Showing posts with label bible. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bible. Show all posts

Sunday, February 10, 2013

Salt & The Sacrifice of Christ - Ebook



Here is another book in the popular Search for Truth Series.  Just 99 cents on Amazon.com and 99p on Amazon.co.uk
 
 
Most Christians are familiar with the use of salt as a picture for many things in the life of disciple, but it can also be used to draw some very valuable lessons about the sacrifice of Jesus Christ at Calvary.

Did you know that salt was involved in the sacrifices in the Old Testament and that there was something in those days called a "covenant of salt"? Brian Johnston explains the meaning of both of these things in this short book under the following chapter headings:
1. The Value of Christ’s Sacrifice
2. Something Long-lasting
3. No Going Back On His Word
4. What a (Sweet) Savour!
 
 

Spiritual Warfare - Jesus and Hades


Again, this is another chapter that I wrote in The Battle:  An Anthology of Spiritual Warfare, which is available in two volumes for Kindle.


 
 
What, exactly, happened between the moment that Jesus died on the cross and his resurrection three days later? Your mind might instinctively go to thinking of the rousing section of the song “The Lion Of Judah” – “he descended to hell yet was raised up to reign at the Father’s side.”   Or, if you are of a slightly older vintage, you might think of the hymn which contains the words “he hell in hell o’erthrew.”  Is this poetic language strictly correct from a theological perspective?   One might think so if you simply looked at the Apostles Creed which contains the words “he descended to hell.”  But it is not as simple as that and this chapter may perhaps remind us that we should not base our beliefs on songs or hymns and not even theological statements that aren’t taken straight from the Bible!

 Let’s deal with the Apostles Creed issue first.  The Apostle’s Creed was a theological summary which has been used by many Christians as a statement of belief for over 1,500 years and right up to the present day.  However, unlike the Bible, the content of the Apostles Creed was fluid for hundreds of years.  The oldest available version is a Roman one from Bishop Marcellus of Ancyra (around A.D. 337) and it does not contain the clause about “descending into hell”.  Apparently this clause first appeared in the Eastern church with Sirmium's version of 359 A.D. The first mention of the descent in the Western church appears in the writings of Rufinus of Aquileia, who included it in his baptismal creed around 400 A.D. Over time, the Latin church absorbed it and officially integrated it into the Creed in 750 A.D, over 400 years after the earliest version we have!  It has also been said that this clause was mistranslated from the original which makes the problem even worse!  The only option is to look directly at the verses in the Bible that could relate to this “alleged” event:

“’When he ascended on high, he took many captives and gave gifts to his people.’ (What does “he ascended” mean except that he also descended to the lower, earthly regions? He who descended is the very one who ascended higher than all the heavens, in order to fill the whole universe.)”  (Ephesians 4:8-10)

“by his death he might break the power of him who holds the power of death—that is, the devil — and free those who all their lives were held in slavery by their fear of death.”  (Hebrews 2:14-16)


“He was put to death in the body but made alive in the Spirit. After being made alive, he went and made proclamation to the imprisoned spirits - to those who were disobedient long ago when God waited patiently in the days of Noah while the ark was being built. In it only a few people, eight in all, were saved through water, and this water symbolizes baptism that now saves you also—not the removal of dirt from the body but the pledge of a clear conscience toward God. It saves you by the resurrection of Jesus Christ, who has gone into heaven and is at God’s right hand - with angels, authorities and powers in submission to him.” (1 Peter 3:18-22)

“For David says concerning Him: ‘I foresaw the Lord always before my face, For He is at my right hand, that I may not be shaken. Therefore my heart rejoiced, and my tongue was glad; Moreover my flesh also will rest in hope. For You will not leave my soul in Hades. Nor will You allow Your Holy One to see corruption. You have made known to me the ways of life; You will make me full of joy in Your presence.’ “Men and brethren, let me speak freely to you of the patriarch David, that he is both dead and buried, and his tomb is with us to this day. Therefore, being a prophet, and knowing that God had sworn with an oath to him that of the fruit of his body, according to the flesh, He would raise up the Christ to sit on his throne, he, foreseeing this, spoke concerning the resurrection of the Christ, that His soul was not left in Hades, nor did His flesh see corruption. This Jesus God has raised up, of which we are all witnesses. Therefore being exalted to the right hand of God…”’ (Acts 2:25-33 NKJV)
“I am the Living One; I was dead, and now look, I am alive for ever and ever! And I hold the keys of death and Hades.” (Revelation 1:18)

 “When a strong man, fully armed, guards his own house, his possessions are safe. But when someone stronger attacks and overpowers him, he takes away the armour in which the man trusted and divides up his plunder.”  (Luke 11:21-22)

“Jesus answered him, ‘Truly I tell you, today you will be with me in paradise.’” (Luke 23:43)

These verses have been interpreted in different ways by eminent theologians through history and here are just a few of them:


  • Augustine believed Christ literally descended into hell but he admitted several uncertainties over the meaning of the proclamation to “spirits in prison” in 1 Peter 3:19.  Why, for example, should these people be singled out for such an honor, and who, if anyone, did Christ save with his preaching in hell?

  • Thomas Aquinas said that Christ descended to two places—hell and purgatory—and that his purpose in each was different. In hell, he put unbelievers to shame, while in purgatory, he gave sinners hope for glory and the righteous deliverance.

  • Martin Luther, though he believed Christ descended to hell, would offer no clear cut explanation for the event.

  • John Calvin went so far as to describe the descent as symbolic, pointing to Christ's suffering at Gethsemane and the cross.
 
   So what are we to make of it all?  The nineteenth-century church historian Philip Schaff made an important distinction which really helps to clarify things.  He deemed the translation “descended into hell” unfortunate and misleading saying: “we do know from His (Jesus’) own lips that He was in Paradise between His death and resurrection. The term Hades is much more comprehensive than Hell (Gehenna) which is confined to the state of the lost.”

Precise terminology in our use of Bible words is important here.   “Sheol” and “Hades” and interchangeable terms which are quite distinct from “tartarus”, “gehenna” or the “lake of fire” – each of which refers to a permanent place of residence.  Hades is a temporary holding place.  We understand from the story of the rich man and Lazarus in Luke 16 that there is a divide which we arbitrarily denote by upper, also known as Paradise or Abraham’s bosom (a place of rest), and lower designations (when it should actually be right and left!). Ephesians 4 makes it clear that Christ did descend – but where exactly? Acts 2 tells us the part of the answer – Hades, temporarily for God would not leave Him there.  Luke 23 gets more specific – Jesus told the thief on the cross that he would be with Him in Paradise - so we deduce that Christ went to upper Sheol where Lazarus was - the (then) temporary abode of righteous departed souls.  (We will have to leave aside the separate question regarding the detailed criteria to determine who is sent to Upper or Lower Hades and trust to the sovereignty and justice of God).

The next question to be tackled is what actually happened there and what do the extremely cryptic verses in 1 Peter 3 relate to?  The respected commentators, Gill, Clark and Barnes, take the same view as John Miller in his “Notes”, with the following general interpretation:

·    Christ rose from the dead being made in alive in the (Holy) Spirit in which He had (previously) preached in Noah's time (through Noah) to those who were then ('once') disobedient to the preaching

·    As a consequence of this disobedience, the spirits of these contemporaries of Noah were imprisoned in (lower) Sheol.

·    Christ never visited lower Sheol at any time and there was no opportunity for these souls to repent (see Hebrews 9:27)

 In other words, 1 Peter 3 should not be linked with the descending of Jesus mentioned in Ephesians 4 at all – they are not related.  Why mention Noah in the first place?  Perhaps Peter was trying to draw some parallels between Noah’s experience and his readers experience – readers who were going through a pretty tough time:

-          A righteous minority surrounded by an unrighteous majority

-          God’s judgement near or may be near (1 Peter 4:5, 7; 2 Peter 3:10)

-          The need to witness boldly in the Spirit of Christ (1 Peter 3:14-17; 4:11)

-          Salvation will come in the end (1 Peter 3:13-14; 4:13; 5:10)

-          The symbolic value of water - made meaningful by Christ’s resurrection

But we digress. Having ruled out 1 Peter 3 as a commentary on the descent to hell, where next?  Are we to believe the various members of the “Word of Faith” movement who teach that Jesus endured three days and nights of unimaginable abuse at the hands of Satan and his hordes of demons?

Frederick K.C. Price explains it this way:  “Do you think that the punishment for our sin was to die on a cross? If that were the case, the two thieves could have paid your price. No, the punishment was to go into hell itself and to serve time in hell separated from God...Satan and all the demons of hell thought that they had Him bound and they threw a net over Jesus and they dragged Him down to the very pit of hell itself to serve our sentence.”

Kenneth Hagin teaches that: “He (Jesus) tasted spiritual death for every man. And His spirit and inner man went to hell in my place. Can’t you see that? Physical death wouldn’t remove your sins. He’s tasted death for every man. He’s talking about tasting spiritual death.”

Kenneth Copeland asserts: “When Jesus cried, ‘It is finished!’ He was not speaking of the plan of redemption. There were still three days and nights to go through before He went to the throne...Jesus’ death on the cross was only the beginning of the complete work of redemption.

As ever, we have to go back to what the Bible actually says – and when we do, we find that the above teaching is wholly false.  As a general point, this erroneous teaching seems to overlook the important fact that Jesus is an omnipotent being whereas Satan is not – the inequality in any “struggle” would lead to a complete mismatch and any “referee” would stop the fight before it had even begun.  But, specifically, Hebrews 2 makes it quite clear where the battle was won.  It was won totally, utterly and once for all at the cross – it was at the moment of Jesus’ death that Satan’s power was completely destroyed – it was here, not later, that the “strongman” of Luke 14 was overcome.  The work was done and he was entering his rest.

It is Ephesians 4 which tells us what was also going on in those three days and any reader in the first century would have spotted the meaning of Paul’s picture language in an instant.  Subjects of the Roman Empire would have seen a victorious conqueror returning to their home base with a string of prisoners in their train, proof and token of the victory just won on the battlefield – and freely giving gifts in celebration.  But here, the scene is turned upside down – Jesus the Victor is not bringing His prisoners with him on his return journey back to the base of heaven, he is bringing those He has liberated from prison in two senses – the prison of the fear of death which had enslaved them all their lives and the actual prison of Hades which they had experienced once they had died. 

And so we see this descent, in part, as a victory parade where Jesus collects the trophies of grace that were already won at Calvary, the gates of Hades having been opened by his victorious death.  And the victory parade has one more set of gates to go through – the gates of heaven.  What a scene for our minds to ponder on, as F.A. Perigo did in the following extract from NT magazine in 1951:

“Consider the welcome at the home-going of the Lord Jesus, so graphically illustrated in Psalm 24. Here are angels upon angels - there are perhaps 100,000,000 (see Revelation 5) all rendering homage to this great and glorious Person.  They had, with wonder and amazement, watched His lowly, but holy, pathway on earth, while He mingled with the human race, supremely perfect in word and work, so dignified in every way that it even calls our cold, poor and unresponsive hearts to deep and glad worship! Yes, myriads of these celestial beings - seraphim, those so near the throne that they become the celebrants of God's holiness, and constantly cry, "Holy, holy, holy;" cherubim, executants of God's governmental dealings with this earth; these all, with welcoming joy, state how fittingly it is that the Son of God should be granted the overlordship of creation, by virtue of: (a) Creatorial right, (b) Redemptive right and (c) Right of birth.  Perhaps the Spirit of God by the Psalmist gave a hint of this, in the words:

 

“Lift up your heads, you gates;
be lifted up, you ancient doors,
that the King of glory may come in.
Who is this King of glory?
The Lord strong and mighty,
the Lord mighty in battle.

Lift up your heads, you gates;
lift them up, you ancient doors,
that the King of glory may come in.
Who is he, this King of glory?
The Lord Almighty —
he is the King of glory.”

 

His entrance into heaven was majestic, and He is lauded as "the LORD strong and mighty". Truly, the triumphant entry of the Victor! Nor did He enter alone, for there were the spoils which He had won in His victory.  Rising from among the dead, the glorious Victor led forth a multitude of captives from Satan’s domain, the Old Testament saints whose souls had been waiting in upper Sheol, to accompany Him in His triumphant entry into the glory. What a profound shock to Satan and the wicked spirits in the heavenlies as they witnessed the Son of God, His humiliation and sufferings over, passing upward to the heavens to the right hand of God!”

We thank God for the truth of this and also the wonderful reality that, due to the cross-work of Christ we no longer have to face a temporary existence in Upper Sheol when we die – it is now an empty place because post-resurrection, all believers who die go straight to be “at home with the Lord” (2 Corinthians 5:8) – what a prospect!  Hallelujah!

 

Friday, February 8, 2013

Great Christian Parenting Advice!


From UCB Word for the Day
MAKE YOUR CHILDREN PROUD OF YOU
'...Parents are the pride of their children.' Proverbs 17:6
Your child is already in the process of becoming the kind of person he or she is eventually going to be. So to bring them up right and to make them proud of you, live by these six principles:
 
1) Assure them of your love. They need to know your love is given, and it will never be withdrawn because of their appearance, achievements, or actions. Let them know they are loved for who they are, and that their worth in your eyes is never in question.
 
2) Build strong character and godly values. 'Direct your children onto the right path, and when they are older, they will not leave it' (Proverbs 22:6 NLT).
 
3) Establish clear boundaries. And be consistent in maintaining them. Do children like rules? No. But your first goal is not to make your child happy, it's to teach them responsibility, and happiness will follow.
 
4) Help them to discover their potential. That means listening, observing, and once their talents are identified, helping to develop them. 'We have different gifts, according to the grace given us...' (Romans 12:6 NIV).
 
5) Don't try to duplicate yourself through them. God gave each of your children their own unique makeup and personality. So don't try to make them something that God and the rest of us don't need one more of.
 
6) Encourage them to pursue their life's vision. '...Your young men [and women] shall see visions' (Joel 2:28 KJV). Don't pour cold water on the fire of their enthusiasm, fan it. Get out of the critic's seat and become their greatest supporter. If you do, you will make them proud of you.

Wednesday, January 23, 2013

Search for Truth Radio Podcast

Search for Truth Radio Programmes have been broadcasting around the world for well over 30 years - now it is possible to listen to the programmes online free at the archive at www.searchfortruth.podbean.com or alternatively you can find the podcast player on the right hand side of this website.

Each programme is 15 minutes in length, hosted by John Martin, with a Bible talk by Brian Johnston, an experienced Bible teacher.  Topics already posted include series on the book of Hebrews, salt as a picture of Christ, overcoming objections to Christian faith, Biblical discipleship and more.  The archive is planned to be updated on a weekly basis so feel free to keep visiting.  Many of these series also form the basis of Kindle books - see the  links section to visit the store.

Monday, September 10, 2012

Tomorrows Headlines - Bible Prophecy Book

Here is a little Kindle book that is currently going like hot cakes and I highly recommend it - especially at the bargain price of just 99 cents!

http://www.amazon.com/Tomorrows-Headlines-Prophecy-Search-ebook/dp/B0094GM5W2/

Bible teacher, missionary and radio broadcaster, Brian Johnston's conversational and down to earth approach provides some key principles for unlocking the meaning of Bible prophecy and surveys what the Bible says about the future, primarily from the books of Daniel and Revelation.

Topics and questions include:

- Will there ever be a United States of Europe?
- Will there be a single world currency?
- What is the critical position of Israel in God's purposes?
- Will the temple be rebuilt in Jerusalem?
- What can we know about the Antichrist?
- Will Jesus Christ return once, or twice?
- What is the role of Babylon in the end times?
- What is the significance of the spread of Islam?

Part of the "Search for Truth Series" which already has 9 titles published with more to come...!

Wednesday, May 16, 2012

Olympic-sized Witnessing Opportunities!

The Olympics are not far away and perhaps you have been wondering whether it presents an opportunity to witness to friends, family or the man in the street.  The question is, how do you go about doing that?

Hayes Press are a Christian publishers who are aiming to answer that very question!  They have assembled a range of  themed material which you might want to take a look at.  Here is a copy of their latest flyer:



Check out their website for more details.  They also stock a wide range of Christian leaflets, tracts, posters and books.

If the Torch Relay is going to be coming around your neighbourhood, why not capitalise on this great opportunity and hand out some themed leaflets?  Or  get some of the childrens resources for your youth club?

Saturday, May 12, 2012

Seven Key Ideas of C.S. Lewis

Seven Key Ideas
I have heard it said that many well-known thinkers have only two or three key ideas that they develop from various angles throughout their lives. It might be asked: What are C.S. Lewis’s key ideas? I have chosen seven to summarize in this essay. You can click on the words in bold to get a further development of these ideas. The seven I have chosen are:
  1. Chronological Snobbery
  2. Desire
  3. Imagination
  4. Objective Values vs. Relativism
  5. Myth
  6. Immortality
  7. Comprehensiveness
1. Chronological Snobbery
One obstacle that C.S. Lewis had to overcome was what he called his “chronological snobbery.” By that he meant the assumption that whatever has gone out of date is thereby discredited. For instance, people might ask, “What does a 2,000-year-old faith have to do with me?” One of Lewis’s friends helped him to ask about ideas that seemed outdated. Why did an idea go out of date and was it ever refuted? If so, where, by whom, and how conclusively? C.S. Lewis later argued that reading old books helped provide a corrective to the blindness induced by our own age. We ought, he maintained, to read one old book for every new one or if that’s too much, then one old one for every three new ones. Otherwise, we may be easily enslaved to the ideas of the recent past.

2. Desire
C.S. Lewis believed that we were made for “joy.” God is the great “hedonist.” He provides things for humans to do all day long, like “sleeping, eating, drinking, making love, playing, praying, working.” But, he also believed that to focus on these “second things” and neglect “first things” such as worshiping and loving God was to be “too easily pleased.” He wrote:
Our Lord finds our desires not too strong, but too weak. We are half-hearted creatures, fooling about with drink sex and ambition when infinite joy is offered us, like an ignorant child who wants to go on making mud pies in a slum because he cannot imagine what is meant by the offer of a holiday at the sea. We are far too easily pleased.
Lewis’s argument for God’s existence from the nature of our desires is fascinating and thought-provoking. Just as the existence of hunger points to satisfaction in the reality of food, thirst in drink, sexual desire in sex, drowsiness in sleep (etc) so other “natural” desires: spiritual hunger, desire for supernatural encounters, aspirations to immortality (and so on) act as cosmic pointers to real supernatural satisfaction.


3. Imagination
C.S. Lewis viewed reason as the natural “organ of truth” and imagination as the “organ of meaning.” He believed that the only way we grasp any idea with clarity is if we have an image associated with it. He was able to work with equal facility in philosophical arguments or in writing fiction. Lewis uses images to illustrate his apologetics and communicates profound ideas in his fiction. For instance, he writes a great critique of relativism in Abolition of Man and communicates the same ideas in the novel,That Hideous Strength.

Imagination acted as a cosmic pointer to Lewis. Once, during his years of unbelief, he was going on a train ride and bought a book (George MacDonald’s Phantastes). While he was reading, he said that a “new quality” touched his life and his imagination was “baptized.” The quality was later described by Lewis to be “holiness.” Although it took a while for the rest of him to catch up (reason-satisfied; will-submitted), it was an important first step. Having had this early experience, it is not surprising that he thought that others might feel a similar thing. He felt that his Narnia series might sneak past “watchful dragons” of religiosity enabling us to see old things in new ways.

4. Absolutes vs. Relativism
C.S. Lewis argued for objective truth and morality against the relativism of his (and our) day. He felt that establishing the reality of truth and goodness was an essential preparation for the Gospel. He wrote:
For my part, I believe we ought to work not only at spreading the gospel (that certainly) but also at a certain preparation for the gospel. It is necessary to recall many to the Law of Nature before we talk about God. For Christ promises forgiveness of sins: But what is that to those who since they do not know the Law of Nature, do not know that they have sinned? Who will take the medicine unless he knows he is in the grip of disease? Moral relativity is the enemy we have to overcome before we tackle atheism.
Lewis’s arguments against relativism are set forth in Mere Christianity (Book I), Abolition of Man, and in numerous essays.


5. Myth
Early in C.S. Lewis’s life he noticed the parallels between pagan myths and classic Christianity. In his education it was assumed that the pagan myths were false and Christianity true. Why was this religion–and this one alone–true? This is one factor that led to his unbelief.
He resolved the problem and wrote about myth in a number of places. A key to his resolution was the increased understanding that if God created the world in a certain way and the human mind with a definite structure, it is not surprising that patterns re-occur. The only question is, Are any of these myths truer than others or, more precisely, Are any of these myths also fact? He came to believe that Jesus was the “myth become fact.”
Later he defined myth as an “unfocused gleam of divine truth falling on human imagination.” Lewis discusses parallel mythologies in his book, Miracles, his novel, Till We Have Faces, and in other places.


6. Immortality
Walter Hooper (C.S. Lewis scholar) argues that C.S. Lewis’s central idea was that all people are immortal. Lewis wrote: “There are no ordinary people. You have never met a mere mortal. Nations, cultures, arts, civilizations, these are mortal, and their life is to ours as the life of a gnat.” Lewis manifested this belief by writing personally to everyone who wrote to him (usually handwritten letters) and giving away all the proceeds of his books.
Hooper tells the story of a time when he was with Lewis and they were talking about a man who was very boring. Hooper told Lewis that the man succeeded in interesting him by the very intensity of his boredom. Lewis replied, “Yes, but let us not forget that Our Lord might well have said, “As ye have done it unto one of the least of these my bores, you have done it to me.” In fact, Lewis felt that it was sometimes his duty to visit and help such people.
Lewis also gives us glorious pictures of heaven. For instance, in my favorite of the Narnia Chronicles,The Last Battle, he portrays life in the higher country as infinite adventures with an infinitely creative God for all eternity. The last paragraph of The Last Battle says:
And for us this is the end of all the stories, and we can most truly say that they all lived happily ever after. But for them it was only the beginning of the real story. All their life in this world and all their adventures in Narnia had only been the cover and the title page: now at last they were beginning Chapter One of the Great Story which no one on earth has read: which goes on forever: in which every chapter is better than the one before.

7. Comprehensiveness
C.S. Lewis believed that Jesus was the way, the truth, and the life and that all truth pointed to Him. Lewis said: “I believe in Christianity as I believe the sun has risen, not only because I see it, but because by it I see everything else.” He was influenced by G.K. Chesterton who maintained that we become convinced of a theory not just when something proves it but only when everything proves it. Lewis explored reason, imagination, fiction, non-fiction, art, philosophy, classic literature, and poetry finding shafts of light and following them back to the sun (Son

Excellent artice taken from http://thinkpoint.wordpress.com/2012/05/11/seven-key-ideas-from-c-s-lewis/

Monday, May 7, 2012

Where is God's House Today ? - Part 3

Here is part 3 which records how God moved from living in a tent to living in a temple, but when Jesus died at Calvary, the veil in the temple was torn from top to bottom to show that God was no longer living there.  But God had another plan for his dwelling place among a people.

Sunday, May 6, 2012

A Series on the Book of Judges - Part 3

Part 3 - Israel and Baal


Sunday School pupils might have long enjoyed Elijah’s triumph over the prophets of Baal but given the somewhat salacious background to this false god, it’s perhaps not too surprising that a “theo-biography” has not traditionally featured on their curriculum!  But no understanding of the Old Testament is complete without knowing the prominent role that Baal played in Israelite life.

The Israelites seem to have managed to avoid falling into idolatry while captive in Egypt, despite the polytheistic society. Post-exodus, apart from the golden calf and the Balaam crisis (Num.25), the Israelites largely stayed loyal to God with some notable exceptions (Amos 5:26). But it didn’t seem to take long for them to fall headlong into idolatry when they entered Canaan.  Judges 2:12-13 records “They forsook the LORD…who had brought them out of Egypt. They followed and worshiped various gods of the peoples around them.”

 What was behind this sudden departure after generations of faithfulness?  The key factor was social co-habitation, including marriage, amongst the Canaanites.  As reviled slaves in Egypt and then pilgrim wanderers in the desert, there was simply limited opportunity for this to happen before then.

Judges 10:6 lists the false gods that the Israelites worshipped. It’s no shock that Baal, a God of the Caananites, is first on the list:  They served the Baals and the Ashtoreths, and the gods of Aram, the gods of Sidon, the gods of Moab, the gods of the Ammonites and the gods of the Philistines”. Who was he?

Baal means master, and thus to worship Baal usurped the position of the Lord.  We learn from ancient Syrian texts that he was known as the storm god, the bringer of rain, and therefore fertility, to the land. His nickname was "Rider of the Clouds," and often described using meteorological terms like clouds, thunder, lightning, hail and, most importantly, water.

 It’s easy to imagine how he might appeal to people living in an arid and agriculturally marginal area, where the fertility of land was so vital to preserving life. The Israelites experienced God as a powerful desert warrior God, who they counted on to march in with his heavenly armies when needed. But as they settled into the land, they perhaps became convinced that Baal was in charge of the more mundane aspects of everyday life, like rain, crops and livestock.   But the Israelites never completely abandoned the worship of the true God. To put it bluntly, they had one God for crises and another god for everyday life (this is called syncretism - we can be guilty of that too!)

Baal worship involved prostitution, designed in part to encourage this fertility to continue (read Hosea and Jeremiah for the graphic details). It seems particularly apt, then, that the metaphor of prostitution was used in Judges 8, and of adultery many times elsewhere, to describe Israel’s unfaithfulness.

There was no prospect of Israel’s God just letting all this happen though. It’s no accident that various scriptures portray God using images consistent with the Baal myth. God speaks from the mighty waters, His voice lightning and His words thunder (Psalm 29; 104:7). God is described as shooting flashing arrows from the heavens as He rides in a chariot in the clouds (Psalm 76:3-9; 77:16-20; 97:1-5; 104:1-4; Hab 3:4-9). It is God alone who rules over the waters of the deep and controls the raging of the sea (Psalm 77:16; 89:5-13; 93:3-4).

 God is showing himself to be the real deal, not just in words but in actions as well.  Judge Deborah’s song of victory has an unmistakably watery motif, “When you, LORD, went out from Seir, when you marched from the land of Edom, the earth shook, the heavens poured, the clouds poured down water.  The river Kishon swept them away, the age-old river, the river Kishon.” Judges 5: 4,21. She knew that it is God who is in control of the elements, not Baal.  The famous Carmel contest was further proof of this, giving strong meaning to Elijah's prayer that rain would be withheld, as a direct challenge to the rain-god!  And Elijah even added insult to the priests’ injuries by soaking his sacrifice to God with water to show that this was no barrier to His almighty power.

 Outlasting the Judges by centuries Baal worship thrived until the time of the exile, even as a quasi state religion under Ahab and Jezebel. Although the problem largely faded after the return from exile thanks to Ezra and Nehemiah’s reforms, Israel has been so passionately monotheistic ever since that most Jews incorrectly view accepting Jesus as the Son of God as a forbidden return to polytheistic syncretism.

Saturday, May 5, 2012

Mark Driscoll on "Marriage and Women"

Lots of traffic on the site looking at what Mark has to say on Twilight!  Here is a longer piece on the subject of "marriage and women".  I will post the video on "Marriage and Men" shortly and they really both need to be viewed in order to get a good overview on how marriage partners can really work together.

With Christian marriages under threat, and all mariages being more than capable of being made better than  they currently are, I recommend you take a look at these.  The world's wisdom would scoff at what Mark has to say - but it works.  Very biblical, very powerful and very humbling stuff..

Where is God's House Today? Part 2

Part 1 one of the series was posted yesterday and has generated quite a lot of site traffic so I thought I should not keep you waiting for the second part in the series!

The opening video was a general introduction to the subject.  Part 2 goes right back to the early part of God's dealings with the human race.  It seems that God has always wanted a collective people for himself.  In the Old Testament, that people was Israel, who entered a special covenant with God and became a redeemed and obedient group - they were to be obedient to the law of God and also obedient to the pattern of worship that God laid out in immense detail in connection with the Tabernacle.

Later parts of the series will trace the collective aspects laid here throughout the Old Testament and show how it changed dramatically when we get to the New Testament - a change which is still with us today - but the importance of which seems to have been overlooked by the majority of Christians.

This is a short 8 minute clip.



Simply Jesus by N.T Wright

N.T. Wright is one of the foremost theologians in England, in addition to holding a senior position as a Bishop in the Church of England.  Although he has a brillian intellect he us quite easy to listen to, especially in the more informal Q&A session which comes midway through this video.  Quite a portion of this is taken up with the subject of the ressurection.  Fascinating stuff!

Is the Bible reliable?

This is effectively the question that Daniel Wallace is attempting to answer in this video hich lasts about 27 minutes (Part 1):

Friday, May 4, 2012

A Meditation on the Cross and the Tomb


The man worked with almost casual efficiency.  He might as well have been hanging a picture on his living room wall.   But the nail he was hammering wasn’t going into the wall. It was going into the hands of Jesus of Nazareth.  Infact it was a rare case that the solider even knew the name of the criminal; he’d lost count of the times he had done this.


They had found someone to carry his cross for him, but that wasn’t kindness, it was simply the quickest way to get the job done.  With all the controversy, the sooner it could all be over the better. As the nails went in, the soldier seemed oblivious to the scene around him or the pain of the crucified; all he cared about was doing a professional job and then onto the next assignment.


A few hours later - a great contrast.  Two men had suddenly realized that Jesus had died, much quicker than expected, and shortly he would be pulled down from the cross and tossed into a mass grave.  This could not be allowed to happen.  They quickly looked around to see who was going to intervene.  There was John, but he was busy caring for Mary, as instructed.   Most of the crowd had dispersed, their appetite for violence sated.  A handful of women remained – the ten remaining disciples were nowhere.


Joseph felt sick.  Nicodemus was shaking.  The time had come for them to act – but now was not the time though?  They were confused, angry, fearful and emotional.  They had no idea how to get Jesus’ body down from the cross, even if they were allowed to.  Bravely they went straight to the highest authority they could think of – Pilate.


Not bothered about their social status, they simply bowed and begged.  Amazingly he agreed to their request.  They ran back to the cross quickly to ensure the soldiers hadn’t already got on with the final phase of their job. 


Removing the body was no easy task.  Just touching a dead body made them unclean, and the special Sabbath was coming up.  They didn’t care.  Getting the body down with dignity and tenderness was all that mattered. And so it took them far longer than the soldiers would have done.

But what next? They had not thought that far ahead.  He would have to be buried quickly as per Jewish custom.  Joseph had a tomb that he had ready for his own burial and there, unhesitatingly, was the solution.  But the body needed to be prepared for burial.  They had never done anything like this in their lives, but they would attempt it for their Master.   All fingers and thumbs they clumsily applied the spices and wrapped the body as best they could.  The watching women silently noted their amateurism and came back on that third day in the hope of being able to do a proper job.


But it wasn’t required.  Jesus had arisen and folded the grave clothes far more neatly and expertly than he had been wrapped.   Despite their fears and inadequacies, the two men had been used greatly by God to protect the body and set the scene for the coming resurrection.


This imagining of part of the Easter story can practically instruct us.   Frequently, there are jobs and responsibilities in our churches – some are mundane but all are necessary.  We might look around for someone else to volunteer, someone who is perhaps better qualified for the task.

But the reality is that amongst small numbers there often isn’t someone else, or that someone else already has his or her hands full. Does this mean then that the work doesn’t get done?  Sadly, often the answer is yes.  It’s said that if you don’t do the Lord’s work, then he will find someone else to do it.  That might be true in certain circumstances, but it’s a risky excuse for sitting on our hands! Is there something you can do for Him that’s “outside your box”?


Also, when we see others attempting to do just that, maybe in an inexpert way, are we wise and gracious enough to support rather than criticize, and perhaps lend a helping hand or guiding word ourselves?

Where is God's House Today? Part 1

This is a short video of less than 7 minutes which is the first of series on the subject of where is God's House today?  In the Old Testament, God lived first in a tabernacle (tent) and then in a temple? It is true of course that God now lives inside every believer, from the day of Pentecost onwards.

But is there an equivalent dwelling place for God in the New Testament that can still exist today, that operates in a collective way like it did for the people of Israel?  This video, and the rest of the series,  argues that the answer to that question is yes, and that this has great importance for every Christian who is interested in serving God in a way that he has instructed us to do.  Take a look and I would be very interested to hear what you think.