, January 26, 2015

Sneaker Worship Time - Because God Says So

I was driving along in my van innocently listening to the radio when the preacher traveling the airways came to 1 Thessalonians 5:18, "in everything give thanks; for this is God's will for you in Christ Jesus." He went on to explain that this is a hard thing to do as life is filled with trials and disappointments. He further tied the verse to Romans 8:28 "And we know that all things work together for good to those who love God, to those who are called according to His purpose." It is a great message, one I have shared as well. But this time the expressway in my brain took another exit. I found I had arrived in Deuteronomy 6:4-7. From here the twists and turns of my mental highway took me through some remarkably scenic visualizations of the God who is the awesome Lord of the universe yet also the God of the mundane and routine. 

Paul writes to an assembly that knows of persecution and even the passing of some of the beloved of the fellowship. The Thessalonians were told of the return of the Lord and the confidence they could have in the resurrection of the dead so they were to be comforted. However, as the Apostle concludes the letter he loads the ending with a number of bullets to challenge them (and us) as to their daily walk with the Lord. "Rejoice always, pray without ceasing, in everything give thanks," phrases that remind us of how intimate and immediate our relationship with God should be. "Always. Without ceasing. In everything." 

The "everything" of verse 18 is everything. Not just good things but also the trials, knowing that Yahweh is in control and can be trusted. However, if we only look at that reality we miss a great opportunity for thanksgiving, praise and worship. Our lives are busy, probably too busy, yet our Creator has given us remarkable mental capabilities. Take just a moment right now and think of everything you have done in the past, say four hours. Got it? Now just how long would it take if you wrote down everything that just shot through your brain? I would guess much more time than the moment you just took to get the mental review completed. We have amazing abilities to think of stuff. Now comes the long awaited connection to all of this.

The people of God had been slaves for over 400 years in the land of Egypt. Even though they maintained their own culture, they were under the law of Pharaoh. They had traditions, but not a system of instructions as how best to live. Moses arrives and leads them out of Egypt, by the mighty hand of Yahweh. Now, as they dwell in the wilderness God provides lessons and instruction as to how they should relate to Him and to one another, Torah, God's gift of instruction and direction as how to best live. This is not just for those in the wilderness, it is for the coming generations as well. So the Lord gives them the means as to how to pass on the information. Deuteronomy 6:4-7 "Hear, O Israel, The LORD our God the LORD is one. You shall love the LORD your God, with all your heart, with all your soul, and with all your might. and these words which I command you today shall be in your heart. You shall teach them diligently to your children, and shall talk of them when you sit in your house, when your walk by the way, when you lie down and when you rise up." Meaning, teach it all the time. God's Word should be integrated into your life.

Now the Apostle Paul tells us to be thankful in everything, all the time. How can this work out in the practical experience, in the routine and mundane things of life? You rise up and decide to take a shower. Paul says be ready to give thanks. Thanks for water, hot water, and a warm house. How many folks around the world do not have this luxury, or even just clean water? Then there are the 1500 varieties of soap, shampoo, and body wash you had to select from, followed by your clean fluffy towel. So much to be thankful for. Now let yourself be reminded that God washes you clean, free from the tainted life of sin. Washed by the water of the Word. He is the God of the early and later rains. He is the water of Life that provides a spring of living water that bubbles up within you. He quenches the thirst of your soul, He leads you beside still waters. And on down the mental highway of thanksgiving for everything you can go. Showers of blessings, and the blessings of a shower. 

Shower completed, dressed, and as you put on those sneakers, shoes or boots, you have a number of pairs to choose from, unlike the cold and barefoot that fill much of this world. Dexterity to tie the laces and the ability to walk knowing others may not know such ability and freedom. Now the words, "Follow Me" come to mind, walk in My ways, Your feet shall not stumble, and He makes your feet like hinds feet traversing the rocky path, or so says Psalm 18:33. And, quietly, without really noticing Sneaker time is a time of thanksgiving; it has become a time of worship, as can be shower time or breakfast time (that daily bread verse or perhaps the Bread of Life). If you let it, your brain can turn most any activity into a time of worship and thanksgiving. And you can do this with your kids, or nephews, or nieces, or grand kids or little ones in the preschool class. Sharing the reality of God in the simple, routine, mundane things of life. When you lie down, when you rise up, when you are in your house or when you walk by the way, you can give God thanks for .......  well, everything. 

And the cool thing is that your brain can do all this in the time it takes to tie a shoe or wash a dish or scrape the frost off of your windshield. I have tried it as of late, and it actually is pretty amazing. So we really can give thanks in everything. Not just the big things or the hard things, but in the "everythings". Time to head out and enjoy the day, but first I think I will have a little worship time with my sneakers. Want to join me?       

Monday, January 19, 2015

You Are Not the Temple of the Holy Spirit or We Need to Speak Southern

Ahhh, the wonder of single verse theology. As the Catholic New Year began (not the Hebrew or Chinese, but the one named after a Pope) many were compelled to make those well meaning resolutions.(By the way you may change your behavior any time you feel convicted, you don't need to wait for January first.) As conversations flowed around me I heard a variety of new found or reaffirmations of past resolutions. Many deal with physical improvements like more exercise, less sugar, fewer carbs, no more smoking, or better eating and sleeping habits. For those who claim to be followers of Messiah, Christians as we call ourselves, there is often an additional incentive that I have heard spoken. "I need to get in shape, after all my body is the Temple of the Holy Spirit." And why would you say that? "Well, we see that right there in 1 Corinthians 6:19, "or do you not know that your body is a temple of the Holy Spirit who is in you, whom you have from God, and that you are not your own?" It is obvious that I am a temple of the Holy Spirit, Paul said so. Or did he? It depends on whether you believe Paul was a Greek philosopher or a Hebrew Rabbi. It also depends on whether you want to look at the actual text, as well as its historic context. Are you willing to ask what those in Corinth would have thought when they read the letter? Or are you just interested in what you want it to mean to you? Let's take a little deeper look.

The confusion here comes from two directions. First, English pronouns are ambiguous. When we ask the question, "How are you doing?", we could mean you as an individual or as a family or as an entire community. Those proficient in "Southern" have less problems, as there is you, the individual, ya'll, as a small group and "all ya'll", for the bigger group. Our translations are not in "Southern" so we have to guess according to what we think the context is. The second, is that we look to the immediate context and forget the context of Paul's letter or the issues he is addressing in the assembly of believers in Corinth. The immediate context speaks of the act of sexual sin, "he who commits sexual immorality sins against his own body" (1 Cor. 6:18). This is followed by "do you not know that your body is a temple (not the temple, there is no definite article and those in Corinth knew The Temple was in Jerusalem when this was written) of the Holy Spirit who is in you, whom you have from God and you are not your own" (1 Cor. 6:19). The easy assumption is to make this about me. However, if we had a Southern translation it would read, "do all ya'll not know that all ya'll's body is a temple of the Holy Spirit who is in all ya'll's midst, whom all ya'll have from God, and all ya'll do not just live for yourself?' You see the pronoun in Greek is plural all the way through. So why is this important?

We need to go back to the purpose of the letter. The folks in Corinth who had come to Messiah were a diverse group. They also came from a city who prided itself on competition. There was a huge stadium/Colosseum with all sorts of sporting events, as well as amphitheaters for public debate where you could compete for intellectual points. This spirit had invaded the assembly. Everyone seemed to want to be the best. Who had the best spiritual heritage (1:12), who was the most mighty (1:26), who was the most tolerant (5:1), who had the best gift (12), who was the most sacrificial spiritual one, "Hey, I gave up sexual intimacy with my wife so I could be more spiritual" (7:5), and the list goes on and on. The whole letter is a plea for unity in the "Body". It is not about individuals. Everything you do, including sexual immorality, damages the whole body, the whole assembly. Yet they brag about the tolerance of a man who has his father's wife (5:1). The Temple of the Holy Spirit is about unity in obedience, not some misplaced idea of love and tolerance. We find the same temple concept in 3:16 - 17. All ya'll are the temple of God, not you as an individual, yet as individuals we can defile God's Temple. We can defile the assembly. The fractured fellowship was displeasing to the Lord and to Paul.

Our Greek based culture drives us to be self-focused. We are under the illusion that what we do only affects us. But Paul's Hebraic viewpoint gives us his illustration in 1 Cor. 12 of our being a part of a "body". In Hebraic thought what we do touches all around us, either for good or for bad. As private as sexual sin may seem, it damages the whole body. To tolerate it is an affront to God and brings corruption to the assembly. We are not our own, we belong to God and one another. We must not be fractured or the whole "Temple" suffers. Peter uses this illustration as well. In 1 Peter 2:5 "you (read all ya'll) are as living stones, being built up to a spiritual house (or maybe a temple)." When we personalize a Temple of the Holy Spirit to mean that it is all about me and my being God's temple, we miss Paul's, and God's point. It is when we are gathered in unity and obedience together that provides a temple for the Holy Spirit to indwell. The work and ministry of the Spirit of God is magnified when we are in fellowship together. That is where the gifts He gives are best manifested. For your gift was given to edify the Body not to hold in your own personal "Holy Spirit Temple".

Now please do not misunderstand. I believe that we, as disciples of Messiah, are given the Holy Spirit. The Scriptures say that we are indwelt, the Spirit of God is in us individually (Jn 14:27), We are to keep being filled with the Holy Spirit (Eph 5:18) and not grieve the Holy Spirit (Eph 4:30). The Spirit of God gives us individual gifts(1 Cor 12:11). He comforts (2 Cor 1) and convicts (Jn 16:8). The Spirit of God ministers to us as individuals. However, if that is our motivating factor we have missed the point. All those things are true so that you can function within a community. And when that is so, Paul says "all ya'll are a Temple of the Holy Spirit." "All ya'll are a Temple of God."

This doesn't mean you don't have to eat healthy or determine to quit smoking. It doesn't mean to take a pass on reading through the Bible this year. Healthy people who know God's Word are a benefit and blessing to the whole "Body". Your obedience and discipline strengthens the whole Temple. After all, "all ya'll are a Temple of the Holy Spirit."

Wednesday, December 31, 2014

Christmas and Torah Are So Much Alike (WARNING! If you are comfortable with your Bible reading DON'T READ THIS BLOG!)

Ahhh Christmas time. Joy to the world the Savior has come. I waited to post this until after Christmas because I did not want to throw gas on the unnecessary fire that may surround the Christmas celebration. There are those who make it their mission to point out all the Biblical flaws in the celebration. Like it being the wrong time of year, having pagan origins, a political move rather than a religious one, druid trees instead of Christmas trees and so on. And yes it is all true. There is little Biblical truth in our traditions concerning Christmas and the birth of Messiah beyond the truth that He was born. Everything else is borrowed or made up. However I am of the opinion that there is no bad time to celebrate Messiah's arrival and to praise and worship God in honor of the gift of his Son. You can praise God for Yeshua's arrival 365 days a year and I will not be upset. 

What is upsetting is the truth that a great many Christians, those who say they are followers of Christ, view Torah in much the same way. Their understanding of the Law has about as much Biblical evidence as Santa Claus. (by the way Zechariah 2:6 "Ho ho come forth from the land of the north" KJV is not a reference to Santa). We have been told that the Law, Torah, is obsolete. That it ended with the resurrection of Christ. That it was an old covenant and does not apply to anyone, Jew or Gentile, today. If you try to follow God's Law you are a legalist and deny the work of Christ. The purpose of the Law is completed; Paul said so and so did Jesus. That is Paul's teaching in Galatians and Romans; everyone knows that. Or do we? Are we as far off with Torah as we are with Christmas, but with far greater consequences?

I give you fair warning that the reading of this blog may cause distress in your spiritual life. The concepts here could change your perspective on lots of things you thought you knew. I will challenge you to actually believe some things that you give lip service to, but don't really integrate into your reading of God's Word, especially the letters by the Apostle Paul. You see, I believe that Paul was Jewish. I mean he was born a Jew, lived as a Jew and died as a Jew. He never "converted" to some new belief system called Christianity. He was a messianic Jew. He was a rabbi and had a special mission to the Gentiles to tell them that through the Jewish Messiah, Yeshua, they could gain access to God's kingdom. However, he remained a Jew. You might say to yourself, "Well, yes I pretty much agree with that, except maybe for the conversion part."  If that is really true, you can throw away most commentaries because they disagree. Not with the statement, just with what it does to your understanding of Scripture if you apply that reality to what Paul writes. We will take a look at a few verses in Paul's letter to the Galatians to make the point.

As you read through the book of Acts you can pick up a bit of a bio on the life of Saul/Paul as you follow his ministry. Paul was a Jew. He spoke Hebrew (Acts21:40). in Acts 22:3 Paul says he is currently a Jew. He declares that he is a Pharisee, not was (Acts 23:6). In Acts 28:17 - 20, Paul speaks to the Jewish Elders in Rome, and tells them he has done nothing against their people, the Jews, or of the customs and practices of their fathers. He is Torah observant. Throughout Paul's ministry, recorded in Acts, he goes to the synagogues to speak of Yeshua as Messiah. He desires to be in Jerusalem for Passover and take a vow, in accordance with the Law. He does not take Gentiles into the Temple which would be a violation of Torah. In writing to the Philippians, in 3:5-6, Paul says he (present tense) is circumcised, of Israel, of Benjamin, a Hebrew born of Hebrews, a Pharisee, zealous to protect Judaism, and Torah observant. Paul was a follower of the Jewish Messiah, who proclaimed a message of the Jewish Messiah that all who trusted in Messiah could be in His kingdom. Paul did not convert to anything. He lived and eventually died as a Hebrew, a Jewish Rabbi, who believed that Yeshua was the Jewish Messiah Who also welcomed the Gentiles to believe and be a part of His kingdom.

If that is true, the record in Acts, and if Paul's testimony in Philippians is also true, then Paul would also write from that perspective. He would write as a Torah observant Jew. If his writings indicated otherwise, then he suffered some mental problems, or simply lied. Or perhaps we have read our own understanding into what he wrote. 

Galatians is a favorite stronghold for those who teach that Paul taught that the Law, that Torah, has been made null and void. First, let us be reminded as to whom Paul is writing. 1:2 "to the Assemblies who are in Galatia." Iconium is one of the cities of Galatia, where, according to Acts 14:1, Paul taught at the synagogue. Who was there? Jews and Gentiles. So this letter would likely have been read in the synagogue to a very diverse group. Jews, Messianic Jews, proselyte Gentiles, Messianic proselyte Gentiles, Messianic Gentiles and God seeking Gentiles, would make up the audience. It would be very helpful at this point if you got a Bible and read Galatians 3:19 - 4:7. The point here is not to give a verse by verse exposition but to raise a question or two and give an alternative understanding of the passage. 

Some highlights. The Law, Torah, amplifies sin. It reveals where we fall short of God's standards. The Law, Torah is not against the promises of God. The Scripture, Torah, 3:22, has sygkiaio "confined" NKJV. Other translations translate the word: under restraint, kept under guard, shut up, imprisoned, or locked up. The word, at its root, simply means to enclose, like sheep in a pen. 3:23 the Law kept us "under guard" until faith came. The Law, Torah, was our paidagogos, our tutor or teacher. This is an important word to understand Paul's point. The history of the paidagogos tells us he was a servant responsible for the direction and training of the father's son. He made sure the child got to school and to whatever training opportunity the child had. He was to protect the child and keep him safe and out of trouble. He was responsible for the character building of the child. When the child came of age he was released to walk with the father doing the father’s bidding and the father’s will. He no longer needed the paidagogos, for what he had learned had been incorporated into his life. This would now guide and protect him as he took on the responsibilities the father had for him.The Law, Torah, gives instruction and direction on how to best live. It was there as a fence of protection until it was integrated into the child's life. (By the way, Jeremiah 31:33 promises that under the New Covenant, brought by Messiah, God will put the Law, or Torah, on our hearts and in our minds. We won't need the written Law paidagogos for it will be integrated into our hearts, minds, and lives.) I believe this is Paul's perspective. 

But let us look at a typical commentary. This is from the Expositors Bible Commentary Chapter 15 commenting on Galatians 3:25 - 29. "FAITH has come! At this announcement Law the tutor yields up his charge; Law the jailer sets his prisoner at liberty. The age of servitude has passed. In truth it endured long enough. The iron of its bondage had entered into the soul. But at last Faith is come; and with it comes a new world. The clock of time cannot be put back. The soul of man will never return to the old tutelage, nor submit again to a religion of rabbinism and sacerdotalism. "We are no longer under a pedagogue"; we have ceased to be children in the nursery, schoolboys at our tasks-"ye are all sons of God." In such terms the new-born, free spirit of Christianity speaks in Paul. He had tasted the bitterness of the Judaic yoke; no man more deeply. He had felt the weight of its impossible exactions, its fatal condemnation. This sentence is a shout of deliverance. "Wretch that I am," he had cried," who shall deliver me?-I give thanks to God through Jesus Christ our Lord; for the law of the Spirit of life in Him hath freed me from the law of sin and death". Almost any commentary will express this point of view. 

Now be honest here, does this sound like the meaning intended by a devout, Torah observant Rabbi? One who calls Torah holy and good and right. One who just a few verses before said that Torah, the Law was never against the promises of God. Would Paul ever call Torah a bitter Judaic yoke? The man who said he never violated his Jewish fathers' customs would suggest he would never submit to rabbinic teaching or to the sacred practices of his fathers' faith? Would he enthusiastically have rejected the inspired Words of Yahweh giving him instruction and direction as how to best live? Would Paul really tell his fellow Jews and the Gentiles believers in the synagogue to fully reject the very Law God promised to write on their hearts? In the Apostle Paul's words "God forbid!".

I do not propose to be a great scholar or by any means infallible, but either the commentary has missed the point or Paul is not who the Scriptures say that he is.

Here is another possible way to look at the Galatians passage. "But the Scripture has enclosed all (Jew and Gentile) under sin, that the promise, by the faithfulness of Jesus Christ, might be supplied (or granted) to those who believe. Torah was not given to provide a way of salvation but to protect us and show us God’s design as to how we should live. The promise of God (deliverance and new life) came to us through the faithfulness of Messiah. Before this act of faithfulness came we were fenced in or protected by Torah, kept for the promise realized through the faithfulness yet to be revealed. Therefore Torah was our paidagogos, our protector and guide, to Messiah, that we might be justified through His Faithfulness. By faith, Torah is now written on our hearts, so we no longer need a paidagogos and we are all, Jew and Gentile, sons of God through the faithfulness of Messiah Jesus."

We are justified through the Faithfulness of Messiah. The focus should be upon Him and His work to redeem us and deliver us from death. The translators paint the Law in the darkest terms and focus on our faith rather than Christ's faithfulness. It is all about me and how I can live without the Law, without Torah. Those who teach and comment would agree that this freedom from the "tutor" is not license, for we are to walk in obedience. But, obedience to what? And what of Jeremiah 31:33? If the "imprisoning iron bondage" has been forever removed, just what is written on our hearts? 

As the New Year begins many of us will make the decision to be more 
consistent with our Bible reading. Maybe get one of those "Read Through the Bible in a Year" schedules to help us keep on track. My question is, will we be content to just read as we have in the past years. Just accepting what we see from our American, Western perspective. Only asking the question, "What does it mean to me?" Or will we take the time to ask, "What did the writer mean?" or "What did the first people who heard this think?" Will we take into account what we know about Daniel, David, Paul, Peter, Moses or John? They were all Jewish. They were all committed to the God of Israel. They were all committed to obey Torah. None of them saw themselves as "Christian". So what does the text mean in light of those facts?

If we approach our reading from this perspective we can more accurately apply what we learn to our lives. Far more effort is required, but isn't God worth it? We could make that commitment or we can just say, "Well, no worries, we are under grace and free from the law. I can depend on my faith to make it all okay. God knows my heart, He can't actually want me to put any effort into knowing Him and His Word."  "Isn't that what the Apostle Paul just said?" No, I don't think so. But the real question is "What do you think?"

   

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Monday, December 8, 2014

Eternity in Heaven? Not if You are a Christian.

"Heaven is a wonderful place, filled with glory and grace." "When we all get to heaven, what a day of rejoicing that will be." So say the choruses and songs we sing. Most believers look forward to going to heaven. You know, Saint Peter and those pearly gates that give us access to heaven. Well maybe not. But you may have been trained in evangelism to ask, "If you were to die today and you stood before God how would you respond to His question, "Why should I let you into My heaven?" But what if that is the wrong question? What if God isn't interested in letting you into heaven? The reality is we know little of the afterlife other than there is one. Scripture is just pretty unclear as to how it all works. But as Biblical, evangelical, followers of Jesus we are often told we are going to heaven and will will see Jesus (or Yeshua if we want to use His real name). But do the Scriptures honestly tell us that? Eternity in heaven? That doesn't seem to be God's plan.

Before we get to that point let's see what we can know about death and the life to come. First the Old and New Testaments most often refer to death as sleep. There are over twenty-five references to "slept with his fathers" in 1 and 2 Samuel alone. I Cor. 11:30 and 15:51 are New Testament examples (unless you have a modern translation which simply says you are dead). The Hebraic idea seems to be that the end of life is a time of rest. Rest from the struggles and toil of this world. Just as an aside, if you look at the days of creation the first six all say, "there was evening and morning" but that is not so of day seven, the Sabbath Day. Rabbinic teachers said that was because Sabbath was a picture of the everlasting Sabbath we come to at the end of our days on earth. So death is rest and sleep if you accept the Biblical references. However there is more. There is a place called "Abraham's Bosom" according to Luke 16. It has a place of rest for those who believe and torment for those who do not. Yeshua met with Moses and Elijah (Mt 17) and they had physical bodies and awareness, so death seems to be more than just unconscious sleep. Whatever the state of things, we will be aware, and it appears we will participate in things that happen in some heavenly realm. 

The Scriptures do say that there is some sort of heavenly connection when we die. Elijah was taken up into heaven (2 kings 2:11) as was Yeshua (Acts 1:11), the Apostle John (Rev 4:1), and the Apostle Paul (2 Cor 12:2). Though Paul is a little ambivalent as to his experience in the third heaven. In Revelation John sees the martyred believers in heaven singing praises (Rev 16). Another side note here. In the often quoted verse in 2 Cor 5:8, the one where Paul says we "would prefer to be absent from the body and at home with the Lord", he doesn't say we will be; Paul just says that is what is "preferred". I would prefer to be in the Outer Banks. That doesn't mean I will be there. It is unlikely that Paul's thought is a Greek out of body experience rather than an Hebraic hope for the resurrection. Just read chapters 15 and 16 if you find that hard to believe. Paul's point in 2 Cor. 5:8-10 is to be "well pleasing to the Lord" for we will all stand before Him to give an account. It is not a theological statement about death but a challenge as to how we should live.

Thankfully we are told that we will be with the Lord forever. In John 14, Yeshua told His disciples that there are many dwelling places in His Father's house. He is going to prepare a place for us and He will come and take us to this place of many dwelling places. 1 Thess. 4 claims that the dead and those alive will forever be with the Lord. The question is where will this forever place be. As we come to answer this question I must first ask this question, "What is your greatest hope?" For many it is the hope of Heaven. That was not so for the Apostle Paul and that is not why Yeshua went to the cross. The greatest hope we have is the resurrection from the dead. Check out much of the latter half of 1 Corinthians. You know, "This perishable must put on the imperishable."  1 Cor. 15:19 "If we have hoped in Christ in this life only, we are of all men most to be pitied." The resurrection from the dead is most essential, most important to Paul. It is foolishness to the Greeks who saw the temporal body something to be shed and released from. But not Paul, not the Jews. A resurrected body was the great hope. Death is conquered by Messiah and His resurrection is the "first fruits" and we will follow. Yet we don't talk much about the importance of a resurrection. We talk about going to heaven where the body thing is sort of nebulous. We have been infected by Greek thought and philosophy.

So why is a resurrected body so important? Because we will be with the Lord forever and He will be on a tangible, physical earth. We know little of heaven but God gives us a great deal of info about a new earth, or at least a new Jerusalem that will be on a new earth. In Revelation 21 John sees a new heaven and a new earth and a new Jerusalem coming down to the earth. The new Jerusalem is about 6,000 miles on each side. It is a cube about the size of our moon. It has streets of gold and pearly gates. It has perpetual light because the Father and the Son are there. There is no need of a temple for the Lord God Almighty and the Lamb are the temple. There is a throne for the Lord God and the Lamb and a river of life flows from it. There are trees along that river forever bringing forth fruit. There is no more pain, or death, or sorrow, or crying, for God will wipe away every tear. The former things have passed and the new has come. A tangible city on a tangible earth, where God and the Lamb are, will have tangible people with new resurrected incorruptible bodies. And so shall we ever be with the Lord. This new earth must be pretty huge to support this new Jerusalem. A 6,000 mile cube of a city must have many dwelling places that Yeshua has gone to prepare for us. And He will come again and receive us to Himself.

So it looks like the Scriptures don't promise eternity in heaven with Jesus. They promise eternity on a new earth in a new Jerusalem with a new body. That is our hope. Resurrection from the dead, and an incorruptible body to serve and worship the Lamb and God our Father in a new city on a new planet prepared just for us. How cool is that? Hope to see you there. 

Sunday, November 23, 2014

BACON!!!!!

Bacon! It is probably one of the strongest contributing factors toward the abandoning of Biblical dietary regulations. Followers of the Jewish Messiah have worked overtime to find or invent reasons why we can eat bacon. Perhaps if the prohibition was about not eating broccoli or collard greens we could go along with it but, "Hey don't mess with my bacon." As we covered in a blog or two ago (See, "Is God upset with vegetarians" Posted Oct. 22, 2014) translators will even intentionally mistranslate and add words to the text to justify their love for bacon. Today we consider the text used by most to show that God did away with all dietary regulations for Jews and Gentiles and, for some, all of Torah as well.

The account is recorded for us by Luke in Acts 10. I encourage you to read the whole passage, Acts 10 and 11. In brief, there is a Gentile named Cornelius who is a Roman centurion. He is said to be devout and fears God. God comes to him in a vision and tells him to send men to Joppa to get Peter. They are to bring Peter back with them. Cornelius does so. As they are approaching Joppa, Peter goes up to the roof of the house where he is staying. God sends Peter a vision as well. A sheet comes down from heaven with all kinds of animals on it, clean, unclean, kosher, ceremonially unclean, all kinds of animals. God tells Peter to, "Arise, kill and eat." Peter says, "Not so Lord, I have never eaten anything common or unclean." God responds, "What God has made cleansed you must not call common". God does this three times for emphasis so Peter is sure to get the vision. Peter is confused and wonders what the vision could possibly mean. Enter the men from Cornelius. God says, "Behold there are three men looking for you. Arise and go with them." So Peter goes with them and the commentators go, "Ahhaa! God told Peter to eat bacon." Well, they really say God told Peter that all animals are now clean and he should feel free to eat any of them. Including bacon. If you care to check this out you can see commentaries by Simon Kistemaker, Ironside, F. F. Bruce, and Charles Carter and Ralph Earl. All respected scholars, and the last three use Mark 7 as the justification for their interpretation, sharing their understanding that Jesus made all food clean. (A distortion of the text if you are at all unbiased in reading the account. See the Oct. 22 post) 

Now it is clear that God gave Peter a shocking illustration. A Torah observant Jewish Rabbi eating common or unclean food, how could this possibly be so? The text says Peter "wondered within himself what this vision which he had seen meant" (Acts 10:17). Peter knows what he saw he just doesn't know what it means. The same was true of Pharaoh in Genesis 41, Nebuchadnezzar in Daniel 2 and for Daniel in Chapter 8, just to mention a few. Visions and dreams can be difficult to understand. God is the one who reveals the meaning. Let's see what God reveals to Peter. 

The servants of Cornelius (remember he is a Gentile, Roman, a centurion no less) arrive, spend the night, and then Peter goes with them to Caesarea. Cornelius tries to worship Peter who tells him not to. Peter is a good Rabbi and knows that is taboo. Cornelius has a houseful of people and invites Peter in. Chapter 10:28 "Then he [Peter] said to them, 'You know how unlawful it is for a Jewish man to keep company with or go to one of another nation. But God has shown me that I should not call any man common or unclean." When did that happen? There is nothing here in the text about unclean people. It was about unclean food, right? But Peter understood the vision to be an object lesson about people, not food. Well, perhaps that is clarified a little later in the text. While Peter is speaking the Gentiles believe, evidenced by the Holy Spirit. On this basis Peter baptizes them. They are now a part of the believing community. 

In Chapter 11 the apostles and brethren heard that the Gentiles had also received the Word of God. Peter is confronted in verse 2, "You went into uncircumcised men and shared a meal with them." Now take just a minute here and be reasonable. Cornelius is said to be "a devout man and one who feared, honored, God, gave generously and prayed." It seems he is pretty familiar with the God of Israel, familiar with the laws and customs of the Jews. God tells him that a Jewish man named Simon Peter can answer his questions. When Peter arrives, Cornelius is so impressed he bows before him. Having been corrected Cornelius invites Peter to stay for dinner. (Just a side thought. Realistically, what are the chances he would intentionally serve Jewish Peter unclean food?)  Having been confronted, Peter shares the vision of the sheet and animals and the house of Cornelius receiving the Word and the Spirit. Chapter 11:18, "When they heard these things they became silent; and they glorified God, saying, "We can eat bacon!" well, no they said, "Then God has also granted to the Gentiles repentance unto life." It seems everyone who hears of the vision sees God's message as one relating to Gentiles coming into the Kingdom. They somehow miss the main point of the end to Jewish dietary laws and possibly all ceremonial laws as well.

Let us go back to the two other visions I mentioned. Pharoah has a vision of seven fat cows being eaten by seven skinny cows. God tells him, through Joseph, that these are years of plentiful harvests followed by years of famine. That is God's message. If we follow the logic and exegesis applied to Acts 10 and 11 Pharaoh should have sent soldiers all across Egypt to kill every skinny cow as the dream/vision is obviously about cows not years. Kill off the skinny cows and avoid the famine. If he focused on God's interpretation he would have been legalistic and missed the "kill the skinny cows" message. Nebuchadnezzar also has a dream recorded for us in Daniel 2. God reveals the dream and its interpretation to Daniel. It is a great statue with the head of gold, chest of silver, belly of bronze, legs of iron and feet of iron and clay. They are kingdoms God has established before time. The head is of Nebuchadnezzar's Babylon. Nebbie is pleased to know the meaning of the vision. But not so much with the end of his and the coming of other kingdoms. So in Chapter 3, he makes a ninety foot statue of pure gold and calls everyone to worship the statue. Not just a head of gold, but it is all gold. This way his kingdom will never end. He will just modify God's vision and make his own interpretation. It was about a statue of a man after all. Not coming kingdoms, right?  If you want a New Testament illustration, both Paul in 1 Cor 13 and James in James 1 use a mirror to make a point. The obvious thing God is revealing to us is that good followers of God and His Son should own a mirror. In fact not owning a mirror might mean we are not being obedient.

I am sure that you can easily see the flaws in all of these applications. Nebuchadnezzar learned that his statue could not replace God's interpretation of God's vision. Yet we have no problem replacing God's interpretation of Peter's vision with our own. Whatever you decide to believe about dietary regulations is up to you. But if you want to justify eating bacon, Acts 10 and 11 offer no help. Unless you don't like God's interpretation of God's vision. 

We are convinced that dietary laws don't apply to anyone. Could it be that after years of rejecting God's regulations it is almost impossible to consider a different perspective? A perspective that actually fits better with Scripture. However it is important to please our taste buds. So enjoy a piece of "golden bacon"; I am sure God will be okay with our own interpretation of His revelation, don't you?