Here is another recommended book. This 99 cent e-booklet provides a concise introduction to answering 10 key objections to
the Christian faith:
• Why do the innocent suffer?
• Don’t all
religions lead to God?
• What about the heathen?
• Isn’t the Christian
experience only psychological?
• Are the miracles possible?
• Isn’t the
Bible full of errors?
• Won’t a good life get me to heaven?
• How can you
believe in hell and a God of love?
• Hasn’t science done away with the need
for faith?
• What about all the bloodshed in the name of
religion?
Bible teacher, missionary and radio broadcaster, Brian
Johnston's conversational and down to earth approach provides a number of
insightful illustrations and Biblical references which all Christians can use to
help them give "a reason for the hope that is within us" and whet the appetite
for further research on each question in greater depth.
http://www.amazon.com/Overcoming-Objections-Christian-Search-ebook/dp/B0091ZTS0S/
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Overcoming-Objections-Christian-Search-ebook/dp/B0091ZTS0S/
Wednesday, September 12, 2012
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...!
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...!
Labels:
antichrist,
bible,
bible teaching,
brian johnston,
end times,
millenium,
prophecy,
rapture,
revelation,
search for truth,
tribulation
Thursday, July 5, 2012
Great mp3 sermons online!
YFR 2012 was held on June 20-24, 2012 at Cefn Lea Christian Centre in Wales. The subject for the 4 day event was "The Battle" or spiritual warfare. The keynote addresses were recorded and are now available for free download - they are all highly recommended. Links to the podcasts are below for your convenience but you can also download them from the Itunes podcast store by simply searching for "YFR 2012".
More information about YFR (and more addresses from previous events) can be found at www.youthfellowshiprally.com
http://yfr.podbean.com/2012/06/29/yfr-2012-opening-address-martin-jones/
http://yfr.podbean.com/2012/06/29/yfr-2012-the-battle-for-the-soul-part-1-karl-smith/
http://yfr.podbean.com/2012/06/29/yfr-2012-the-battle-for-the-soul-part-2-mark-imoukhuede/
http://yfr.podbean.com/2012/06/29/yfr-2012-the-battle-for-the-heart-stephen-mccabe/
http://yfr.podbean.com/2012/06/29/yfr-2012-the-battle-for-the-mind-brian-johnston/
http://yfr.podbean.com/2012/06/29/yfr-2012-the-battle-for-strength-phil-brennan/
http://yfr.podbean.com/2012/06/29/yfr-2012-closing-address-greg-neely/
More information about YFR (and more addresses from previous events) can be found at www.youthfellowshiprally.com
http://yfr.podbean.com/2012/06/29/yfr-2012-opening-address-martin-jones/
http://yfr.podbean.com/2012/06/29/yfr-2012-the-battle-for-the-soul-part-1-karl-smith/
http://yfr.podbean.com/2012/06/29/yfr-2012-the-battle-for-the-soul-part-2-mark-imoukhuede/
http://yfr.podbean.com/2012/06/29/yfr-2012-the-battle-for-the-heart-stephen-mccabe/
http://yfr.podbean.com/2012/06/29/yfr-2012-the-battle-for-the-mind-brian-johnston/
http://yfr.podbean.com/2012/06/29/yfr-2012-the-battle-for-strength-phil-brennan/
http://yfr.podbean.com/2012/06/29/yfr-2012-closing-address-greg-neely/
Labels:
free,
mp3,
sermons,
spiritual warfare,
yfr 2012
What is the basis of Christian fellowship?
Here is a question that I received from a fellow Christian and my answer to it. It is a VERY important question, which is why my answer is so long! (For your information, I am a member of the Churches of God, which you can find out more about at www.churchesofgod.info)
Question: I would like to
understand your church's rationale for excluding godly, consistent
Christians from the fellowship of the Lord's communion?
Answer: Your
question seems to boil down to “what is the basis of Christian fellowship”? Is it perhaps a) being a believer, b) being a
godly and consistent Christian (however that might be defined) or c) something
more? Allied to that, what then, does
that fellowship consist of?
It seems to me that this is one of the fundamental
questions that has been posed and answered in different ways by parts of the Brethren
movement over the last 150 years or so.
The Churches of God are not alone in effectively answering “option c)
with option a) being a “given” and option b) being “an expectation” to that
question.
The way your question is worded of course, seems to accentuate
the negative and could also imply that this “exclusion” is based on a sense of
moral or spiritual superiority. I would
put it to you though that such a “separation” is really a case of being positively
separated “to”, rather than separated “from”.
Separation to what? Separation to the pattern of divine service that we
see throughout the Bible. We simply see
no alternative in this present age in order to be able to faithfully attempt to
give expression to it.
Jesus prayer in John’s gospel was that his followers should be one - that
there should be unity. What was this
prayer aiming at? The Church, the Body
was, and is, automatically perfect in every way, there is no division in it and
the gates of Hades shall not overcome it.
There was no need for him to pray for its unity. He must have been talking about something
else – a local expression (if you can call it that) of the Church the Body,
some kind of entity where unity was at risk.
But what is that local expression based on? Is it membership of the Body, where two or
three meet in the Lord’s name? This is
the answer that many would give.
The context of Matthew 18 19-20 is not the
church the body, but a congregation prior to this dispensation. We apply it to
church life today in respect to the congregation dealing with someone who
refuses to repent of sin. It specifically refers to the church asking the Lord
to do something. Extending its application as the basis for all gatherings of believers
is, I submit, very questionable.
Having said that, it would seem to me to be the case
that there would certainly be some capacity to express unity on this basis of
fellowship, and many can testify to that I am sure – and we are thankful to God
for that. But it does seem to be at risk
of being either fragile, transient and/or also in a very limited scope. There could easily be a situation where a
group of one believers in a town are unified in doctrine and conduct, and there
is another set of believers in the same town which are also unified, but the
two groups differ in any number of ways, whether it be on matters of doctrine
or discipline or some other matter. One
believer who broke unity with his “group”, or was disciplined by them, could simply
transfer allegiance to another group.
You will probably know of many examples of this.
Could there be, and should there be, any broader and
deeper expression of unity in view? More
to the point, what is the basis of achieving unity that we see in the Acts and
the Epistles? We would make the case
that there is indeed a broader expression possible - which occurs in the New
Testament in churches of God. We view
the churches of God as not being synonymous with the Church the Body, there
being a number of very clear distinctions laid out in scripture, some of which
include:
-
No
gender distinctions in the Body of Christ, gender distinctions in the church of
God (1 Cor 14:34)
-
No
leadership required in the Body of Christ, overseers and deacons in the Church
of God – (Phil 1:1, 1 Timothy 3:2,8,15)
-
No
discipline required in the Body of Christ (as perfect), discipline required in
the church of God (1 Cor 5:13)
-
Body
of Christ includes believers who have gone home to be with the Lord, the Church
of God only contains people who are still alive and therefore are capable of
attending a church in a certain place associated with a Church of God (1 Cor
1:1)
-
Membership
of the Body of Christ is permanent and unconditional, membership of the Church
of God may not be permanent and is conditional (Hebrews 3:6)
Having seen that a church of God is different from the
Body of Christ, we recognize that there needs to be a definite and different entry
point into it. We believe that the
scriptural pattern for entry is not a self-gathering but being added by the
Lord to an existing group – as in the case of the fledgling Church of God in
Jerusalem in Acts 2:41,42. The only
two criteria for being added are noted in these verses – salvation and
baptism. Further, this addition is by no
means casual or temporary, nor is the group itself viewed as such – the picture
of the lampstand in Revelation speaks to an ongoing light and witness.
Acts 2:41,42 go onto describe the remaining four of
seven steps that characterize the activities of a church of God – continuing
steadfastly in the Apostles teaching, the Breaking of Bread, the fellowship and
the prayers. We view Acts 2:41,42 as
something of a synopsis of Matt 28:20 and linked to Jude v3 – the faith once
for all delivered to the saints. It is
on the basis of this subscription to the faith, not simply a common salvation,
that we have a basis for fellowship. (It
should be noted that we hold the vast majority of the articles of the faith in
common with the brethren movement – particularly, but not limited to, the work and person of Christ, doctrine
related to the Holy Spirit and eschatology).
As an aside, we take the view that all the instances
of the breaking of the bread noted in the New Testament relate to the activity
of a church, not a casual association of believers. It seems that Paul deliberately stayed behind
where there was a church in order to break bread.
Our understanding is also that it is the divine
pattern for only one Church of God to occur in every city. We read of various “companies” in places like
Jerusalem but Paul is very clear in only referring to all the believers in a
locality as “the church”. Paul’s
instruction to Titus to appoint elders in every church would support our view
that companies in a locality would all fall under the authority of the elders
of the whole church there and not simply “company elders”. And so, unity would be able to be expressed
at this level – the locality.
But is there something more? We believe yes. I always find it remarkable when people hold
a position that the churches of God that Paul went around and visited (and
helped to plant in many cases) were intended to (and did) operate autonomously
from each other. I would love to hear
other points of view. Conceptually, it
doesn’t make sense to me that Paul would have taught (from God) differently in
each place or expected different moral standards or approaches to discipline? In fact, in 1 Corinthians 11, he makes the
point that the Churches of God have no other practice than the one he expounds,
in relation to head covering! The
Jerusalem council of Acts 15 and the communication afterwards also indicates a
desire for unity of doctrine to be expressed amongst all Churches of God. Why do we think things should be any
different today? Isn’t God glorified by
such an expression of unity across churches?
Two key verses seem to talk about this collective
worship that God desires:
“you
also, like living stones, are being built into a spiritual house to
be a holy priesthood, offering spiritual sacrifices acceptable to God through
Jesus Christ.” (1 Peter 2:5)
“but
fellow citizens with God’s people and also members of his household, built on
the foundation of the apostles and prophets, with Christ Jesus himself as the
chief cornerstone. In him the
whole (other versions say every or each several ) building is joined together
and rises to become a holy temple in the Lord. And in him you too are being built together to become a dwelling in
which God lives by his Spirit.
(Ephesians 2:19-22)
It is our position that all believers in the body of
Christ are “living stones” and all are individual priests. But God’s pattern is that they should be
built together to become a) a functioning priesthood and b) a place for him to
dwell, foreshadowed by the Old Testament Priesthood and dwelling places of God
(Tabernacle and Temple).
How does this process of building together (or being
“fitly framed”) happen – is it automatic?
How does this priesthood serve, where and on what basis? Our position is that God’s plan is for
individual churches of God aggregated together to form the house of God with
holy priesthood service (before God) carried out in heaven (as per Hebrews
10:19-22, 6:19) and royal priesthood service (before men) on earth. They serve, according to the pattern laid
out, just as he laid out a prescriptive pattern of service in the Old
Testament.
Now, it is vital to state that we believe that the
above is God’s pattern for ALL believers and this would have been carried out
in the early years of the church. The
countless schisms that we have seen over centuries completely eroded the deep
and broad unity that once existed. A
vibrant, organic movement was replaced with rigid denominationalism which the
brethren movement rightly sought to escape from. But, to quote the title of a recent book on
the subject: Are We Missing Something?”
Going back to the wording of the original question - there
can be no sense of superiority of any kind – people in the organization known
as Churches of God today are of no better “quality” than any other believers or
group of believers. We are simply
aiming to carry out the pattern that we see (the mold that we have been
delivered to (Rom 6:17) - to do otherwise would be disobedient. If others do not see it, that is up to them -
we will all have to answer for what we have done in our churches. But, in practical terms, how would it be
possible to give effect to it, whilst associating with churches who will not
accept this pattern? It was tried 125
years ago and it simply didn’t work – this is why Churches of God exist. Our history is very different from so-called
Exclusives, any separation not being on the grounds of spiritual superiority or
purity.
In terms of our separated position, it should be noted
that the focus of it is collective. We
welcome and encourage fellowship with other believers on an individual and
informal basis, for example in praying together or discussing the Word
together. It is where we are carrying on
an activity “as a church” (as Paul talks about in 1 Corinthians 11) in times of
prayer and worship that these activities are participated in by members of the
church. In all cases, however, all
people (whether believers or unbelievers) are free to observe any of our
gatherings (with the possible rare exception of when church discipline is being
carried out).
Perhaps the above is sufficient to answer the original
question posed and responses are welcomed.
Labels:
basis of fellowship,
church teaching,
doctrine,
open brethren
Thursday, June 28, 2012
Ikthus Christian Resources - Launched!
Yesterday was a very exciting today for the webmasters behind Ikthus Christian Resources - the e-store was launched, and launched without a hitch!
The initial focus of the store is to sell a great selection of high quality gospel tracts (or leaflets to use the modern word), targetted primarily at the UK and North America (where the inventory resides) but also very open to selling around the world.
You can check it all out at www.ikthuschristianresources.com
The store currently offers over 30 different leaflets in pack of 20, 50 or 100 with a special price for the purchase of a monster pack of 1,000!
Each leaflet clearly presents the Christian message using modern Bible translations and in a contemporary style.
A regular 100 pack costs just 4.50 pounds, or you can go for a 100 tract sampler for a fiver.
Here are just a few of the tracts on offer:
The tract entitled "Why Do They Do It?" is perfect for handing out at the Olympic Torch run.
The initial focus of the store is to sell a great selection of high quality gospel tracts (or leaflets to use the modern word), targetted primarily at the UK and North America (where the inventory resides) but also very open to selling around the world.
You can check it all out at www.ikthuschristianresources.com
The store currently offers over 30 different leaflets in pack of 20, 50 or 100 with a special price for the purchase of a monster pack of 1,000!
Each leaflet clearly presents the Christian message using modern Bible translations and in a contemporary style.
A regular 100 pack costs just 4.50 pounds, or you can go for a 100 tract sampler for a fiver.
Here are just a few of the tracts on offer:
The tract entitled "Why Do They Do It?" is perfect for handing out at the Olympic Torch run.
Labels:
evangelism,
gospel leaflets,
gospel tracts,
ikthus christian resources,
olympics,
outreach,
torch run,
witnessing
Thursday, June 7, 2012
Contemporary Christian Worship - A Satire
I cannot remember where I first saw this but I stumbled across it in my archives - very clever. Very. I think it is a spoof :)
"Thank you for choosing to worship with us today. If you are from a church that uses traditional hymns, you may be confused. Please take a moment to read through this guide to contemporary Christian music.
In our church you will not hear "How Great Thou Art," "Wonderful Grace of Jesus," or "Like a River Glorious." (Generally, hymns that have words like “Thou” are not used. They are too archaic and are normally replaced by words like “awesome” and “miry clay”). Yes, okay, we may do "Amazing Grace" or "Peace Like a River" at some point, but as a general rule we avoid songs with too many different verses or those that can't be played easily on guitar and drums.
If you are new to worship here, you may wish to know the reasons for this. One is that deep theological concepts do not belong in contemporary Christian worship. We frown on songs that change more than one or two words for each verse. For example, our version of "Holy is the Lord" consists of repeating that phrase six times per verse and then changing "Holy" to "Worthy," "Mighty," "Jesus" and finally changing "the" to "my." Isn’t that much simpler to sing and easier to remember? The twin goals here are a) repetition and b) chanting quality. We don’t focus on what we’re singing, but how we’re singing it. The main thing is to get that kind of tingly, "olive oily" feeling. Don't worry if you don't get this right away. It will come as you learn to disengage your intellect. Just free yourself. Immerse yourself. Relax.
Nevertheless, a traditional hymn may sometimes be used. For example, we’re not averse to "Holy, Holy, Holy." You may be tempted to sing this as you would have in your former church, but please note that it is sung here with changes, mainly the fact that we repeat it several times and try to sing as slowly as possible, thereby emphasizing the funereal nature of the verse.
Repetition is very important in contemporary Christian music. We repeat: Repetition is very important in contemporary Christian music. Just because a song may have one verse and one chorus does not mean that you only sing it through once. Old hymns have several verses, each of which introduces a new theological concept, and are meant to be sung once followed by "Amen." This is no longer how it’s done. The correct procedure is to sing the identical verse and chorus at least three times. Often it is preferable to repeat the verse two times initially before moving on to the chorus.
Also the worship leader may want to repeat a verse or chorus found in the middle of the song. This is signaled by “calling an audible." When this occurs, the worship leader will say the first few words of the verse or chorus he will be singing next. Sometimes, due to the similarity of the verses, this may be confusing and the overhead projector may flash several pages of text until the correct one is arrived at. Don't panic, this is normal. Just continue singing as though you know the words and soon either the correct slide will appear or a new chorus will begin.
After the verse and chorus are sung at least three times, it is permissible for the song to end. However, the chorus must first be repeated in its entirety, then the last paragraph, then the last line. When singing the last line it is important to slow down a little and look upward. Raising a hand is permissible and often done at this time. This may take a little getting used to but don't worry, if you just join in, in a short time you won't even notice and soon you will forget that you ever did it any other way.
We are just really glad you chose to share the worship experience with us today. Thank you and we hope to see you again soon.
Thank you and we hope to see you again soon. Thank you. Thank."
"Thank you for choosing to worship with us today. If you are from a church that uses traditional hymns, you may be confused. Please take a moment to read through this guide to contemporary Christian music.
In our church you will not hear "How Great Thou Art," "Wonderful Grace of Jesus," or "Like a River Glorious." (Generally, hymns that have words like “Thou” are not used. They are too archaic and are normally replaced by words like “awesome” and “miry clay”). Yes, okay, we may do "Amazing Grace" or "Peace Like a River" at some point, but as a general rule we avoid songs with too many different verses or those that can't be played easily on guitar and drums.
If you are new to worship here, you may wish to know the reasons for this. One is that deep theological concepts do not belong in contemporary Christian worship. We frown on songs that change more than one or two words for each verse. For example, our version of "Holy is the Lord" consists of repeating that phrase six times per verse and then changing "Holy" to "Worthy," "Mighty," "Jesus" and finally changing "the" to "my." Isn’t that much simpler to sing and easier to remember? The twin goals here are a) repetition and b) chanting quality. We don’t focus on what we’re singing, but how we’re singing it. The main thing is to get that kind of tingly, "olive oily" feeling. Don't worry if you don't get this right away. It will come as you learn to disengage your intellect. Just free yourself. Immerse yourself. Relax.
Nevertheless, a traditional hymn may sometimes be used. For example, we’re not averse to "Holy, Holy, Holy." You may be tempted to sing this as you would have in your former church, but please note that it is sung here with changes, mainly the fact that we repeat it several times and try to sing as slowly as possible, thereby emphasizing the funereal nature of the verse.
Repetition is very important in contemporary Christian music. We repeat: Repetition is very important in contemporary Christian music. Just because a song may have one verse and one chorus does not mean that you only sing it through once. Old hymns have several verses, each of which introduces a new theological concept, and are meant to be sung once followed by "Amen." This is no longer how it’s done. The correct procedure is to sing the identical verse and chorus at least three times. Often it is preferable to repeat the verse two times initially before moving on to the chorus.
Also the worship leader may want to repeat a verse or chorus found in the middle of the song. This is signaled by “calling an audible." When this occurs, the worship leader will say the first few words of the verse or chorus he will be singing next. Sometimes, due to the similarity of the verses, this may be confusing and the overhead projector may flash several pages of text until the correct one is arrived at. Don't panic, this is normal. Just continue singing as though you know the words and soon either the correct slide will appear or a new chorus will begin.
After the verse and chorus are sung at least three times, it is permissible for the song to end. However, the chorus must first be repeated in its entirety, then the last paragraph, then the last line. When singing the last line it is important to slow down a little and look upward. Raising a hand is permissible and often done at this time. This may take a little getting used to but don't worry, if you just join in, in a short time you won't even notice and soon you will forget that you ever did it any other way.
We are just really glad you chose to share the worship experience with us today. Thank you and we hope to see you again soon.
Thank you and we hope to see you again soon. Thank you. Thank."
Tuesday, May 29, 2012
Monday, May 28, 2012
Links in the Chain of Testimony Ebook
Here we have another book, published by Hayes Press.
Here are the quick links as usual:
Amazon.com: http://amzn.to/LBZygH
Amazon.co.uk: http://amzn.to/LYfEHO
Who is this book for?
This little book is for all Christians who want to better understand how God wants to be worshipped and served today, based on His pattern that is seen throughout the Old and New Testaments.
Who is it written by?
This book was written by S.J. Hill in the early part of the last century. Hill was an elder in the Churches of God, an organization that still exists today (see www.churchesofgod.info) and still seeks to worship and serve God as a collective and united people in the way he describes in this book. The book has been re-published because of a conviction that this church truth is as vital today as it was when it was first written.
What is it about?
It centres around the word “Testimony”. There are many books that talk about the kind of “individual testimony” seen in the lives of people of faith in Genesis like Abel, Enoch or Noah; but this book is about something different that is spoken of much, much less – it’s the important concept of “collective testimony” which is first seen in the Old Testament in the book of Exodus. Psalm 78:5 says: “For He established a testimony in Jacob”, by which he meant the People of Israel.
What is "collective testimony about"?
Collective testimony starts with a redeemed and obedient People, to whom God spoke words like this: “Now if you obey me fully and keep my covenant, then out of all nations you will be my treasured possession. Although the whole earth is mine, you will be for me a kingdom of priests and a holy nation.” (Exodus 19:5-6)
God had a purpose with His redeemed People, when he delivered them from Egyptian bondage and slavery in Eqypt. He set them free, not to remain in Egypt and keep the Passover there, but to leave and do what he wanted them to do. What was that? “And let them make Me a sanctuary, that I may dwell among them” (Exodus 25:8)
This was the first step in God's purpose for 1) a temple to be built in accordance with the pattern that He gave to David and 2) the Kingdom of Israel to be established in the land at a later day. Through Israel's subsequent failure, the Kingdom closed with disaster. Seventy long years passed and the call of God came to the exiles in Babylon: “Any of his people among you may go up to Jerusalem in Judah and build the temple of the LORD” (Ezra 1:3)
The small remnant, led by great men like Ezra and Nehemiah, fulfilled the purposes of God – ultimately from that little group came the Messiah, who in turn called some of them who were later were found together in the Upper Room. These men became some of the first members of the Body of Christ - but they also became the nucleus of the Churches of God – the House of God - of the Apostolic era. God does not change – he is still calling out His children to contend for the faith, once for all delivered to the saints (Jude v.3) ; and this involves the re-building of the House of God – but a spiritual one, not a physical one any longer, according to Peter's words:
“You also, like living stones, are being built into a spiritual house to be a holy priesthood, offering spiritual sacrifices acceptable to God through Jesus Christ.” (1 Peter 2:5)
We see many times in the Bible that obedience to God's Word will bring the believer in line with His purposes, even if there are only a few who can grasp it and act on it.
What is the challenge of this book?
The challenge of this book is clear – are you prepared to be obedient to God’s Word and form part of his spiritual house, built according to his pattern – an entity that is quite distinct from, but closely linked to, the “Church, which is His Body?”
Here are the quick links as usual:
Amazon.com: http://amzn.to/LBZygH
Amazon.co.uk: http://amzn.to/LYfEHO
Who is this book for?
This little book is for all Christians who want to better understand how God wants to be worshipped and served today, based on His pattern that is seen throughout the Old and New Testaments.
Who is it written by?
This book was written by S.J. Hill in the early part of the last century. Hill was an elder in the Churches of God, an organization that still exists today (see www.churchesofgod.info) and still seeks to worship and serve God as a collective and united people in the way he describes in this book. The book has been re-published because of a conviction that this church truth is as vital today as it was when it was first written.
What is it about?
It centres around the word “Testimony”. There are many books that talk about the kind of “individual testimony” seen in the lives of people of faith in Genesis like Abel, Enoch or Noah; but this book is about something different that is spoken of much, much less – it’s the important concept of “collective testimony” which is first seen in the Old Testament in the book of Exodus. Psalm 78:5 says: “For He established a testimony in Jacob”, by which he meant the People of Israel.
What is "collective testimony about"?
Collective testimony starts with a redeemed and obedient People, to whom God spoke words like this: “Now if you obey me fully and keep my covenant, then out of all nations you will be my treasured possession. Although the whole earth is mine, you will be for me a kingdom of priests and a holy nation.” (Exodus 19:5-6)
God had a purpose with His redeemed People, when he delivered them from Egyptian bondage and slavery in Eqypt. He set them free, not to remain in Egypt and keep the Passover there, but to leave and do what he wanted them to do. What was that? “And let them make Me a sanctuary, that I may dwell among them” (Exodus 25:8)
This was the first step in God's purpose for 1) a temple to be built in accordance with the pattern that He gave to David and 2) the Kingdom of Israel to be established in the land at a later day. Through Israel's subsequent failure, the Kingdom closed with disaster. Seventy long years passed and the call of God came to the exiles in Babylon: “Any of his people among you may go up to Jerusalem in Judah and build the temple of the LORD” (Ezra 1:3)
The small remnant, led by great men like Ezra and Nehemiah, fulfilled the purposes of God – ultimately from that little group came the Messiah, who in turn called some of them who were later were found together in the Upper Room. These men became some of the first members of the Body of Christ - but they also became the nucleus of the Churches of God – the House of God - of the Apostolic era. God does not change – he is still calling out His children to contend for the faith, once for all delivered to the saints (Jude v.3) ; and this involves the re-building of the House of God – but a spiritual one, not a physical one any longer, according to Peter's words:
“You also, like living stones, are being built into a spiritual house to be a holy priesthood, offering spiritual sacrifices acceptable to God through Jesus Christ.” (1 Peter 2:5)
We see many times in the Bible that obedience to God's Word will bring the believer in line with His purposes, even if there are only a few who can grasp it and act on it.
What is the challenge of this book?
The challenge of this book is clear – are you prepared to be obedient to God’s Word and form part of his spiritual house, built according to his pattern – an entity that is quite distinct from, but closely linked to, the “Church, which is His Body?”
Labels:
discipleship,
ebook,
hayes press,
kindle,
pattern,
testimony
The Parable of the Tabernacle Ebook!
Here is another Kindle book by Hayes Press. Here are the quick links:
Amazon.com: http://amzn.to/L83GGv
Amazon.co.uk: http://amzn.to/K6GmNU
Why did God go into such great detail with Moses as to exactly how the Tabernacle was to be built and the offerings that were to be made there? And why did He include it all in our Bibles? Is it just rather dry, ancient history or is there anything that is applicable to Christians today – thousands of years later?
The writer to the Hebrews said almost 2,000 years ago that the Tabernacle is “symbolic for the present time” (Hebrews 9:9). This book makes the case that the Tabernacle is still of vital importance to all Christians today and that there are two main purposes:
1) To outline a clear vision of the House of God today as a called-out, gathered-together and united people, expressed in Churches of God - serving Him in Holy and Royal Priesthood service, according to the Biblical pattern that God Himself has laid down. Many believers today view the terms “Body of Christ” and “House of God” as interchangeable, despite the clear and important differences that are outlined in this book.
2) To provide a more wonderful appreciation of the beauties, glories, character and functions of the Lord Jesus Christ, who is Son over God’s House, the Great High Priest and typified in so many ways in the various offerings associated with worship in the Tabernacle.
This book was written by Jack Ferguson in 1981 and has been re-published in ebook and hard copy formats by Hayes Press to meet demand – it has lost none of its relevance in the intervening years.
Amazon.com: http://amzn.to/L83GGv
Amazon.co.uk: http://amzn.to/K6GmNU
Why did God go into such great detail with Moses as to exactly how the Tabernacle was to be built and the offerings that were to be made there? And why did He include it all in our Bibles? Is it just rather dry, ancient history or is there anything that is applicable to Christians today – thousands of years later?
The writer to the Hebrews said almost 2,000 years ago that the Tabernacle is “symbolic for the present time” (Hebrews 9:9). This book makes the case that the Tabernacle is still of vital importance to all Christians today and that there are two main purposes:
1) To outline a clear vision of the House of God today as a called-out, gathered-together and united people, expressed in Churches of God - serving Him in Holy and Royal Priesthood service, according to the Biblical pattern that God Himself has laid down. Many believers today view the terms “Body of Christ” and “House of God” as interchangeable, despite the clear and important differences that are outlined in this book.
2) To provide a more wonderful appreciation of the beauties, glories, character and functions of the Lord Jesus Christ, who is Son over God’s House, the Great High Priest and typified in so many ways in the various offerings associated with worship in the Tabernacle.
This book was written by Jack Ferguson in 1981 and has been re-published in ebook and hard copy formats by Hayes Press to meet demand – it has lost none of its relevance in the intervening years.
Labels:
ark of covenant,
brethren,
hayes press,
Old Testament,
tabernacle
Wednesday, May 23, 2012
The Churches of God:Origin and Development - Ebook
I have another Kindle book to bring to your attention. Here are the links:
North America: http://amzn.to/Kp2RLi
UK: http://amzn.to/JxRiUL
In 2012, the Churches of God (see www.churchesofgod.info) are represented by over one hundred assemblies in many countries around the world on four continents.
The formation of Churches of God in 1892 was one of a number of significant development in the history of the Brethren movement in Great Britain - although not as well known or documented as others.
This book, published by Hayes Press, tells the story of how and why such an event happened, starting with a detailed examination of the emergence of Brethrenism in the mid-nineteenth century and the roles played by the leaders of the movement, such as John Nelson Darby and others, and the key role played various Brethren magazines such as Needed Truth in discussing church doctrine and practice.
The dramatic events of 1892 are then re-told, explaining exactly why some felt that they had no option but to separate from the Plymouth Brethren and other off-shoots, to become a completely new entity - so that they could more effectively put into practise what the pattern that they saw in the Old and New Testaments of God's desire for united collective testimony and elderhood.
The final session of the book walks through the early history of the Churches of God, their early struggles, the expansion into North America, West Africa, India, Burma and Australia and discusses distinctive features such as Bible camps, radio evangelism and missionary work up to 1985.
This book is a great resource for students of church history who wish to understand more about the Brethren movement and the Churches of God, an entity who - despite still having much in common with the Brethren movement - deeply hold core convictions that have not always been well known or understood.
North America: http://amzn.to/Kp2RLi
UK: http://amzn.to/JxRiUL
In 2012, the Churches of God (see www.churchesofgod.info) are represented by over one hundred assemblies in many countries around the world on four continents.
The formation of Churches of God in 1892 was one of a number of significant development in the history of the Brethren movement in Great Britain - although not as well known or documented as others.
This book, published by Hayes Press, tells the story of how and why such an event happened, starting with a detailed examination of the emergence of Brethrenism in the mid-nineteenth century and the roles played by the leaders of the movement, such as John Nelson Darby and others, and the key role played various Brethren magazines such as Needed Truth in discussing church doctrine and practice.
The dramatic events of 1892 are then re-told, explaining exactly why some felt that they had no option but to separate from the Plymouth Brethren and other off-shoots, to become a completely new entity - so that they could more effectively put into practise what the pattern that they saw in the Old and New Testaments of God's desire for united collective testimony and elderhood.
The final session of the book walks through the early history of the Churches of God, their early struggles, the expansion into North America, West Africa, India, Burma and Australia and discusses distinctive features such as Bible camps, radio evangelism and missionary work up to 1985.
This book is a great resource for students of church history who wish to understand more about the Brethren movement and the Churches of God, an entity who - despite still having much in common with the Brethren movement - deeply hold core convictions that have not always been well known or understood.
Labels:
christianity,
church history,
Churches of God,
darbyism,
ebook,
exclusive brethren,
free kindle,
hayes press,
john nelson darby,
kindle,
needed truth,
open brethren,
plymouth brethren
Tuesday, May 22, 2012
"The Call of Christ" Discipleship Ebook
"The Call of Christ" is now available on Amazon Here are the links:
UK - http://amzn.to/L3oYHT
North America - http://amzn.to/K8w4KZ
Synopsis
Published by Hayes Press, this book is a compilation, by popular demand, of twelve challenging articles which were originally commissioned for Needed Truth magazine (http://www.neededtruth.info) in 2009.
There are times when every Christian believer feels a sense of dissatisfaction with his or her life of discipleship Those of us who love the Lord and value our Bibles will, from time to time, be motivated to explore again the character of radical discipleship as opposed to pew-filling, sermon-tasting comfortable 'churchianity' which for many can end up as a sort of passive, if not pious, 'spectator sport'.
“The Call of Christ” is ideal for times like that and even a glance at some of the topics explored will remind us what being a disciple of Jesus is really all about:
• Called to serve
• Called to suffer
• Called to die
• Called to simple dependence on God
• Called to be saints
• Called as we are
• Called to community
• Called to obey
• Called to possess God’s hope
• Called to share a heavenly calling
It is always good to finish on a high, and we certainly do that in this book. The high point of our discipleship is our worship experience among God's people. As we journey through the individual contributions which together present us with a biblical kaleidoscope of discipleship, what comes into focus is the fact that the call to Christ is the call to God's community, and that in turn is the call to worship (and what a worship experience it truly is, as described in the final contribution). Such a mind-blowing privilege explains - and renders so worthwhile - the high demands of true biblical discipleship which all the contributions making up this book present us with.
Read, think, act!
UK - http://amzn.to/L3oYHT
North America - http://amzn.to/K8w4KZ
Synopsis
Published by Hayes Press, this book is a compilation, by popular demand, of twelve challenging articles which were originally commissioned for Needed Truth magazine (http://www.neededtruth.info) in 2009.
There are times when every Christian believer feels a sense of dissatisfaction with his or her life of discipleship Those of us who love the Lord and value our Bibles will, from time to time, be motivated to explore again the character of radical discipleship as opposed to pew-filling, sermon-tasting comfortable 'churchianity' which for many can end up as a sort of passive, if not pious, 'spectator sport'.
“The Call of Christ” is ideal for times like that and even a glance at some of the topics explored will remind us what being a disciple of Jesus is really all about:
• Called to serve
• Called to suffer
• Called to die
• Called to simple dependence on God
• Called to be saints
• Called as we are
• Called to community
• Called to obey
• Called to possess God’s hope
• Called to share a heavenly calling
It is always good to finish on a high, and we certainly do that in this book. The high point of our discipleship is our worship experience among God's people. As we journey through the individual contributions which together present us with a biblical kaleidoscope of discipleship, what comes into focus is the fact that the call to Christ is the call to God's community, and that in turn is the call to worship (and what a worship experience it truly is, as described in the final contribution). Such a mind-blowing privilege explains - and renders so worthwhile - the high demands of true biblical discipleship which all the contributions making up this book present us with.
Read, think, act!
Thursday, May 17, 2012
Tips for Gospel Tract Distribution
It really is amazing how many simple opportunities we have each day to spread the word of God. Often that can be using a simple gospel leaflet (also known as a "tract") which you can design and print yourself or buy them in bulk.
Here is a list of suggestions to disperse gospel leaflets. The important step is in bold and then the long list follows that..food for thought..
Always ask God to use you, seek the guidance of the Holy Spirit for each tract placed, and then pray for the Lord of harvest to bless it.
- Put some in a plastic holder or envelope by your door, to give to anyone who comes to your door, and as a reminder to take some with you when you leave the house.
- Hand out to customers at local restaurants / leave at takeaways.
- Put on tables in post offices.
- Pass out on busy street corners.
- Pass out at schools after dismissal.
- Pass out to people waiting in line at theater or any place where there is a queue!
- Put in each box or bag of goods you might sell to people - ebay items etc.
- Send to people on birthdays or holidays.
- Leave in phone boxes / booths.
- Put on car windows.
- Pass out door to door.
- Leave on sitting areas of shopping centres.
- Pass out at parades, festivals, and special events.
- Leave in city parks on benches, etc. (beware of wind and rain so that they don't become litter or pulp)
- Hand out at stadium entrances, etc.
- Leave at funeral homes.
- Give to attendants at parking garages, etc. If your ticket could benefit others, give it to someone with a tract.
- Leave in hotel rooms (in the drawers, telephone book, etc.)
- Give to waitresses with generous tips at restaurants
- Put in magazines in waiting rooms.
- Leave on hairdressers tables.
- Hand out at zoos, picnic areas, beaches.
- Include in bills paid by mail. OR simply post the prepaid envelopes you don't use with tracts in them (please put stamps on these for a good witness).
- Hand to store employees, check-out clerks.
- Leave in waiting areas of hospitals.
- Leave in toilets at restaurants, schools, airports, etc.
- Leave in the bank where deposit slips are.
- Give to hospital and nursing home patients.
- Leave in returned library books (or simply place in library books when visiting).
- Leave on tables at markets, fairs, etc.
- Leave on tables at health club / gym
- Put in airport lounges, bus terminals, etc.
- Mail to relatives of deceased in obituaries.
- Leave on seats on bus, taxi, airplane, etc.
- Rent stalls at county or local fairs.
- Put in pockets of used / new clothing given away.
- Leave in dressing rooms of clothing stores.
- Put in sealed bottles in the ocean.
- Hand out at sporting events.
- In the workplace / through business (but don't steal time from your boss, do it at break!
- Magazines & Newspapers
- Public leaflets / information - slip one in!
- Place on public notice boards
- In shopping trolleys
- In clothes pockets in stores
- In nappy changing stations
- On ATM machines (or any credit card slot)
- In elevators
- On hotel dressers for the room cleaners
- On newspaper racks
- In plane, bus or car seat pockets
- Inside "religious" books or any other popular books in the library or book store
- Between the rubber and the glass on driver's side windows (but not on private property)
- If you rent videos put one in the movie you are returning.
- Leave them on video games in the arcade
- Pull out a couple of feet of toilet paper, and insert the tract while rolling it back up
- Place tract in napkin holders, behind a few napkins
- Place money / coin tracts in a buskers box / street entertainers collection box. TIP: if its a note tract, expect the music to stop!
- Leave in the carrier bags at checkouts (self serve), they won't check these bags until they get home!
- Attach them to the envelope of letters you send out in the post
This was taken from http://freetractsource.co.uk/
The leaflet pictured and a wide selection of others are available from www.hayespress.org
Here is a list of suggestions to disperse gospel leaflets. The important step is in bold and then the long list follows that..food for thought..
Always ask God to use you, seek the guidance of the Holy Spirit for each tract placed, and then pray for the Lord of harvest to bless it.
- Put some in a plastic holder or envelope by your door, to give to anyone who comes to your door, and as a reminder to take some with you when you leave the house.
- Hand out to customers at local restaurants / leave at takeaways.
- Put on tables in post offices.
- Pass out on busy street corners.
- Pass out at schools after dismissal.
- Pass out to people waiting in line at theater or any place where there is a queue!
- Put in each box or bag of goods you might sell to people - ebay items etc.
- Send to people on birthdays or holidays.
- Leave in phone boxes / booths.
- Put on car windows.
- Pass out door to door.
- Leave on sitting areas of shopping centres.
- Pass out at parades, festivals, and special events.
- Leave in city parks on benches, etc. (beware of wind and rain so that they don't become litter or pulp)
- Hand out at stadium entrances, etc.
- Leave at funeral homes.
- Give to attendants at parking garages, etc. If your ticket could benefit others, give it to someone with a tract.
- Leave in hotel rooms (in the drawers, telephone book, etc.)
- Give to waitresses with generous tips at restaurants
- Put in magazines in waiting rooms.
- Leave on hairdressers tables.
- Hand out at zoos, picnic areas, beaches.
- Include in bills paid by mail. OR simply post the prepaid envelopes you don't use with tracts in them (please put stamps on these for a good witness).
- Hand to store employees, check-out clerks.
- Leave in waiting areas of hospitals.
- Leave in toilets at restaurants, schools, airports, etc.
- Leave in the bank where deposit slips are.
- Give to hospital and nursing home patients.
- Leave in returned library books (or simply place in library books when visiting).
- Leave on tables at markets, fairs, etc.
- Leave on tables at health club / gym
- Put in airport lounges, bus terminals, etc.
- Mail to relatives of deceased in obituaries.
- Leave on seats on bus, taxi, airplane, etc.
- Rent stalls at county or local fairs.
- Put in pockets of used / new clothing given away.
- Leave in dressing rooms of clothing stores.
- Put in sealed bottles in the ocean.
- Hand out at sporting events.
- In the workplace / through business (but don't steal time from your boss, do it at break!
- Magazines & Newspapers
- Public leaflets / information - slip one in!
- Place on public notice boards
- In shopping trolleys
- In clothes pockets in stores
- In nappy changing stations
- On ATM machines (or any credit card slot)
- In elevators
- On hotel dressers for the room cleaners
- On newspaper racks
- In plane, bus or car seat pockets
- Inside "religious" books or any other popular books in the library or book store
- Between the rubber and the glass on driver's side windows (but not on private property)
- If you rent videos put one in the movie you are returning.
- Leave them on video games in the arcade
- Pull out a couple of feet of toilet paper, and insert the tract while rolling it back up
- Place tract in napkin holders, behind a few napkins
- Place money / coin tracts in a buskers box / street entertainers collection box. TIP: if its a note tract, expect the music to stop!
- Leave in the carrier bags at checkouts (self serve), they won't check these bags until they get home!
- Attach them to the envelope of letters you send out in the post
This was taken from http://freetractsource.co.uk/
The leaflet pictured and a wide selection of others are available from www.hayespress.org
Labels:
evangelism,
gospel,
hayes press,
leaflets,
tracts,
witnessing
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?
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?
Labels:
bible,
olympics,
outreach,
witnessing,
youthwork
Tuesday, May 15, 2012
"They Shoot Birds, Don't They? - Book Review
This is a very easy to read children’s novel by British author M.P. Jones that explores the kinds of questions inquiring children ask.
Mason has been given an assignment, along with his entire class, over the two week holiday break from school. He has to find a “fact,” research it and attempt to prove it is true or if not, debunk it. Seeing a dead bird by the side of the road on a family day out, he wonders “there must be stacks of birds dying every single day-what happens to them all?”
To sweeten the pot a newspaper is offering 20,000 Pounds for anyone who can debunk an urban myth. Enough money to see his family clear on their debt and bring much needed financial stability.
Once Mason has his question he is off on a merry chase for the truth. Mason is nothing if not resourceful, he uses every information source at his disposal. From his grandfathers puns, his pastors biblical knowledge, the internet and anyone else he can find. The search is on.
Along the way Mason finds another question and begins a quest for the answer to another question. Soon his quest spirals out of control and he is forced to face things he never expected and helps solve a real adult problem.
This is a lovely book for children and would be enjoyed by both boys and girls although the primary protagonists are boys. I would rate it for about grade five through middle school and up. The adults in the book are good supporting characters and are there to guide and give good advise to help Mason make good decisions. There is no “language” to be concerned with. Of course, with all books written for young boys this was has the usual suspects; bathroom humor, dead birds, bad guys and mom’s who keep boys manners in line.
The author is English so it is written with British spelling and humor, which is not a problem in this one as most references are things American’s can understand.
★★★★★
Available:
on Amazon.com: http://bit.ly/JOtKpE
on Amazon.co.uk : http://amzn.to/JhuIcj
This review was taken from the Parents Little Black Book website - http://www.parentslbb.com/books/2012/05/13/they-shoot-birds-dont-they-by-m-p-jones/
Mason has been given an assignment, along with his entire class, over the two week holiday break from school. He has to find a “fact,” research it and attempt to prove it is true or if not, debunk it. Seeing a dead bird by the side of the road on a family day out, he wonders “there must be stacks of birds dying every single day-what happens to them all?”
To sweeten the pot a newspaper is offering 20,000 Pounds for anyone who can debunk an urban myth. Enough money to see his family clear on their debt and bring much needed financial stability.
Once Mason has his question he is off on a merry chase for the truth. Mason is nothing if not resourceful, he uses every information source at his disposal. From his grandfathers puns, his pastors biblical knowledge, the internet and anyone else he can find. The search is on.
Along the way Mason finds another question and begins a quest for the answer to another question. Soon his quest spirals out of control and he is forced to face things he never expected and helps solve a real adult problem.
This is a lovely book for children and would be enjoyed by both boys and girls although the primary protagonists are boys. I would rate it for about grade five through middle school and up. The adults in the book are good supporting characters and are there to guide and give good advise to help Mason make good decisions. There is no “language” to be concerned with. Of course, with all books written for young boys this was has the usual suspects; bathroom humor, dead birds, bad guys and mom’s who keep boys manners in line.
The author is English so it is written with British spelling and humor, which is not a problem in this one as most references are things American’s can understand.
★★★★★
Available:
on Amazon.com: http://bit.ly/JOtKpE
on Amazon.co.uk : http://amzn.to/JhuIcj
This review was taken from the Parents Little Black Book website - http://www.parentslbb.com/books/2012/05/13/they-shoot-birds-dont-they-by-m-p-jones/
Monday, May 14, 2012
To Tattoo, or Not Tattoo?
Our inked up generation doesn’t give it a second thought—but should they?
The Pew Research Center reported in 2010 that nearly 40 percent of millennials sport at least one tattoo, more than double the number of our parents’ generation. While most of those tattoos are covered up by clothing, that doesn’t mean we’re ashamed of them. If anything, twenty- and thirtysomethings are proud of our body-art, but cognizant that not everyone will get it. As sociologist Mary Kosut writes in the academic Journal of Pop Culture, people with tattoos today “are not exotic or deviant others—they are everyday people with aesthetic sensibility.” Now when friends show off their new ink, many of us inquire what prompted it, and then move along.
Yet many younger Christians’ relationship to tattoos is still more complicated than most people’s. Those who grew up in the Christian subculture have memories and battle scars of the heated and contentious debates with parents and youth pastors over Levitical laws. My first confrontation over tattoos occurred when I was convinced that my neighbor’s newly minted Tweety ankle tattoo was the first step on the short road to perdition.
Parents and pastors may still have their objections, but most younger Christians don’t seem to be very concerned. Discussions about tattoos have often been limited to a single question: “Should I or should I not?” While that’s an important line of inquiry, it’s not the only one. And answering it requires first thinking through what tattoos mean, and why they’ve become such a prominent form of self-expression at this point in our history. Why not poetry or pixels instead?
The Christian faith is in a God whose concern for human bodies is such that He became one in order to accomplish salvation. The most basic intuition of American culture is that our “rights” allow us to treat our bodies how we want, but the Gospel sets forth a startling alternative: “You are not your own, but you have been bought with a price. Therefore, glorify God in your body.”
So what does that mean when it comes to permanently altering a body?
The debates over Leviticus 19:28 are officially worn out, and most everyone knows the exegetical troubles that come with trying to interpret and apply the Old Testament law. The more interesting Old Testament passages are in Isaiah, where the Lord suggests that some Israelites will one day write on their hands, “Belonging to the Lord” (44:5), and that the Lord has written their names on His hands (49:16). In the former, the marking seems to be tied to the Israelites’ perfection as the people of God. Isaiah points to a day when the people of God will be so faithful that some will mark the name of the Lord on their bodies. The tattoo, or tattoo-like mark, signifies a permanent status—a physical expression of human faithfulness and God’s ownership.
As for the New Testament, Pastor Mark Driscoll of Mars Hill Church in Seattle has famously pointed to Revelation 19:16 as proof that Christ the tatted warrior will return with His sword someday. It’s a stunning image, and one that plays well in the grunge-oriented city where Driscoll preaches. There’s only one problem with it: It’s resting on a bad translation. Biblical scholar Grant Osborne points out that grammatically, the verse is better translated along the lines of “on his robe covering his thigh he has a name written”—rather than on his thigh directly.
Otherwise, the closest you’ll find in the New Testament to a commendation of tattoos is when Paul writes that he carries on his body the “stigmata,” or the Greek word for tattoo. The reference is sometimes used as an argument for voluntary tattooing, but it shouldn’t be. Paul’s tattoo (if he, indeed, had one) was most likely administered as a punishment, as tattoos in Greco-Roman culture were almost exclusively punitive.
Paul is undermining his punishment by identifying it with the sufferings of Christ. In other words, Christians shouldn’t collapse the distinction between the bodily persecution Paul experienced for the cross of Christ and a voluntary decision to add the Ichthus to their forearms. Otherwise, there is the risk of emptying out the uniqueness of the suffering of the martyrs and improperly inflating an individual standing in the Kingdom.
The record from Scripture is mixed. There aren’t necessarily any explicit prohibitions of aesthetic tattooing, but it’s not exactly endorsed, either. Instead of focusing on the diversity of self-expression through the body, Scripture repeatedly turns its attention toward the pattern for self-expression: the person of Christ and the means He established to bring believers into conformity with Him. The Christian identity is given in union with Christ and by a life within Christian community, as the book of Ephesians repeatedly emphasizes—not in tattoos or the histories written on a body. The primary concern of the New Testament is not aesthetics or fashion, but faith working through love.
Yet in this, there may be reasons for caution. When self-expression takes a religious form through tattooing crosses or other iconography, there is the risk of obscuring how the Bible enjoins believers to express faith through their bodies. The faith, hope and charity that set Christians apart in the world are not aesthetic markings per se, but rather expressive behaviors that reshape a Christian’s muscles and organs (including the skin). Holiness, in other words, can’t be tattooed on—it can only be cultivated through the practices of the Christian life.
Whether any particular Christian should get a tattoo is, then, an open question. But Christians should think about them differently than they have. In short, the question of whether to get a tattoo should be a question of Christian discipleship, rather than purely individualistic forms of self-expression.
For instance, if Christians are tattooing themselves as a reminder of God’s work in their lives, it might make sense to bring a Christian community into the discernment process in order to ensure the correct meaning. The same principle holds, in fact, for those seeking tattoos simply because they look good. It’s tempting to treat tattoos as an expression of autonomy, or the individual freedom to do to our bodies as we will. But if individuals are to avoid the chasm of individualism, then people must open themselves in the discernment process to the counsel of others.
The permanent things are faith and hope, without which any tattoos are simply empty symbols and meaningless art. Many twentysomething Christians have been frequently misunderstood or ignored during debates about tattoos, which can be deeply frustrating. But Christian freedom doesn’t primarily mean anyone can get a tattoo if they want one.
The purpose and goal of Christian freedom is love and unity, which sometimes may mean joyfully relinquishing desires for the sake of others. Tattoos should not be occasions for asserting one’s rights against others, but of listening, learning and seeking the unity God has brought in Christ.
Tattoos will continue to matter because bodies matter. Because “the form of this world is passing away,” Christians ought to enter into the permanence of tattoos the way the Anglican Book of Common Prayer advises believers to enter into the permanency of marriage: “reverently, discreetly, advisedly, soberly and in the fear of God.”
This article originally appeared in RELEVANT magazine. Want full access to print content? Subscribe here.
The Pew Research Center reported in 2010 that nearly 40 percent of millennials sport at least one tattoo, more than double the number of our parents’ generation. While most of those tattoos are covered up by clothing, that doesn’t mean we’re ashamed of them. If anything, twenty- and thirtysomethings are proud of our body-art, but cognizant that not everyone will get it. As sociologist Mary Kosut writes in the academic Journal of Pop Culture, people with tattoos today “are not exotic or deviant others—they are everyday people with aesthetic sensibility.” Now when friends show off their new ink, many of us inquire what prompted it, and then move along.
Yet many younger Christians’ relationship to tattoos is still more complicated than most people’s. Those who grew up in the Christian subculture have memories and battle scars of the heated and contentious debates with parents and youth pastors over Levitical laws. My first confrontation over tattoos occurred when I was convinced that my neighbor’s newly minted Tweety ankle tattoo was the first step on the short road to perdition.
Parents and pastors may still have their objections, but most younger Christians don’t seem to be very concerned. Discussions about tattoos have often been limited to a single question: “Should I or should I not?” While that’s an important line of inquiry, it’s not the only one. And answering it requires first thinking through what tattoos mean, and why they’ve become such a prominent form of self-expression at this point in our history. Why not poetry or pixels instead?
The Christian faith is in a God whose concern for human bodies is such that He became one in order to accomplish salvation. The most basic intuition of American culture is that our “rights” allow us to treat our bodies how we want, but the Gospel sets forth a startling alternative: “You are not your own, but you have been bought with a price. Therefore, glorify God in your body.”
So what does that mean when it comes to permanently altering a body?
What the Bible Says
It’s nearly impossible to draw a straight line from the Bible’s teachings on tattoos to today, as the meaning of tattoos has drastically shifted. The Bible knows nothing of tattoos for purely aesthetic purposes, or as artistic self-expression. Instead, tattoos in the ancient Near East were punitive, expressions of fidelity to the local deity, or marks of ownership over slaves.The debates over Leviticus 19:28 are officially worn out, and most everyone knows the exegetical troubles that come with trying to interpret and apply the Old Testament law. The more interesting Old Testament passages are in Isaiah, where the Lord suggests that some Israelites will one day write on their hands, “Belonging to the Lord” (44:5), and that the Lord has written their names on His hands (49:16). In the former, the marking seems to be tied to the Israelites’ perfection as the people of God. Isaiah points to a day when the people of God will be so faithful that some will mark the name of the Lord on their bodies. The tattoo, or tattoo-like mark, signifies a permanent status—a physical expression of human faithfulness and God’s ownership.
As for the New Testament, Pastor Mark Driscoll of Mars Hill Church in Seattle has famously pointed to Revelation 19:16 as proof that Christ the tatted warrior will return with His sword someday. It’s a stunning image, and one that plays well in the grunge-oriented city where Driscoll preaches. There’s only one problem with it: It’s resting on a bad translation. Biblical scholar Grant Osborne points out that grammatically, the verse is better translated along the lines of “on his robe covering his thigh he has a name written”—rather than on his thigh directly.
Otherwise, the closest you’ll find in the New Testament to a commendation of tattoos is when Paul writes that he carries on his body the “stigmata,” or the Greek word for tattoo. The reference is sometimes used as an argument for voluntary tattooing, but it shouldn’t be. Paul’s tattoo (if he, indeed, had one) was most likely administered as a punishment, as tattoos in Greco-Roman culture were almost exclusively punitive.
Paul is undermining his punishment by identifying it with the sufferings of Christ. In other words, Christians shouldn’t collapse the distinction between the bodily persecution Paul experienced for the cross of Christ and a voluntary decision to add the Ichthus to their forearms. Otherwise, there is the risk of emptying out the uniqueness of the suffering of the martyrs and improperly inflating an individual standing in the Kingdom.
The record from Scripture is mixed. There aren’t necessarily any explicit prohibitions of aesthetic tattooing, but it’s not exactly endorsed, either. Instead of focusing on the diversity of self-expression through the body, Scripture repeatedly turns its attention toward the pattern for self-expression: the person of Christ and the means He established to bring believers into conformity with Him. The Christian identity is given in union with Christ and by a life within Christian community, as the book of Ephesians repeatedly emphasizes—not in tattoos or the histories written on a body. The primary concern of the New Testament is not aesthetics or fashion, but faith working through love.
Practical Considerations
So what can one make of all this? In one sense, the popularity of tattoos within the younger Christian culture could be read as an indictment of the Church, which has largely left the younger generation on their own to interpret their experiences and discover their own sense of meaning. And not surprisingly, twentysomethings have turned to the culture for cues. The absence of meaning-making rituals within the Church has left an empty space that tattoos have admirably filled.Yet in this, there may be reasons for caution. When self-expression takes a religious form through tattooing crosses or other iconography, there is the risk of obscuring how the Bible enjoins believers to express faith through their bodies. The faith, hope and charity that set Christians apart in the world are not aesthetic markings per se, but rather expressive behaviors that reshape a Christian’s muscles and organs (including the skin). Holiness, in other words, can’t be tattooed on—it can only be cultivated through the practices of the Christian life.
Whether any particular Christian should get a tattoo is, then, an open question. But Christians should think about them differently than they have. In short, the question of whether to get a tattoo should be a question of Christian discipleship, rather than purely individualistic forms of self-expression.
For instance, if Christians are tattooing themselves as a reminder of God’s work in their lives, it might make sense to bring a Christian community into the discernment process in order to ensure the correct meaning. The same principle holds, in fact, for those seeking tattoos simply because they look good. It’s tempting to treat tattoos as an expression of autonomy, or the individual freedom to do to our bodies as we will. But if individuals are to avoid the chasm of individualism, then people must open themselves in the discernment process to the counsel of others.
The permanent things are faith and hope, without which any tattoos are simply empty symbols and meaningless art. Many twentysomething Christians have been frequently misunderstood or ignored during debates about tattoos, which can be deeply frustrating. But Christian freedom doesn’t primarily mean anyone can get a tattoo if they want one.
The purpose and goal of Christian freedom is love and unity, which sometimes may mean joyfully relinquishing desires for the sake of others. Tattoos should not be occasions for asserting one’s rights against others, but of listening, learning and seeking the unity God has brought in Christ.
Tattoos will continue to matter because bodies matter. Because “the form of this world is passing away,” Christians ought to enter into the permanence of tattoos the way the Anglican Book of Common Prayer advises believers to enter into the permanency of marriage: “reverently, discreetly, advisedly, soberly and in the fear of God.”
This article originally appeared in RELEVANT magazine. Want full access to print content? Subscribe here.
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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:
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:
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:
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:
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/
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
- Chronological Snobbery
- Desire
- Imagination
- Objective Values vs. Relativism
- Myth
- Immortality
- Comprehensiveness
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/
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Friday, May 11, 2012
Where is God's House Today? Part 4
Where does God live today? Of course God lives inside each Christian through the Holy Spirit. But in the Old Testament, we see that God lived right in the middle of his people in a physical house. Is there anything like that today? Many Christians would see the parallel to be any group of Christians, because Jesus said, to the effect. "where two or three meet, there I will be in the middle of them". But, as this series shows, it speaks of something different - a spiritual House, not the same as the Body of Christ, which operated in the New Testament and operates today. Here is Part 4 of the series - find the first three videos earlier in the blog if you have not seen them..
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Did Jesus Say He Was God?
From: www.apologeticsguy.com
What would you say if someone asked you, “Did Jesus say He was God?” In this post, I’ll give you a few talking points that you can use to give a thoughtful response to a question like this. But first, let me tell you a little story.
One day, I was at this family reunion at my in-laws’ place when a relative decided to engage me in a religious conversation. Now you have to understand that I usually don’t go looking for these kinds of discussions at parties. What I was looking for was more potato chips. Why? So I could try some of this homemade blue cheese dip–a secret family recipe!
So anyway, this woman cornered me and started talking about how Jesus never claimed to be God. In fact, she grabbed my Bible off the table, held it up as a visual aid, and said, “According to this, Jesus never claimed to be God.”
As a World Religions professor at a couple of universities, I hear this challenge a lot. The popular concept is that Jesus of Nazareth never said He was divine or never claimed to be the Son of God. But what about this? Did Jesus really say He was God? What does the historical evidence actually show?
On another occasion, He used the personal name of Israel’s God–the name revealed to Moses (Exodus 3:14)–to refer to Himself. And He even used the Torah for context, so no one would misunderstand Him: “Before Abraham was, I AM” (John 8:58). This would be about wild as telling a Muslim, “I am your God, Allah.” Don’t try that in Saudi Arabia! It’s no wonder the Jews tried to stone Him to death. That was the exact penalty for blasphemy under the Jewish legal system. It was pretty clear to everyone there that He was saying, “I am Israel’s God.”
So did Jesus say He was God? Yeah. Did He use the exact words “I am God?” We don’t read a direct quote like that in Scripture, but here’s the thing: Jesus didn’t have to say the exact words “I am God,” in order to claim to be divine. But why is this a problem?
I don’t have to say the exact words, “I am married” to indicate that I’m married. I can say “I’m her husband,” or “this is my wife,” or “It’s our 12th wedding anniversary.” The question is, what did the people who were actually a part of conversation think about what Jesus said?
Jesus claimed to be God in ways that were pretty clear to the people He was talking to. Our problem as 21st century readers, is that we might not easily get what some of Jesus’ sayings actually meant to the people who were part of the conversation. For example, Jesus also claimed to be divine when He said He was the ”Son of Man.” I’ll admit that the first time I heard this title, I thought it was kind of like Muhammad saying, “I am but a man like you” (Qur’an 41:6)—Now there’s a religious figure who never claimed to be God! But this isn’t what Jesus meant at all. Let’s take a look at the term, “Son of Man.”
But then, Jesus follows up with, “I’m also the Son of Man. And you’ll see me seated at the right hand of Power and coming on the clouds of heaven.” That’s when people freaked. Why? Because Jesus basically said, ”You know that guy in Daniel’s vision? That’s Me.”
The high priest didn’t misunderstand Him for a second. His response was essentially, “Yikes! You just said you’re God and everyone should worship you!” No ambiguity there. But this just expressed what Jesus already seemed to assume by walking around and doing the things He did. Things like claiming to forgive sins (Mark 2:5-11, Luke 5:20-24). He certainly didn’t object when people worshiped Him or called Him God (John 20:28-29).
So if anyone ever asks you, “Did Jesus Say He Was God?” You can confidently say, “Yes.” Just be ready to mention at least a couple of these talking points. It doesn’t hurt to memorize at least a couple of the Scripture references, too. Try it!
But what happened at my little family get-together? The woman decided to change the topic and drop it. I don’t think she’d ever seen these reports in the Bible before. I almost felt bad for her and just let it go. After all, this was a casual family reunion and I think she got the point.
I went back to look for more chips. And I finally got to that blue cheese dip, too.
What would you say if someone asked you, “Did Jesus say He was God?” In this post, I’ll give you a few talking points that you can use to give a thoughtful response to a question like this. But first, let me tell you a little story.
One day, I was at this family reunion at my in-laws’ place when a relative decided to engage me in a religious conversation. Now you have to understand that I usually don’t go looking for these kinds of discussions at parties. What I was looking for was more potato chips. Why? So I could try some of this homemade blue cheese dip–a secret family recipe!
So anyway, this woman cornered me and started talking about how Jesus never claimed to be God. In fact, she grabbed my Bible off the table, held it up as a visual aid, and said, “According to this, Jesus never claimed to be God.”
As a World Religions professor at a couple of universities, I hear this challenge a lot. The popular concept is that Jesus of Nazareth never said He was divine or never claimed to be the Son of God. But what about this? Did Jesus really say He was God? What does the historical evidence actually show?
Did Jesus really say He was God?
That’s exactly how Jesus’ original audience seemed to take it when He said, “I and the Father are one.” In fact, the Jews were ready to kill Him right there! Why? “Because you,” they said, “a mere man, claim to be God” (John 10:33).On another occasion, He used the personal name of Israel’s God–the name revealed to Moses (Exodus 3:14)–to refer to Himself. And He even used the Torah for context, so no one would misunderstand Him: “Before Abraham was, I AM” (John 8:58). This would be about wild as telling a Muslim, “I am your God, Allah.” Don’t try that in Saudi Arabia! It’s no wonder the Jews tried to stone Him to death. That was the exact penalty for blasphemy under the Jewish legal system. It was pretty clear to everyone there that He was saying, “I am Israel’s God.”
So did Jesus say He was God? Yeah. Did He use the exact words “I am God?” We don’t read a direct quote like that in Scripture, but here’s the thing: Jesus didn’t have to say the exact words “I am God,” in order to claim to be divine. But why is this a problem?
I don’t have to say the exact words, “I am married” to indicate that I’m married. I can say “I’m her husband,” or “this is my wife,” or “It’s our 12th wedding anniversary.” The question is, what did the people who were actually a part of conversation think about what Jesus said?
So Why Don’t People Get It?
Honestly, some never look into it. They believe whatever they hear about Christianity in pop culture. Others never look into it honestly. But some will actually be open-minded and give the Bible a fair hearing. Why don’t some of these people get it right away?Jesus claimed to be God in ways that were pretty clear to the people He was talking to. Our problem as 21st century readers, is that we might not easily get what some of Jesus’ sayings actually meant to the people who were part of the conversation. For example, Jesus also claimed to be divine when He said He was the ”Son of Man.” I’ll admit that the first time I heard this title, I thought it was kind of like Muhammad saying, “I am but a man like you” (Qur’an 41:6)—Now there’s a religious figure who never claimed to be God! But this isn’t what Jesus meant at all. Let’s take a look at the term, “Son of Man.”
Jesus claimed to be the Son of Man
“Son of Man” seems to be Jesus’ favorite thing to call Himself–He uses it 80 times in the New Testament Gospels. Interestingly, it’s only used 1 time outside the gospels (Acts 7:56). So this probably wasn’t something the church made up. How many modern worship songs can you think of that use the term, “Son of Man?” We know this title didn’t emerge later on in history and it wasn’t written back into the earlier traditions about Jesus. But why is this title important? Because it’s referring to a figure that Jews recognized as divine. Here’s what the Jewish prophet Daniel wrote (7:13-14):In my vision at night I looked, and there before me was one like a son of man, coming with the clouds of heaven. He approached the Ancient of Days and was led into his presence. He was given authority, glory and sovereign power; all peoples, nations and men of every language worshiped him. His dominion is an everlasting dominion that will not pass away, and his kingdom is one that will never be destroyed.Here’s the point: The “Son of Man” in Daniel’s vision is rightful heir to the divine throne. According to the prophecy, He’ll rule forever. Nations will worship Him and His kingdom will be unstoppable.
Jesus claimed to be the Divine Messiah
Back to my family get-together. I asked the lady where she heard that Jesus never claimed to be God. I let her talk and explain her ideas. Then, I gently took my Bible back from her and asked, “Could you read this for me?” I turned to Jesus’ trial, as recorded by Mark (14:60-64). She read the record of Jesus’ cross-examination:Again the high priest asked him, “Are you the Messiah, the Son of the Blessed One?” “I am,” said Jesus. “And you will see the Son of Man sitting at the right hand of the Mighty One and coming on the clouds of heaven.” The high priest tore his clothes. “Why do we need any more witnesses?” he asked. “You have heard the blasphemy. What do you think?” They all condemned him as worthy of death. (63-64).Jesus publicly claimed to be the Messiah. He claimed to be the Son of God. He even used the divine name in His answer: “I AM.” Now, at the very least, Jesus answered, “Yeah, I’m the Messiah. I’m the Son of God.” At that point, the High Priest probably thought something like, “Gotcha!”
But then, Jesus follows up with, “I’m also the Son of Man. And you’ll see me seated at the right hand of Power and coming on the clouds of heaven.” That’s when people freaked. Why? Because Jesus basically said, ”You know that guy in Daniel’s vision? That’s Me.”
The high priest didn’t misunderstand Him for a second. His response was essentially, “Yikes! You just said you’re God and everyone should worship you!” No ambiguity there. But this just expressed what Jesus already seemed to assume by walking around and doing the things He did. Things like claiming to forgive sins (Mark 2:5-11, Luke 5:20-24). He certainly didn’t object when people worshiped Him or called Him God (John 20:28-29).
Jesus said He was God
If you’re willing to look at the historical record, you’ll find that there’s a reasonable explanation for the early Christian belief that Jesus was divine: Jesus Himself said He was God. Even people who hated Jesus attest to the fact that this is what He said about Himself.So if anyone ever asks you, “Did Jesus Say He Was God?” You can confidently say, “Yes.” Just be ready to mention at least a couple of these talking points. It doesn’t hurt to memorize at least a couple of the Scripture references, too. Try it!
But what happened at my little family get-together? The woman decided to change the topic and drop it. I don’t think she’d ever seen these reports in the Bible before. I almost felt bad for her and just let it go. After all, this was a casual family reunion and I think she got the point.
I went back to look for more chips. And I finally got to that blue cheese dip, too.
Your Turn
Has anyone ever surprised you with a challenge to the truth of an essential Christian belief when you least expected it? How easy was it to respond? Would you respond differently if you could re-live that encounter?
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What Happened to Good Christian Fiction?
From Relevant magazine (www.relevantmagazine.com)
If you’ve ever been to a Christian bookstore or even the far corner of Barnes and Noble, you’ve probably wandered into the Christian fiction section that’s littered with novels owning sentimental titles like Abby’s Journey, complete with a downtrodden-looking Amish girl on the cover. Or you might have escaped gazing at such saccharine work and come across fictional books about the End Times, or maybe about a detective who tracks down serial killers using Scripture and his “quiet time.”
Christian fiction might be, more than any other genre, the most cringe-worthy of all Christian arts. Sure, as attempting-to-be-culturally-progressive-and-relevant Christ followers, we can wince at films like Fireproof and the music on our local family-and-faith-friendly radio station. But at least there are so-called crossover films, such as Blue Like Jazz, and albums like Sigh No More by Mumford and Sons, which place importance on reality and spirituality rather than religious sensationalism.
But Christian fiction?
Contemporary Christian fiction was marred by two phenomena: the Left Behind series and Amish fiction. As a kid who loved to read and grew up in a conservative Christian home in the '90s, there weren’t many options. There were silly YA books like the Wally McDoogle series, but once I reached an age where I yearned for good literature, the Christian realm had little to offer. I downed the Left Behind books and read some Randy Alcorn and Frank Peretti but found little else outside of those offerings.
As a student of literature pursuing a graduate degree in English, books are important to me. As a follower of Jesus, knowing more about the heart of God, how to love others well and navigate the world God made for us is important to me too. Unfortunately, there is a huge disconnect between authors of Christian fiction and relevant, craftful, wonderful literature. Furthermore, Christian authors are almost completely absent in modern literary fiction. In my sphere, contemporary fiction is dominated by secular authors, many with apparent cynical, sexual and materialist agendas.
Writers of Christian fiction need reprisal. The fiction that Christian authors are putting on shelves and marketing as Christian fiction isn’t great art; it’s popular, genre fiction. The Lord calls us to create and to make well. We, as creators, are called to make our art so that it glorifies God to the best of our abilities and brings Him praise. Formulaic plots, boring stereotypes, sensationalist themes and predictable endings are not great art. It seems to me that Christian writers choose one of two paths. They write nonfiction (whether it be a memoir or something deemed “inspirational”) or they write popular, genre fiction.
Books have the power to change the world and people's lives. Shouldn’t Christian authors, in attempting to love God and glorify Him in their creativity, craft the best fiction they can surmise?
Christian fiction was once very, very good. C.S. Lewis wrote his Space Trilogy and the Narnia series; Madeleine L’Engle had A Wrinkle in Time. Christian fiction can exist—and be good!
In her new collection of essays, When I Was a Child I Read Books, Marilynne Robinson writes about how easy it is for an author to slip into what will sell (and believe me, if you look at my mother’s bookshelf, the typical Christian fiction of today does sell). She writes about her students at the University of Iowa Writers' Workshop and says, “The Writers’ Workshop is as interesting and civilized a community as I have ever encountered, and it owes the successes of its long history to the fact that it works well as a community.
A pretty large percentage of these fine young spirits come to me convinced that if their writing is not sensationalistic enough, it will never be published, or if it is published, it will never be read. They come to me persuaded that American readers will not tolerate ideas in their fiction. Since they feel that anything recognizable as an idea is off-limits to them, they sometimes try to signal intellectual seriousness by taking a jaundiced or splenetic view of the worlds they create and people. They are good, generous souls working within limits they feel are imposed on them by a public that could not possibly have an interest in writing that ignored these limits—a public they cannot respect.”
If you look at the general best-selling fiction of today, it is often riddled with violence, inaccurate depictions of love, sex and cynicism. It’s not necessarily realist fiction but sensationalist, meager, sentimental and anxious. That is not to say Christian authors should put forth happy-go-lucky, positive and encouraging fiction, but good fiction. Fiction that is true. Fiction that reveals to its readers things they never knew about the world, themselves and their Creator.
Marilynne Robinson comments on this further. She asks us to “only consider how many things have gone wrong here, when a young writer is dissuaded by the pessimism that floats around the culture from letting her or his talent develop in the direction natural to it. If the writer is talented, the work might well be published, and the American reading public will look once more into the mirror of art and find sensationalism, violence, condescension, cynicism—another testament to collective mediocrity if not something worse. Maybe even spiritual free-fall. But the writer is better than this, and the reading public is better than this.”
Let us be a reading public and a writing, creative public that is better than this. Let us encourage our community of Christian writers to produce fiction that is good, honest and serious. Let us be a community of readers and thinkers that still searches for the true, not merely what feels good, what strikes our senses or what is easy.
If you’ve ever been to a Christian bookstore or even the far corner of Barnes and Noble, you’ve probably wandered into the Christian fiction section that’s littered with novels owning sentimental titles like Abby’s Journey, complete with a downtrodden-looking Amish girl on the cover. Or you might have escaped gazing at such saccharine work and come across fictional books about the End Times, or maybe about a detective who tracks down serial killers using Scripture and his “quiet time.”
Christian fiction might be, more than any other genre, the most cringe-worthy of all Christian arts. Sure, as attempting-to-be-culturally-progressive-and-relevant Christ followers, we can wince at films like Fireproof and the music on our local family-and-faith-friendly radio station. But at least there are so-called crossover films, such as Blue Like Jazz, and albums like Sigh No More by Mumford and Sons, which place importance on reality and spirituality rather than religious sensationalism.
But Christian fiction?
Contemporary Christian fiction was marred by two phenomena: the Left Behind series and Amish fiction. As a kid who loved to read and grew up in a conservative Christian home in the '90s, there weren’t many options. There were silly YA books like the Wally McDoogle series, but once I reached an age where I yearned for good literature, the Christian realm had little to offer. I downed the Left Behind books and read some Randy Alcorn and Frank Peretti but found little else outside of those offerings.
As a student of literature pursuing a graduate degree in English, books are important to me. As a follower of Jesus, knowing more about the heart of God, how to love others well and navigate the world God made for us is important to me too. Unfortunately, there is a huge disconnect between authors of Christian fiction and relevant, craftful, wonderful literature. Furthermore, Christian authors are almost completely absent in modern literary fiction. In my sphere, contemporary fiction is dominated by secular authors, many with apparent cynical, sexual and materialist agendas.
Writers of Christian fiction need reprisal. The fiction that Christian authors are putting on shelves and marketing as Christian fiction isn’t great art; it’s popular, genre fiction. The Lord calls us to create and to make well. We, as creators, are called to make our art so that it glorifies God to the best of our abilities and brings Him praise. Formulaic plots, boring stereotypes, sensationalist themes and predictable endings are not great art. It seems to me that Christian writers choose one of two paths. They write nonfiction (whether it be a memoir or something deemed “inspirational”) or they write popular, genre fiction.
Books have the power to change the world and people's lives. Shouldn’t Christian authors, in attempting to love God and glorify Him in their creativity, craft the best fiction they can surmise?
Christian fiction was once very, very good. C.S. Lewis wrote his Space Trilogy and the Narnia series; Madeleine L’Engle had A Wrinkle in Time. Christian fiction can exist—and be good!
In her new collection of essays, When I Was a Child I Read Books, Marilynne Robinson writes about how easy it is for an author to slip into what will sell (and believe me, if you look at my mother’s bookshelf, the typical Christian fiction of today does sell). She writes about her students at the University of Iowa Writers' Workshop and says, “The Writers’ Workshop is as interesting and civilized a community as I have ever encountered, and it owes the successes of its long history to the fact that it works well as a community.
A pretty large percentage of these fine young spirits come to me convinced that if their writing is not sensationalistic enough, it will never be published, or if it is published, it will never be read. They come to me persuaded that American readers will not tolerate ideas in their fiction. Since they feel that anything recognizable as an idea is off-limits to them, they sometimes try to signal intellectual seriousness by taking a jaundiced or splenetic view of the worlds they create and people. They are good, generous souls working within limits they feel are imposed on them by a public that could not possibly have an interest in writing that ignored these limits—a public they cannot respect.”
If you look at the general best-selling fiction of today, it is often riddled with violence, inaccurate depictions of love, sex and cynicism. It’s not necessarily realist fiction but sensationalist, meager, sentimental and anxious. That is not to say Christian authors should put forth happy-go-lucky, positive and encouraging fiction, but good fiction. Fiction that is true. Fiction that reveals to its readers things they never knew about the world, themselves and their Creator.
Marilynne Robinson comments on this further. She asks us to “only consider how many things have gone wrong here, when a young writer is dissuaded by the pessimism that floats around the culture from letting her or his talent develop in the direction natural to it. If the writer is talented, the work might well be published, and the American reading public will look once more into the mirror of art and find sensationalism, violence, condescension, cynicism—another testament to collective mediocrity if not something worse. Maybe even spiritual free-fall. But the writer is better than this, and the reading public is better than this.”
Let us be a reading public and a writing, creative public that is better than this. Let us encourage our community of Christian writers to produce fiction that is good, honest and serious. Let us be a community of readers and thinkers that still searches for the true, not merely what feels good, what strikes our senses or what is easy.
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