About Me

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I am a born-again Christian, who is Reformed, but also charismatic, spiritually speaking. (I do not speak in tongues, but I believe glossalalia is a bona fide gift not given to all, and not as great as prophecy, for example.) I have several years of college education but only completed a two-year degree. I was raised Lutheran and confirmed, but I didn't "find Christ" until I was in the Army and responded to a Billy Graham crusade in 1973. I was mentored or discipled by the Navigators in the army and upon discharge joined several evangelical, Bible-teaching churches. I was baptized as an infant, but believe in believer baptism, of which I was a partaker after my conversion experience. I believe in the "5 Onlys" of the reformation: sola fide (faith alone); sola Scriptura (Scripture alone); soli Christo (Christ alone), sola gratia (grace alone), and soli Deo gloria (to God alone be the glory). I affirm TULIP as defended in the Reformation.. I affirm most of The Westminster Confession of Faith, especially pertaining to Providence.
Showing posts with label gospel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gospel. Show all posts

Sunday, October 15, 2023

Grace Abounding To The Chief Of Sinners

 "But where sin abounded, grace abounded much more." Rom. 5:20 

One may ask: How much grace do we need?  It is often said by cliche even that we're saved by grace, everybody has heard that but nobody understands what is meant by that fully or comprehensively.   For the grace of God is infinite.  And like God's mercy cannot be measured or limited,  God's grace abounds to the chief of sinners wrote John Bunyan and Paul would say God save me the chief of centers. Often it is the worst kind of sinner that God shows the greatest grace to And the greater the sin the greater the grace or abounded grace abounded all the more. (Romans 5:20).  But it says we're saved by grace and this means grace all the way from first to last, beginning to end, we do not participate in our salvation we're only recipients of it. 

This is called synergistic salvation.   God does everything from beginning to end. He makes believers out of us he kindles faith in us he makes us believers by grace or an act of grace and in fact, faith and itself is a work of grace a gift of God, and the work of God (John 6:29).   Now Paul went through great effort to teach that we receive the grace we received faith like all brethren we don't achieve it we receive it does not work if faith were a work then salvation would be by works this is what the Catholics believe that faith is a work and not a gift they deny it's a gift.

 For by grace are you saved through faith and that not of yourself it is the gift of God, not works and so forth in this verse we see that that is the antecedent of faith so it's referring to faith as not the is the gift and faith is not of ourselves Jesus himself said you can do nothing of yourself nothing apart from me (John 15:5).   Peter said that we receive a like faith  (2 Peter 1:1).  We are not saved by works of righteous which we have done. (Titus 3:5).  In a faith world, work that would be a reason or crown for boasting in God's presence would say while I was smart enough or wise enough or good enough to have faith no one will get with this for this faith is a gift it's what we do with our faith that matters not our faith itself. 

Faith is not salvation it's the object that saves Christ. We do not put faith in faith we put faith in Christ it's the object of the faith that matters not the amount of faith we can have faith as a grain of mustard seed and it will be sufficient to move mountains.  Now Romanists will tell you that faith is merely acquiescence or an assent or consent to the doctrine of the dogma of the church. Not true, faith is active faith is living faith is growing and faith is commitment and dedication and renewal.   We must first have the correct body of knowledge to have faith but must believe the right things secondly we must have trust in that knowledge that it is correct, thirdly, we must commit our dedicated ourselves to that knowledge and live it out and this is not just a one-time event but it continue all ongoing resolution day by day. 

So living faith means you are growing in it is alive is going somewhere is not stagnant or static. The whole gist of Reformed theology is that we are saved by the Lord not by ourselves (monergism) as Jonah said "Salvation is of the Lord."   What this means is that it is not a joint effort between us and God or synergism. Is not our efforts alone that bring salvation either no one can do much for salvation even though mankind is addicted to doing something for his salvation. But Salvation is wholly a work of God and his grace and we contribute nothing we receive it by grace as a gift to do anything for it would be to insult God in a mustache to the Mona Lisa it's an insult to add something to a perfect masterpiece such as salvation our salvation work of God. 

You know if God required some work for salvation a lot of people would celebrate because they think they could do it but you know the work would be impossible if it were possible and no one could achieve it in fact only Christ did and he lived the perfect life he's the only one that did it he obeyed the law completely. But if people are just like an argument had to do something then feel secure because they wanna put their confidence in their own works. 

But to put our confidence in our faith in God requires a belief of faith and trust and dedication to God not ourselves not our self-esteem but our God-esteem. We have to give God the credit, not ourselves credit in other words if God did make some work available to due for our salvation you know we would blow it because we are only human we would mess up our own salvation it's a good thing we receive it by faith we do not achieve it. 

It is not something we conjure up or imagine or conceive, it is something that is kindled in our hearts as they become alive by the spirit of God and open the eyes of faith within us? You see what matters in the final analysis is what we think of God not what we think of ourselves our estimation or appraisal of our self matters that we are worthless and can do nothing for our salvation this is nothing but music to God's ears when we realize that we are helpless I need God to have mercy on us. We must file for spiritual bankruptcy in other words and realize that we are at God's hands in our salvation our destiny is in his hands not ours he controls our future.

Sunday, August 27, 2023

The Reluctant Prophet VIII Conclusion

 

"Everything comes to pass of necessity." John Wycliffe. 

"Did we in our own strength confide, our striving would be losing." Martin Luther, hymn: A Mighty Fortress

"Not by might, nor by power, but by My Spirit," says the LORD of hosts..." (Zech. 4:6). 

"... who works all things according to the counsel of his will." (Eph. 1:11). 

Jonah was never grace-oriented because he never experienced it himself dramatically enough to change his attitude.  He was full of "them" and "they" but not enough "I" statements. He was pointing the finger and playing the blame game and he had the gall to play the "Let's compare!" game!  Like when you say, compared to Hitler, I am a saint!  When you judge someone it says more about you than them.  In the case of the Ninevites, he thought they deserved to be punished and was waiting around after he preached to them just to see what would happen hoping that God would not spare them because he may be out of some technicality like they didn't repent sincere enough or something.  Don't we all rejoice or even gloat when our enemy falls, stumbles, or has calamities or judgments? 

We must realize that the story of Jonah is about how God deals with us as sinners and we all can put ourselves in Jonah's shoes and realize that we are no better than him. The point is that if you don't experience grace, you don't know how wonderful it is and you will want you will not want other people to experience it.  It's like once you've experienced love, you want to pass it around.  Grace changes you!  God does not have to save even Jonah though otherwise it would be justice.  God's mercy is undeserved towards us none of us is good enough to make it to have in fact we're bad enough always that we need to be saved. But in order to be saved, we must realize how bad we are and we don't realize how bad we are until we've tried to be good--what a catch-22!

Nothing just happens without a cause according to the law of cause and effect. There is no such thing as chance or luck in God's eye or vantage point.  He is completely in control even over the toss of the die. But Jonah seemed to think all these events were just coincidences and not a way of God giving him an object lesson. He should have heeded God's impending warning signs and even his mercy on him.  

Several times in the story it says God "appointed" this or that God appointed a storm, appointed a whale, appointed a plant,  appointed the worm, appointed a wind--this shows and stresses God's sovereignty. We must realize that God is always in control this is called Providence when he directs it towards us his children and leads our lives toward his purposes.  He orchestrates all history to his glory.   He has divine favor on us whether it is good or bad God has our best in mind.  If we must thank God for the good times, we should also realize that he may send bad times as well and accept them.

It is really problematic that Jonah found himself in a depressed funk that Nineveh did not get its comeuppance maybe they should have deserved just a little bit of punishment but they didn't get any they got off scot-free and it pushed his buttons, so he said he'd rather die. He didn't realize that he was a successful prophet and got the people to listen to his thankless message to repent. The point is we're all undeserving people in need of God's grace and mercy that God grants us repentance and opens our hearts to make us repent. If any of us deserved to be saved, it would be justice, not mercy! 

God always warns us when he's going to judge us.  That's another point to the story let's realize that God also has patience and his patience can run out he will have limits where he must judge. Jonah doesn't seem to get that God means business even with him the story goes on that Jonah was not on board with God who didn't teach him the basic lesson that his mercies never come to an end.  Even with Jonah who was so self-righteous, he thought he was a cut above the rest and he actually challenged God and confronted God with his so-called injustice to spare Nineveh in his eyes.  To his dismay, Nineveh was spared. But the reader probably doesn't even want Jonah spared.  A major takeaway from this story is that God is compassionate to all people who repent and doesn't desire to judge but to have mercy and no one is too far gone for his mercy. 

Salvation is a matter of realizing we cannot save our selves! "Apart from Me, you can do nothing," John 15:5.  The story ends with Jonah's religiosity or setting up his own religion to save himself. He relied upon the energy of the flesh!  God is not against doing good or helping ourselves but in doing it on our own without his spirit or help.  This is religion in essence: a do-it-yourself proposition, a self-help system, lifting yourself up by your own bootstraps, and self-reliance and rugged individualism.  Sounds very American!  Being a self-made man! Didn't he realize he needed God?  Religion is antithetical to grace which relies and depends upon God, not us or the works of the flesh.  In other words, he believes God helps those who help themselves and builds himself a hut to relieve himself without calling upon the LORD. Soli Deo Gloria!

Sunday, August 20, 2023

The Reluctant Prophet VI

"But now after you have known God, or rather are known by God.." Gal. 4:9 

"I selected and sent you to bring light and my promise of hope to the nations." (Isaiah 42:6). 

"Yet he did what was right in the sight of the LORD but his heart was not in it." 2 Chron 25:2


The book of Jonah continues with Jonah being angry at God for no justifiable reason. He hated the Assyrians so much he didn't want them to repent and thought they deserved annihilation. He is the only prophet who got results from his preaching that is recorded to repent and he should have realized he had a record to brag about or an achievement to tout or flaunt back in Israel.  "I will also give You as a light to the Gentiles, That You should be My salvation to the ends of the earth." Isaiah 49:6. That is the Great Commission as given to Israel which they failed to complete.  But maybe he thought his brethren would be angry with him for helping out their enemy. 

It shows that we can throw a fit at God and even get angry just as Job did and God will not judge us but rather have mercy: "His mercies never come to an end."  You cannot limit God's mercy.  Jonah did not realize that he did not deserve God's mercy either!  It should have humbled him that they repented but he was still self-righteous and God still forgives him. Jonah had to realize who was in charge and find out he couldn't have his own way but must accept God's will. He might have thought he knew better than God!  God never answered his question but humbled him with another question.  "Is it right for you to be angry?"   It is noteworthy we can get angry at God!  You have to be secure in your relationship to get angry at them as couples know.   Jonah did not doubt his salvation!  When someone repents we should realize our need for it also and not just expect others to repent or think only they need it. This means "practicing what we preach." 

The question arises as to whether Jonah was obedient; he was to the letter of the law but his heart was not in it. He was not gusto, or gung-ho for the Lord and had no grit, and was not a wholehearted follower but only met the bare minimal requirements. We should never think we are failures when we do the Lord's work for the Lord will use us for his purposes and accomplish his will through us as his vessels of honor.  No Christian in God's will is a failure!   Jonah should teach us that we are much like Jonah ourselves and that God is also patient with us and we should not judge Jonah! 

The big problem with Jonah was that he was self-righteous much like Job and failed to realize his shortcomings and that he needed to repent--even Job did at the end. Job thought he was on board with God but never was.  He needs to get on track with God again.  He was forced to do God's will and complied in deed only but his heart wasn't in it and he had no love for these sinners or concern or burden or the lost. Jonah boasted to the Lord that he "knew" God and his mercies and even thought that God was going to spare Nineveh but he found out how little he did know.  Jonah didn't know as he ought to know! 

Even theologians can know a lot of doctrines and be quite versed in the Word and biblically savvy and not know God as well as anyone else.  "For I desire mercy and not sacrifice, And the knowledge of God more than burnt offerings." Hosea 6:6.  "My people are destroyed for lack of knowledge." Hosea 4:4   Jonah said,  "I knew..." but this doesn't mean he knew God--you can know a lot about God and still fall short and not know God or have knowledge of God. 

You can know doctrine but until you experience it and it becomes part of you, making it your own or owning it and living it out, can you say you know it. We must turn our creeds into deeds! Jonah insisted he "knew" this and that but it was not real to him yet.  "Now that you know these things blessed are you if you do them."  John 13:17. After God spoke to Job, he repented but not so with Jonah!   He had not come to a personal encounter with God that made him humble before him and it did not change him! Holiness is not according to experience because he sure had it.   It goes to show that there are two types of Christians: those who have been humbled and those who will be! Soli Deo Gloria!

Sunday, August 13, 2023

The Reluctant Prophet V

 When we look at the book of Jonah, we see that he preached that they ought to repent pronto, immediately with due haste, and with no postponement at all--as soon as possible, asap. The Ninevites realized "Now is the day of salvation."  They did respond immediately as it says and felt convicted with what they had done, and they changed their attitude towards their behavior and said that they had sinned against God, even though they did not know God, but did not realize this is only half of the formula of salvation or conversion we must add faith to our repentance. Now, we should realize penitent faith or believing repentance go together hand in hand as it says in Acts 20:21.  

Now, something you may wonder whether Jonah was a good prophet or not but he is the only prophet of the major and minor prophets who really got any results in preaching the thankless job of repentance because the people actually did repent when he preached, and what is ironic thing is that Jonah probably didn't even want him to repent or wasn't expecting him to repent he probably hated these innovate somewhat he won and to be punished by God. What kind of attitude does God have when he says, "I will be merciful to those who are merciful." and "Mercy and mercy triumph over judgment." (James 2:13).  

We must be careful not to pass judgment too quickly and that measure we measure on others may come back to us and haunt us if we are judgmental, we may end up being judged. If you want to be shown mercy you must be merciful to others if you are not merciful to others don't expect God to be merciful to you you need a lot of mercy then you better exhibit a lot of mercy. This is the thing about mercy in my opinion once you've experienced it you want to pass it along just like the love of God if you have never experienced the love of God you will not be sharing it with others is a transforming experience to encounter God in one's life in conversion you want to help others see the light in the work when you see the light the Joanna exhibited none of these qualities he didn't realize that the commission that God gave the Jews for the Israelites was also to the Gentiles to be a light to the nations.

The point of the story is that the Ninevites sought fire insurance, as it were, they didn't want their city destroyed or overthrown.  They had regrets about what they had done and felt sorry for what they had done but it was nothing mixed with faith they were only halfway there. Also, repentance is not supposed to be merely a ticket out of hell or fire insurance, but a heartfelt conviction, radical change of behavior, and transformation of the heart will, and mind not just a change in your opinions toward your sin. 

They certainly did not deserve mercy we must also realize that we do not deserve mercy and that God doesn't have to be merciful. God could be just even if he condemned everybody who ever lived. It is a miracle of mercy that he has saved anyone. When people say that God is love they forget that is not the whole picture as far as God is concerned for the lost ("Behold, therefore the goodness and sternness of God." Rom 11:22).   God is also just and righteous and holy and must not overlook sin he must punish it because it offends him it is just like man or is to anti-matter to matter when both cannot coexist.  God's holiness and man's sin are antithetical. 

Usually, when we preach faithfully the Word of God, we must properly divide the law and gospel into what we must do and what God has done or will do for us. Good news as well as bad news. He failed to preach the good news of the gospel to get them saved he just preached something to them so they would avoid catastrophe and annihilation as a city. Have the message!  He was a doomsayer, in other words, and he probably felt that this was their just dessert for what they had done, and in due time they would be judged.

But the Ninevites realized, first of all, that perchance God grant them mercy and change his mind and not destroy us. This is an example of God's justice being satisfied because these people did render contrition to what they had done in the sense that they went through all the motions of repentance like sacrificing sackcloth and sitting fasting and prayers and all that so God did spare them, so they were lucky in a sense.  We certainly did not deserve it either, we must realize that all of us are like the men of Nineveh, but God is calling us all on the day of salvation that once. we repent we will be headed towards hellfire as we already are if we don't repent. 

The default position or direction or destination is hell-bound and God does not condemn us. We condemn ourselves God does not judge so much as we judge ourselves so much, we condemn ourselves by our own conscience and we choose to rebel against God on our own even without Adam's help for we would have done the same thing as Adam and God knows it and we know it.

You must realize that true repentance isn't just reforming our lives or changing our ways but having a change of heart not just an opinion and a complete turnaround from our sin to God and in about-face going in the other direction we were running from God and we should run to God it's more than just turning over a new leaf or making a New Year's resolution or making an AA pledge, rather it is a complete transformation of the heart from the inside out wrought by God's grace (Acts 5:31:11:18).

Repentance is only manifest when it has the fruits of repentance (Luke 24:47) for it we are told to bring forth fruits worthy of repentance to prove our repentance is genuine for there is no genuine repentance without saving faith that produces a life of good works.  They all go together hand in hand one after another in subsequent order. We do not change our lives, but God changes us and changes our hearts. 

We must also note in this book that God always gives time and place and the chance for repentance he never judges without warning.  We are given a fair chance to repent and an opportunity to change our ways and God doesn't give anyone an excuse, so it is our fault that we turn against God, not his fault for failing to warn us of our ways. We all got more than an apology we need to change our lives to prove our apology is valid.  We don't just say we're sorry to God that doesn't cut it with God.  Judas said he was sorry, but he did not have faith, Peter did have faith when he did repent and was sorry, he showed true repentance accompanied by faith and fruit.   Soli Deo Gloria! 



Sunday, August 6, 2023

The Reluctant Prophet IV

 

I'm sure about this:  the one who started a good work in you will stay with you to complete the job by the day of Christ Jesus. Phil. 1:6

I am with I am by the grace of God. 1 Cor. 15:1

PBPGIFWMY  (Please be patient, God isn't finished with me yet!") 

WE ARE GOD'S WORKS IN PROGRESS! 

Remember that we are God's masterpieces. (Eph. 2:10).  God never gives up on us (Phil. 1:6)--that is a point we see in Jonah. God is no Plan B, for instance, he has our destiny planned out and written out for us he controls our destiny he uses us for his purposes and we will know there is no second best in our life but best either the best or disobedience there is no second best.  God doesn't compromise!  We are either in God's will or we are not. We cannot keep God's will as Jonah thought he could. God goes after us as a hound of Heaven in a shepherd after the lost sheep. We cannot offer excuses for God's will in our life that we are not adequate or suited for it or that people will not believe us or that we are inarticulate or have no way with words.   

God uses us the way we are and we can become all things (1 Cor. 9:22) to all people God opens the door for whoever we are to reach other people in his name if we have the faith to do it.  It is the power of the gospel and the power of the word that works on people, not our words but the power of the word that brings conviction of the Holy Spirit. We must remember that God is the Potter and we are the clay though we must not quarrel with our maker.  God has a purpose for us even regarding the evil ones.  God is the purpose for them there's nothing in the world that does not have a purpose in God's eyes this is called teleological thinking. We are God's masterpiece in the sense that we are his "workmanship" created by Christ Jesus unto good works. (Eph. 2:10). 

God knows us, in fact, he knows better than we know ourselves for he is our Maker and we know us inside and out and has all of our days or lives written out beforehand and before we were born even knew us. We must sometimes think that we are not someone that would people would respect but God does not look at our appearance or look at our resume what he sees is what he can do with us if we let him control our spirit submitting to his we are seen as possibilities than someone that he can work with and he sees potential in us even if we are just the average Joe.

God is able to make all things work together for his Plan to supply all our needs (Phil. 4:19).  If we do his will, we never lack supplies or goods or provisions when we're in God's will. We must always have a criterion for our plans and our lives and be patient with others because God's not finished with us yet either so we want people to pace it with us too. Some people think that when we lack nothing good it means we have everything,.  No, it does not mean that Paul lived in poverty even though he had a tent maker minister, he did not have riches it's not necessarily true that Christians become rich as prosperity preachers but God is the Maker both the rich and the poor. But God will supply all your needs to do his will and all your needs not all your wants.  (Phil. 4:19). 

God will give us the marching orders to do his will and we must not major in the minors or get sidetracked but be disciples on a mission to do what he has planned out for us and open the door for us to do and I remember the disobedience does not change God's plan he will deal with it and prune us discipline us and chastise us to bring us into the right path and on right track.  He keeps us going on the right track and God is able to make us willing to do his will  Phil 2:13) this is unusual because we are free persons and agents with God have free will but God can influence our will and make us do whatever his will is.  He is more powerful and stronger than us, in fact, his sovereignty means that we cannot frustrate or thwart his will and God has all power to accomplish his will on Earth regardless of what we do or not whether we cooperate or not. We must realize that God never holds back on his abounding grace (where sin abounded, grace abounded all the more. Rom 5:20) and never has a second plan in case this one fails if we fail and we won't because God knows that he has called us for his good purposes we cannot fail the church cannot fail because God has chosen it.

Isaiah 14:24, 27 says, "As I have plans and as I have a purpose" In verse 27 it says, "Who will know it is He has stretched out who will turn it back?"    Contrast this with Job 42:2 which says I know that you can do everything and no purpose of yours can be felt or thwarted from you God is never frustrated with us we cannot upset God he will do his will whether we cooperate or not we are mere clay in his hand as he is the Potter and we are the clay and we have vessels who honor or dishonor we either examples of good or of evil god use us regardless.  Soli Deo Gloria! 

Sunday, July 30, 2023

The Reluctant Prophet Part III

 Jonah is the story of our salvation, it is not meant to be prophetic.  His book is a narrative that tells us a lot about salvation and about our walk with God but it is a story of a backslidden son in a sense one that goes away from God and then God uses him in a way brings him back but in this case, Jonah never really does come back but God uses him in a way it shows that God uses us for his will regardless of us he doesn't need our cooperation even to make us do his will.  But the essence of faith is measured by obedience and Jonah finally did obey!  We are vessels of God either of honor or dishonor (good or bad examples!) and we are here for his purposes, not ours God will achieve his plan for us no matter what. Jonah was saved or thought he was and was wayward, backslide, nearly apostate, and reluctant to God's will.  

We find his prayer in the belly of the fish as one of salvation but it is not, he is already saved and knows it. He would even rather die than fulfill his ministry and commission and direct order!  There is no prefabricated prayer of salvation (as some make his prayer out to be) in Jonah's prayer in Jonah chapter two he never prayed when he was on board the ship nor when he was called to go to  Nineveh but now he seems desperate and he wants to pray while in the belly. This is not a prayer of faith or of repentance is a theological one of confession and faith where he's trying to make a point with God, for instance, he says that those who worship idols forfeit their grace when he was referring to the sailors and looking down on them thinking that he was better than them comparing themselves. He knew all the theology of salvation but he did not have his heart in the right place. He actually thought he was better than others or superior or had a holier-than-thou attitude which was repugnant to God and that's why the fish vomited up as a symbol of God's rejection of his prayer. 

But God was to use Jonah despite himself just like God uses us despite ourselves and he saves us despite ourselves.  No one deserves salvation!  When it says "Salvation is of the Lord," it also means repentance of the Lord faith is of the Lord and regeneration of the Lord is God's work in us.  It is God's work in our hearts to kindle it with faith and repentance by regeneration.   God grants us repentance and changes our hearts and woos us to him we do not do this on our own we do not conjure up faith or repentance we do not catch it like we catch a cold in a crowd. Jonah did not consider himself unworthy (the prerequisite to salvation is to realize our unworthiness!) which is a primary consideration to come into God (realize you are not worthy!)  He humbles himself shall be exalted he exalts himself shall be humbled. The way up is down in God's economy just as John said, "He must increase and I must decrease." God is opposed to the proud but gives grace to the humble! (James 4:6).  And Jonah did not see this and was never onboard with God throughout the whole book. 

We must realize from that verse in Jonah 2:9 that the salvation of the Lord is not a cooperative venture of us and the Lord or us alone god grants salvation from first to last all by grace.  It is God's work in us. Jonah in his prayers much like many of us we want revenge we want vindication we want to get even or to score we do not want repentance. Even a child that gets caught with a cookie in his hand at the cookie jar is not sorry for what he did but for the consequences and when he gets in trouble he wants revenge and does not confess wrongdoing, he doesn't want to repent and admit wrong. 

Jonah is the type of person who could probably preach repentance and salvation to other people and knew all the all doctrines of salvation and soteriology but he could not apply it to himself.  If he had a high opinion himself and did not realize he was backsliding from the Lord or towards apostasy. But God saved him in a way that is the whole story of us, how we cannot look down even on Jonah but let's learn from the story that we can be in the same boat as God has leveled the playing field and we have no right to feeling superior; to him the missing link is indeed repentance

I did not realize how to save myself until I found out about the missing link of repentance in my life hearing it from a Billy Graham crusade.   I knew that was what was missing and what I needed to do to get restored to God because of my sin. Jonah will never get back to God until he repents regardless of what he did even preaching the sermon he must still repent to be restored to fellowship. The story reminds me of the Pharisee in Luke 18 who says I thank God that I am not a prostitute, publican, or a sinner like others but has such a superior attitude and attitude of exceptionalism and superiority that God is offended by his self-righteousness.  Soli Dep Gloria!


Sunday, July 23, 2023

The Reluctant Prophet Part II

Jonah was not onboard with God and he ran from God thinking he could get away with it but that would be disobeying a "direct order" in military parlance.  That deserves the severest of punishments: treason is punishable by death!  Court-martial per the uniform code of military justice. The point is that we all tend to run from God at times but there is a merciful God who will come after us and bring us to repentance. The phrase "but God" is significant in that God has the last word and is a God who intervenes in the affairs of man.  

God was always in control noted by the phrase "but God..." even churning up a perfect storm and went after this rebellious lost sheep and brought him back. The storyline is a perfect illustration of the gospel: Jonah doesn't preach the gospel he is the gospel in a manner of speaking but the book portrays it by symbolism and events.  Some people only learn by seeing what not to do or by bad examples!  Jonah was a prophet who was called to speak on God's behalf with his authority and he knew what the people needed to hear but was reluctant.  He was stubborn all the way to his NDE or near-death experience.

When the seasoned sailors (note that seasoned believers can be in the same predicament) cried for salvation, he knew what to tell them and they repented and worshiped God but Jonah thought it was all over for him and it was too late to get on track with God again. They say there are no atheists in foxholes and people get religion when desperate or afraid!  When people ask us what shall they do to be saved, we should be prepared to speak for God and what to tell them. We should know the simple gospel message: repent and believe in Jesus for the remission of sins and to get right with God and restore the broken relationship.  

One main lesson from this book is that there are consequences and recompense for disobeying God's direct commands and going our own thing or running from God.  Conditionals are all over the Bible: if this, then that...  We reap what we sow and pay the piper for our sins and even get others punished by association with us.  With every cause, there is an effect by definition or it's not a cause. This is the second law of being and is called the law of causality or of cause and effect.  Jonah in this book found out that God is merciful and that means we do not get what we deserve: he deserved death and he knew it.  To him who knows the right thing to do and fails to do it, it is a sin! Jonah knew better and was held to a higher standard.

Like Joshua knew, "There is sin in the camp!"  Paul the apostle also fought God or His will and Jesus said to him: It is hard to kick against the goads! meaning that the way of the transgressor is hard and you will not get away fighting my will and that is a hard way to live. He who does the will of God abides forever.  We cannot live lives of disobedience and escape running, punishment, discipline, or natural consequences even if we repent!  

God is saying to us: what have you done! Known sins are more serious.   That is rhetorical for our sake because God knows our rebellion. Jonah had a wake-up call and saw the light and God's mercy but he learned the hard way; blessed are those who learn from the Bible and don't need to go through the school of hard knocks. Jonah had been doing his own thing and doing what was right in his own eyes and was "following the course of this world."  Jonah should have learned that we do not get away with disobeying God or running from his will.  Paul said he was not "disobedient to the heavenly vision."  Jonah was indeed an example; what not to do!  We must be faithful to fulfill our calling! 

Jonah also doubted God's omnipresence or that God is everywhere and erroneously thought you could hide from God or escape His sovereignty as if God were a tribal or local deity. The sailors on board wondered where God was but Jonah reminded learned that the question should be "Where isn't God?
Today with all the evils in the world people still ask this but God says "Where is the church?"  The church was given the Great Commission to the whole world but it also has a social obligation to be good citizens and salt and light to the world.  

Jonah might have had disdain or animosity toward Nineveh because of its notorious reputation. But God has leveled the playing field and called us all sinners in his sight and we are all in the same boat needing his mercy. He despised them but God saw differently.   God is the God of the Gentile too and not only of the Jews and this book illustrates that better than any other OT book. God has no hands but our hands, no voice but ours, and no ears except ours; we are his instruments of mercy and his vessels of honor that God has decided to use for his glory whether we want or not God has a purpose for us.  

Some doubt that Jonah was a prophet because there are no predictive prophecies in the book but a prophet not only can foretell but forthtell or speak on God's behalf to edify and with the authority of God.  Prophets are notorious for upsetting or discomforting the at ease and comforting the discouraged.  Prophets must be ready to speak not on authority but with authority and they are known for doing the thankless job of preaching repentance to the apostate and rebellious Israel and Judah. 

Prophets are never people pleasers nor do they preach what people are itching to hear! Their message is usually unwelcome!  People can get upset at the truth told directly to them.  Jonah did not want to be a prophet, he did not inherit the job, but was appointed directly by God!  But the sailors asked him what to do and he knew as if they were saying if you are a prophet or know your God what is happening onboard this ship? We find out Jonah was no ordinary prophet: God used him to bring revival. 

Jonah knew the Answerer, not just a generic answer1, and as believers, we do too: we should know the answers to life's ultimate questions and be ready to speak for God because we are anointed. We are all commissioned to preach the gospel. Many Christians are spiritually hard of hearing and turn a deaf ear to God's call on their lives.  We must heed the heavenly claim on our lives for God owns us! 

The message of this book seems to be summed up asking "What shall we do?"  When we are called by God, we cannot say: No Lord! for that is false by definition: if Jesus is Lord, we must not disobey. We must not preach the false gospel of "easy-believism" or "cheap grace" thinking we do not need to receive Christ as Lord to be saved but only need to simply believe he is Lord; even the demons do that much.  Soli Deo Gloria!

Sunday, July 16, 2023

The Reluctant Prophet Part I

 Jonah is called the reluctant prophet because he fled from the presence of the Lord after he was given his great commission.  He was called by God to preach against Nineveh, the great city and the enemy of Israel at that time, the Northern Kingdom, it was like asking a Jew to go preach against Hitler in Berlin during World War 2.  This was indeed a tall order!  Was he up to it?  He had a right to self-preservation and survival instinct (he must have considered this a suicide mission) and that's what he did he fled and went the opposite way toward Tarshish. But he found out he cannot flee the presence of the Lord for he had thought that God was the only of Israel was the only God of Israel and not the God of all Gods everywhere (henotheism)  He thought that if you went to another country God would not be God there, in other words. He was great and mistaken the God of Israel is God everywhere and a God even of the Gentiles he was asked to preach against in Nineveh.  

Some people say he prophesied against Nineveh because he said that in forty days it would be overthrown Good.  Now this prophecy never did come true and was eventually overthrown 200 years later (see the book of Nuhum) but Nineveh's prediction did not come true thus making him in a sense a false prophet. No, he was not really a prophet in this true sense of the word because He gave no prophecy. On the other hand, he was the most successful prophet of all time because his prophecy actually had an effect and worked repentance upon the people he was a success unlike other prophets and he didn't get stoned, unlike other prophets. Prophets do not necessarily tell predictive prophecies but speak forth the Word of God.  They comfort the affected and afflict the comforted. 

No, in this book we see that everyone seems to be on board with God except Jonah like when he was on the ship all the people repented and feared God but Jonah refused and when the people repented in Nineveh he was upset with God he actually probably want the people to be you know and be destroyed and would pity a plant more than on the people of Nineveh. 

We see in this book from the get-go that God had heard about the great evil of Nineveh and it reached Heaven by reputation then we had a great reputation to be the evilest people on the face of the earth there they were so heinous and egregious they would kill babies by striking them against the wall they did some repugnant, ignominious and offensive things, the most brutal person would do like the sins of Sodom and Gomorrah had reached up to God and God decided to judge but this time God decided that a prophet to tell him to repent rather than strictly judge them without warning. 

It says that Jonah preached against and they heard him and understood because he actually preach God's word but he didn't want them to repent and give them a chance told them to wait to avoid judgment but he never thought they would or pent now why would God tell Jonah this message if God knew they would repent? Because God has provisional plans and God works in time like we do and this is a reality that if they did not repent they would have been overthrown Jonah was not deceiving them he was just delivering his God-given message is a great commission.

This book teaches us that we ought to go when God tells us to go until obey God because God will get his way with us he will find a way to make us do his will. And if God wants us to repent we will repent and God is also the God of the Israelites and the Gentiles just as much there is one God for the whole world he is not a local Deity or God or a tribal God. Jonah was very mistaken thinking he could escape the so-called presence of the Lord by fleeing for God is everywhere.  Now everyone has heard of Jonah he's the most famous prophet of all he's the one people usually use a skeptic to say do you believe there a man could be sold by a whale? So he has become the object of ridicule for skeptics and cynics and atheists and this is more than a kid story or a fable Jesus quoted that Jesus believed in it so it must be true it is a fact of history

The Book of Jonah is written as a narrative, not in a didactic form like Paul's epistles just teaching propositional truth or lessons or doctrine we are to glean lessons from the reading of the historical narrative this actually happened it is true history even Jesus believed in it. Stories become a matter of cliche and odd end ridicule by some who claim that a whale could not swallow a man but there's been proof that wheels quit swallowing men a blue whale has been discovered to find a man inside.  We do not know whether this was a whale or great fish according to some scholars because Jonah probably didn't know the difference. The story has been told and told and oversold and some get tired of hearing it but there are many deep lessons and many doctrinal lessons especially to be learned from it that apply to us even if we don't think they apply to us.

We must realize this book is about God's compassion, about his attributes.  We can know the God that we don't know. We should teach others and lead them to know the beauty of this book is that God is the protagonist and he appears front and center as the main character and the story involves him as if our lives revolve around God.  We are not the center of our life. Still, God writes out the destiny of our lives. It is no use fighting God! We can get his attention! 

Now Jonah disobeyed God's direct command of God to go to any disobeyed and went the opposite way out of fear survival instinct etcetera he had self-preservation and knew how dangerous these people were he had heard of them, Nineveh had a bad reputation. This was also during good times and he was very reluctant to leave the peace and safety of his role and go to a faraway land. Jonah probably knew that God cared about the Gentiles he thought maybe God only cared more about the Jews or the Israelites as they were called His people, at that time some in the Northern Kingdom did not think that Gentiles were worthy of the gospel even though God had called the Jews to be a light to the world but they failed in this commission.  

And the plot thickens as he doesn't arise and go as commanded to go immediately but goes in the opposite direction to see if he can get as far away from God as possible because maybe he thought that God would not be there as I said he fled from the presence of the Lord he felt he could actually get away from God which is impossible. In summation of this, Jonah did not want you to save them, he wanted punishment and he heard of their great wickedness it was common knowledge Jonah was an un-prophet or anti-prophet and he would didn't prophecy anything really in this book or any in the old in the Bible that we know of except unless you want to take his sermon about saying that Nineveh would fall in forty days.  

But note that he is the only prophet who was successful in bringing repentance!  But that turned out to be a false prophecy in that case because it did come true but Nineveh spoke for God this is what a prophet really does he doesn't just foretell but forth-tells, that is, he tells God's words, and explains them to God's people to understand he tells exactly what God tells him to tell he may.   But we noticed that Jonah rationalized.

But we noticed that Jonah rationalized he had many excuses for not going just like Moses had three reasons for not going anywhere who was he, couldn't speak, and people wouldn't listen to him they would believe that kind of thing.  Jonah thought that someone else could do better than him maybe he wasn't good enough that they wouldn't listen to him or that he it was too dangerous why should he risk his life to do that that was he thought probably the people in Judah or Israel needed God more than Nineveh.  This was outside his comfort zone but we should never question God's commands, we should never run from him.

In fact, when we do that we find out that God chases us like a Hond of heaven and we cannot escape the presence of the Lord he finds us we don't find him he finds us and will not let us go so, in essence, we are to a rise and go just like Jonah and follow God's commands.  It's like Paul said I was "not disobedient to the heaven vision." When he became converted and saw the light on the road to Damascus he was immediately blinded but then saw the light and realized it was Jesus Christ that had saved him even though he was reluctant. 

That's why we called Jonah the reluctant prophet, just like God said to Saul: "Why do you kick against the goads?" (meaning fighting God's will) he did not want to do and we are like that ourselves we are reluctant to do a big God's will sometimes in our command is also like the Great Commission given by Jesus to go to all nations making disciples, and so forth.  We don't just pawn this off on the pastor but we have to take our individual gifts and go for it and find our role or niche in doing the work in the church. So in essence, this is not a great suggestion or a great idea but it is a great command it is an imperative mandate we have no choice we are disobedient you cannot say no lord that's a contradiction of terms if you're going to call God Lord, you must obey him you do not argue with God.  

In sum, God will knock us all out of our comfort zone and give us a heavenly vision to fill tall orders and to obey; but we can walk on water and move mountains with mustard-seed faith!  We all are running from God but this is impossible because God pursues us as reluctant prophets in a sense. After all, we fall short and we must trust God's will for our lives and trust in His love that He knows best for us and can plan our lives better than we can.   Soli Deo Gloria!

Sunday, July 9, 2023

A Little Tough Talk Is Due

 Jesus didn't always say things easy to accept, his so-called hard sayings were controversial, roughed up some feathers, and caused many disciples to no longer walk with him, he was not a people pleaser neither did he tell the crowds what they wanted to hear or were itching to hear and they were not an easy pill to swallow.  For instance, many want to be the boss or Number One and are control freaks and think great people are only those in power.  They are not to lord it over the flock or throw their weight around indiscriminately.   But Jesus said the greatest is the servant of all!  Quite topsy-turvy to the conventional wisdom of the time.   Jesus came not to be served but to serve and he got down and dirty with mankind, especially in the "order of the towel" when he washed the disciple's feet and his fellow disciples and was not afraid to associate with anyone but meet their needs, especially in doing miracles or healing; it seems he was saying nothing is "beneath us." 

Some people naturally see the needs of other people in situations they just have a natural servant's heart when a need rises they want to do it. Other people are more like leaders, not because they want to lord over others or be the boss, but because they realize that good leadership is essential and lead by example.  They want to show the way and be trailblazers.  I mean to be scripturally versed and savvy and privy to the deep truths of the Word, able to teach what Jesus commanded--all his commands.   Jesus was loving with all in essence wanting us to assume the helm and to be in charge.  

Now there are only two offices to fill in the modern church: elder and deacon; nearly identical resumes are required but different job descriptions.  Deacons are a special breed of people who do not want to bring attention to themselves or are not self-seeking or self-ambitious but really want to help people out with their personal needs and to promote unity in the church in the bond of peace. The church elders or congregants do not look for a mechanic or plumber and appoint him because he could be very useful to those in need!   

They are caretakers and caregivers!  They want to do whatever they're called to do they do not have something that they think is beneath them.  Humility is a virtue necessary because power may go to one's head as well as being in the spotlight or on the church radar for it is widely known that power tends to corrupt and absolute power corrupts absolutely; we must not let power, influence, or authority ever reside in one single person. 

Deacons must be tested first before being appointed they must be proved they are faithful and pious or godly and must be blameless--this does not mean they are perfect because perfect people need not apply to the church at all because the church is not a hotel for saints but a hospital for sinners.  Deacons must realize they are not self-appointed but are recognized by the church this is a point when they do what comes naturally to them and find themselves serving the church they will be recognized that they are good candidates.  

They do not go around advertising. campaigning, drawing attention to themselves, promoting themselves, or running for the job like a politician gaining favors or namedropping! All things are to be done with dignity and order.  This is most unbecoming and unwelcome. a dignified believer to be self-promoting. And this is not something you apply for officially; you don't particularly say that you want to be a deacon but you must prove yourself first that's what the testing is all about you must prove your worthiness and your adeptness to the priorities and responsibilities of the office. 

Now,  deacons and elders are not spiritual gifts they are offices in the church and you can be very gifted spiritually, intellectually, and even very talented and not an elder or deacon.  We must also recognize that deacons are not junior elders or elders in training it is not a stepping stone to being an elder this is very important because in some churches they want to test you first.   You don't earn your right to be an elder by being a deacon first. It is not by seniority! 

The church calls them to this office just like they call a pastor to preach to a church, it is a calling, and God's gifts and callings are not repented of--he doesn't regret it.  They must remain true and faithful to their heavenly calling.  God calls and God gives members gifting or spiritual gifts are not something that we are taken away or forfeited but our calling is something that we must be faithful to in the church some priests for instance are pastors have been defrocked due to immoral behavior this does happen some some some people can be excommunicated even if they are in office. 

This has happened because elders have the authority for church discipline, to serve, not govern the body of Christ.  The difference between elders and deacons is that deacons are called to serve, and elders are called to lead.  They are the practical ones in the body, handy people!   Elders are in a position of authority whereas deacons are in the position of servanthood. You must learn to be proactive as a deacon because you must see a need to fulfill it just like an entrepreneur sees a need fulfills it to become successful. Some people are just blind to needs this is basically the way they are they don't see it but deacons are looking always looking for opportunities to serve God. I think it's not just like a handyman or spiritual person that's practically useful, but there's a spiritual gift of helps.   He must be spiritually qualified  (godly, virtuous, and pious, and biblically knowledgeable (not just qualified vocationally. But deacons can  be considered "good to be around," and many have the gift of "helps." 

One thing we must notice between elders and deacons is that sometimes an elder may be called to do the work of a deacon if somebody rides or help them up financially this has been done they always get together and decide to build somebody out of a financial situation or something.   All spiritual gifts are like that even if we have one gift we do not prohibit ourselves or exclude ourselves from other gifts if we are called to do them or see the opportunity to do them. Do what God opens the door for you to do even if you don't think we have that gift. Deacons may be called to the service as a teacher but they do not have the office of teacher or pastor-teacher or officially recognizes teachers like the elders who teach well.  You can say elders make and interpret the rules but the deacons apply and follow them. 

Basically, the most important aspect of a deacon  (a man on a mission) is that he promotes the "unity of the spirit in the bond of peace" he knows the church's mission statement and he sees a vision for the church and he works together with the other body members or congregants toward that goal. I like the concept of the deacons as the face of the church they are the peaceful people who bring people together and are peacemakers that we call when we need help they're the ones that know the issues in the church they are in know lots of things but they cannot possibly meet the needs of all the people by themselves they are part of the solution. 

Deacons are those who serve behind the scenes in a support role has been said wisely have a special function towards all of the members. One thing of deacon may do is if he cannot meet and eat himself he may know someone else who he can recommend people deacons are to bring the body together to concerted effort to help people as a body and to work together as a unity as one body in Christ.  Deacons have a supportive role which means they do whatever they are called to do they are open to suggestions and willing to do whatever the elders or the church members ask them to do willingly.   Soli Deo Gloria! 

Wednesday, April 19, 2023

Remaining Obedient To The Heavenly Vision...

Paul was really despised and disparaged in Corinth and had to defend his ministry and authenticity as an apostle.  He reminded them of the signs of an apostle: signs, miracles, wonders!  He even entreated them to accept his authority, even begging for their ears and was frank even blunt.  But this seemed to fall on deaf ears and they were spiritually hard of hearing!   This was done by literary techniques of restatement and repetition of his points to drive them home and strike a chord to resonate with them on their "home page" and get on the same page finding common ground and commonality, not points of disagreement, especially of opinions. It was obvious to the Corinthians that Paul could be quite articulate and authoritarian in letters but not in person.  This did not qualify him as timid or as a gifted speaker, and this in no way reflected on his knowledge, expertise, or experience, and especially his authority as the appointed apostle of Jesus. 

He used this as an excuse to teach and instruct them and he did not rely on a human playbook or means but used "divine power" to demolish the strongholds of Satan and the world. Not to rely on human authority but depending on the power of the Spirit so that their faith does not rest in the power or authority of men but in God alone! The divine weapon of choice was the Word of God and not opinion, oratory skill, education, or biblical or world savvy. But Paul knew how to get their attention! This is encouraging to us who are unlearned and have handicaps to overcome.  

Paul wasn't one to lord it over them either but shared the ministry of the Spirit that we all take part in the work of God according to the gifts of the same Spirit.  Paul knew that you could not argue someone into the kingdom or win one over by the art of persuasion techniques alone. He didn't try to rationalize nor appeal to logic alone.   Our faith must be in the power of God in the gospel ("for it is the power of God unto salvation..."). Paul believed in living the gospel message out and his life showed more suffering for Christ than anyone who ever lived.  But in all this Paul never had a martyr's complex thinking the more you suffer the better Christian. 

He was humble and thought of himself as the chief of sinners. He said that this is a way of becoming all things to all people and reaching out to the lost and those unreachable by other means such as the church.  This is to say that if we are not hypocrites and practice our faith and prove our faith by good works and fruit, then people will be drawn to Christ  God fills the vacuum in the soul and draws people to Christ.  In sum, to be obedient to the heavenly vision, we must see the light and depend upon God's armor and power of the Spirit not ourselves.  Soli Deo Gloria! 

Monday, August 23, 2021

Our Marching Orders In Perspective



"Where there is no vision, the people perish..." (cf. Proverbs 29:18).
"A curse on anyone who is lax in doing the LORD's work! ..." (Jer. 48:10, NIV).
"I will show you my faith by my good deeds" (cf. James 2:18).
"Therefore my people will go into exile for lack of understanding..." (Isaiah 5:13, NIV).
"[M]en who understood the times and knew what Israel should do..." (1 Chron. 12:32, NIV).
"If you know these things, blessed are you if you do them" (cf. John 13:17).


We take our marching orders directly from the top--Jesus Himself, who has an open-door policy through the prayer ministry! He issued the Great Commission and has entrusted the faithful to bring it to fulfillment until the day of the "Great Completion." We are not here to usher in the Millennial Kingdom nor to be utopians, but to be salt and light in a dark and lost world that doesn't know the way- Christ is the Way. Christ is to restore the kingdom (cf. Acts 1:6). Christ, who Himself will usher in His kingdom and we are here to advance His agenda and cause in making Christ known to the lost, while also paying heed to our cultural mandate or "Social Commission," which is not a social gospel.

This is not to be confused with the so-called social gospel which is a misnomer (noting that every great social cause in history can be attributed to the church, from universities to hospitals and missions) and we are to be the hands, eyes, heart, and ears of Christ that needs a helping hand--we are to multiply bread and fish and "feed the people" or to meet needs as well as preach. We are commanded to "remember the poor" (cf. Gal. 2:10). We are not to merely turn stones into bread, or do good deeds for their own sake, or lose focus of the main objective which is to preach the Word; there's no social gospel, but there's a social mandate to combat evil and be salt and light.

The church is meant to fulfill more than the gospel, but also to make disciples and to teach and prepare for the ministry to the needy, so that they will obey all that Jesus taught. We are examples to the world to whom we may be the only light they will witness. There is just enough light to see and just enough darkness not to, and we are to make a difference to those with a positive and willing attitude--(cf. John 7:17) "If any man will do His will," he shall know the truth to set him free.

But witnesses are to tell their personal story that cannot be refuted (Psalm 107:2 says, "Let the redeemed of the LORD say so..."), though there is never enough evidence for the unwilling or skeptic, no one can disbelieve for lack of evidence, for there is ample evidence for the willing and open-minded. You must be willing to go where the evidence leads to find the truth and not rule it out as a possible reality from the get-go. Christians with faith have nothing to fear from the facts because it's an evidence and fact-based faith. Unfortunately, skeptics have their minds made up and don't want to be confused with the facts--no amount of evidence will convince them.

Now, what purposes do the churches fulfill in detail? The primary one is the worship of God, the second is of love towards our fellow man demonstrated by works and good deeds as a witness to the world of Christ's love (mission), the next is to train up the people of God, and then provide for an opportunity of fellowship and communion of the body (contrary to popular opinion, the primary purpose of going to church is not to hear a sermon--that's only part of the equation). The discipline or training up of believers is a primary function of the church (cf. Eph. 4:13). People are to get a positive image of Christ and this can only be done when the church is doing its job, but unfortunately, today's church is largely absentee and in dereliction of duty, and many people see evil in the world and wonder where God is, but should be wondering where the church is--e.g., it has a calling to pray for all those in authority.

Secondly, the church must support mission work and contribute to the needs of the saints in the body--there should be no one who is overlooked in the time of need by a body that is blessed in order to be a blessing. The church that is not reaching out is a contradiction in terms. People often wonder what's wrong with the world and should be asking what's wrong with the church. A focus of the church largely ignored is what the Roman Catholic Church did in colonial days-- spread the light of Western civilization to a primitive world and be a cultural force to be reckoned with. It isn't necessarily the turf of the church to directly involve itself in political movements but to train in the Christian worldview that believers can go on to be a force for good in the world at large.

The church needs to realize what's going on in the world become informed and heed the wake-up call to action, flying its colors and taking its stand for Christ wherever needed no matter the cost--it must defy evil and illegitimate decrees from the government, for Augustine said that "an unjust law is no law at all." Isaiah 10:1 pronounces woe on those who decree unjust laws. The church is not to sanitize society, but to be a positive force and influence for good so that there will be an opportunity to preach the Word and minister to those in need (sad to say, though, the church has become lax in its social commission, even as the moral conscience, compass, or fiber of society). NB: It's not the government's role to outlaw all sin but to keep evil at bay and protect human rights.

In God's economy, there's always a right way to do things, and we must realize that the pragmatism of politics is evil. The world cannot survive without the aid of the church as its preservative. The apostolic church devoted itself (cf. Acts 2:42) to sound doctrine, prayer, fellowship, and communion or the breaking of bread (which presumably included fellowship meals to share with the needy and reach out in ministry and mission).

The church is to reach out to more than one demographic, recipient, or audience: the seekers, the skeptics, those of another faith or no faith, the infidel, the pagan, the atheist, the agnostic, the nihilist, the polytheist, the anti-theist, the agnostic, the mature, and last, but not least, even the baby or newborn believer--anyone's guess who's in church. Meanwhile, it must inform, educate, enlighten, and transform by preaching and teaching the Word faithfully, giving heed to sound doctrine (for heresy can creep in unawares and people become blind or callous to an orthodox faith). We must admit that doctrine is not too arcane for the Average Joe believer, for it's a matter of the enlightening of the Holy Spirit to open the eyes of one's heart--though some have become hard of hearing spiritually speaking. All this is accomplished in toto by the cooperative effort of the body exercising their God-given gifts of the Spirit--all needing each other in some respect to use in ministry to each other.

The calling of the church is five-fold: worship, fellowship, discipleship, ministry (to believers), and mission (to the lost). Above all, the church belongs to the family of God and is to be known as a house of prayer for all members. Unfortunately, today's church seems to be the so-called "Church of What's Happening Now" and into the latest fad or movement (political or social), and is guilty of moral and spiritual laxity and negligence all for the purpose of making a name for itself, not a name for Jesus (for we are to minister and reach out in His name--e.g., too many churches are erecting edifices at great expense but have their priorities misplaced).

Our marching orders may be summed up as follows: occupy or stand our ground till Christ returns, do business as usual, not be doomsayers, purify ourselves in holiness in sanctification (living each day in readiness for the Lord), watching for Christ's return (i.e., reading the signs of the times and being ready), worshiping and glorifying our Maker and Redeemer, all while reaching out to a lost world that needs salvation. All in all, it should be the custom of believers not to forsake (cf. Heb. 10:25) the assembly together of themselves (all the more as one can see signs of the coming of Christ) and to meet with God regularly with a genuine and real encounter or experience with the Almighty in the fellowship of the body where no one is the rock but Christ (1 Cor. 10:4).

The church has always been a light to the world of its devotion and mission: Saint Theresa said she wanted to build a convent. Someone asked her how much were her resources, and she replied twelve pence. They told her that even Saint Theresa couldn't build a convent with only that at her disposal. She retorted that Saint Theresa and twelve pence and God can do it! We need to be examples of our faith in action and that God will always provide the provisions for His work and will. "Seek the welfare of the city I deported you to..." (cf. Jer. 29:7).

This goes a long way in making an impact on the community making a difference for Christ in the world at large and setting the example for the body of Christ at large, and so God has done something about the evils and problems in our world--He made the church and expects believers not to be remiss of their commitment to it, knowing that true faith expresses itself, because the faith we show is the faith we have!

The bottom line of the church's mission is that the members should know their place in the body (or they'll be a fish out of water!) and know what they believe (instead of pointing fingers and fixing blame we should find solutions and take responsibility) and realize the faith is defensible and they should be ready to take a stand for the truth in the world as Christ's ambassadors--the church is not a hotel for saints as much as a hospital for sinners and a training camp for soldiers of Christ to be equipped for the angelic and cosmic battle with Satan and his minions; i.e., having a working knowledge of apologetics and be ready to be defenders of the gospel and Christ. In other words, Job One is the Great Commission and we must never lose focus to keep the main thing the main thing--getting people saved is only the beginning; there must be a follow-up!

We don't just go to church just to hear the preaching of a sermon (or corporate worship), but to get a spiritual checkup, take spiritual inventory, interact in the body by means of fellowship, minister in accordance with one's gift, serve one another even in the order of the towel or the servile act of foot-washing as an example of humility if need be, to charge one's spiritual battery pack, and ultimately to prepare for the mission, which is the world, and for the angelic conflict, fulfilling the Great Commission in accordance to one's gift and preach the good news and the Word where the door is open. However, though the church at large has a directive from God, it's focusing on movements for pragmatic and expedient reasons.

"And do this, understanding the present time: the hour has already come for you to wake up from your slumber because our salvation is nearer now than when we first believed" (Rom. 13:11).
"Again, if the trumpet does not sound a clear call, who will get ready for battle?" (1 Cor. 14:8).


KEEP THE MAIN THING THE MAIN THING! DON'T MAJOR ON THE MINORS!

The church today is sidetracked with many foci that are not commissioned by Christ--personal agendas and political causes, for instance. The church was given the Great Commission and this should be the focal point of its ministry. All other ministries are secondary and should be relegated to a lesser degree of importance--they are not of paramount value compared to the number one goal of achieving the calling given us to spread the gospel and make disciples of all nations. This commission, by the way, is not any one person's burden, because no one person has all the gifts, but it is the shared burden of the church at large. We need to do our part as an individual, as well as corporately as a church.

What we have today is the social gospel where churches are into causes so much that they are derelict in their evangelical duties (not just for evangelists--Paul exhorted preachers to do the work of an evangelist). You might say they are turning stones into bread or multiplying bread to feed multitudes and attract crowds, not converts. People are being converted to the cause, not to Christ. Bleeding Hearts is into the church and taking over because they see it as a social vehicle for change--an opportunity to spread their agenda. They have no interest in Christ Himself and no love for Him, but if He is not the center of church life they feel right at home because they have a concern for the betterment of society and to usher in their idea of peace on earth--and the church is only a vehicle for change.

The priority of the church is the Great Commission and if this loses emphasis the people never get converted to anything other than a cause. They are, in reality, converted to a program, not to Jesus Himself. The Great Commission includes making disciples (not just converts--they must be followed up and mentored or trained in the Scriptures), and in taking part in spreading the good news first at home (teaching members how to spread the good news too is implied), then elsewhere via missionaries, etc. There is no limit to the amount of impact one obedient church can have, and this does not depend on its size, because Christ was more interested in quality than quantity.

Today, with all the so-called mega-churches, we see attention given to size as what is impressive, and what most of them are is really crowds, not families; a church is a local body of believers who function as a family in Christ, not strangers who just happen to worship together. The order of growth is to believe in Christ, to belong to His body, and the church, and to grow and become what He wants for you in Christ.

Until Christ comes the marching orders for the church are not to sound the alarm as doomsayers as some today are wont to do, (we are to be ready, yes, but not to predict or act as if we know some secret revelation from God Himself as a latter-day prophet would), but to occupy the land or you might say do business as usual, in obedience; to proclaim the Lord's death till He comes; to purify ourselves in holiness and sanctification; and to watch the signs of the times (be ready saying every day, "Lord, will this be the day?"), so that we can judge for ourselves whether we feel the time is near and as we do to not forsake the assembling together of ourselves (Heb. 10:25); and most of all to worship God corporately and personally.

We are not to have an agenda of being prophecy nuts or of warning people of the coming of Christ and of coming judgment as if we are unbalanced or fanatics (what we need are more clear-thinking interpreters of the times who understand the Christian worldview, not self-appointed ministries claiming indirectly to be prophets or to be prophesying).

Many errant preachers have presumptuously predicted the coming of Christ and have been wrong (i.e., William Miller on Oct. 22, 1844, called the Great Disappointment because Christ was a no-show). The last hour was announced by John (cf. 1 John 2:18) over 17 million hours ago and Paul rebuked believers who jumped to the conclusion that the coming was near and refused to even work. It should be comforting and encouraging that Christians will be finally delivered ("Therefore comfort ye one another with these words").

In summation, '"Where there is no vision, the people perish." (cf. Prov. 29:18):   The sole emphasis of the obedient and model church is the Great Commission, and any other ministries are only secondary as they only should serve to unite the body and to reach out and spread the good news as a body. Liberal causes are rampant in the church and the church has no business getting into political causes or the so-called social gospel, which is a misnomer, and should stay focused on the gospel. The great inquiry and judgment on that day of judgment will be whether we did our part in this Commission. Causes are not taboo, but the church's function is not that; individual believers can be involved in them, but this is their own business and calling in life as they see fit. The church can give out bread, but only if it also gives out the gospel first. What we need is a wake-up call to the church, not an alarm to the world at large! Soli Deo Gloria!

Friday, August 13, 2021

What Does It Mean To Believe In God?

  am assuming the Christian faith and referencing the Bible and the God of the Bible: Abraham believed God and it was counted unto righteousness. By faith Abraham obeyed God. (Romans 4:3; Heb. 11:8).

You don’t just believe He exits for the demons do that. And faith without works is dead: true faith is manifested and proved by good works—you are known and rewarded by your fruit. Faith is authenticated by deeds! You believe Him and take Him at His Word, trusting Him with your heart and life. You must be willing to do His will and obey His commands; surrender to the Lordship or ownership of your life. Is Christ your Lord? Do you unashamedly confess His name and stand up for Him?

True faith entails love in the heart for we believe not just in our minds as much as in our hearts. (cf. Romans 10:9–10). Do you believe the God who is and that He is with you? You don’t have to repeat a creed every day religiously but grow in your faith by obedience. In short, trust and obey! That is the only true measure of faith. It isn’t how much you believe but how well you obey. Remember, it’s not the amount of faith but the object that matters. It must be settled solidly in Christ alone.

Also, true faith is connected with true repentance—they go hand in hand and it may not be how much you believe but how thorough your repentance is. You must grow in your faith and develop a relationship with Jesus by confession of known sin and walking in the Spirit. We learn to walk by faith, not by sight (cf. 2 Cor. 5:7). This means you need to be filled with the Spirit continually so you do not walk in the flesh and sin. This also means producing the fruit of the Spirit: love, joy, peace…. Thus, it’s not just having a sort of faith, but having saving faith that translates your creeds into deeds!

Sunday, November 15, 2020

The Gospel As The Power Of God

 "We do not preach ourselves but Christ Jesus as Lord," (cf. 2 Cor. 4:5). 

"... when ye received the word of God, which ye heard of us, ye received it not as the word of men, but as in the truth, the word of God, which effectually worketh also in you that believe," (cf. 1 Thess. 2:13). 

"For my speech and my preaching was not with enticing words of man's wisdom, but in the demonstration of the Spirit and of power: that your faith should no stand in the wisdom of men, but in the power of God," (cf. 1 Cor. 2:4-5). 

A preacher should realize that the gospel is where the action is and should never grow weary of preaching it.  It may be milk of the Word but we never outgrow milk or any other staple of our diet such as bread.   The Holy Spirit doesn't desire to glorify Himself but to praise and glorify Jesus for what He's done to save us as a people of God and for who He is as the Son of God, earnest unto good works. 

We should strive to know nothing save Christ and Christ crucified (cf. 1 Cor. 2:3) and to spread the good word of Jesus or the gospel message and to apply it to our lives as a testimony to others; i.e, to live it out and make it relevant the only gospel others may see is in us!    If they see it in us it becomes real and a welcome mat to the infidel.  This gospel is indeed good news but there is also bad news that must accompany it: to repent of sins as a prerequisite of salvation.  We must get them lost first!  In the true gospel message, which is about what Christ has done and not we do, God reaches down to us in condescension. 

We must realize it's all about God and not about us!  We can experience salvation in real-time and have an actual encounter with God.  We are made alive (or our souls are quickened per Eph. 2:1) by the preaching of the cross because we are as good as dead in God's eyes in our sins.  God quickens and opens the door of faith within us (cf. Acts 14:27) and makes us alive in Christ tor born again. When we have the Holy Spirit, we see life with a new lens or with a Christian worldview or outlook. We have a whole new motive for living:  kingdom living for Christ's glory in God's economy as it were.  

To enter the kingdom of God, we must surrender or raise the white flag to Christ of the ownership of our lives. We become living sacrifices!  We are the salt of the earth to preserve it and give it a flavor but also the light of the world to show the way. We see ourselves for who we are and the picture isn't pretty; we need a renewed mind in the image of Christ.  Salvation brings a new identity in Christ so we can relate to Him as family; not as a second chance or new lease on life but a whole new life becoming regenerated and made new from the inside out.  We don't just turn over a new leaf, make a New Year's resolution, or an AA pledge but are given a clean slate and a new beginning, a fresh start. 

We must not ever be ashamed of the gospel as Paul wasn't and realize that it's the power of God unto salvation for everyone who believes (cf. Rom. 1:16).  The gospel has convicting power and we never outgrow it as believers; it's the staple of our spiritual diet of the Word. We must remember that the Christian life is not just hard, it's impossible!  We need the grace of God to live it out and make it real to others by our witness and we should never jeopardize this.  The unconditional love of God is shown in Him reaching down to us when we don't deserve it, our worship is reaching up to Him and our fellowship is in reaching out to fellow believers.  When we reach down to those in need, it's compassion and mission.   

The Christian life is not for spectators and worship isn't passive but active because only genuine believers can share the true gospel with conviction: it's not just about do-goodery or doing good deeds but about being a witness for Christ and obeying Him in all things. God doesn't want our achievements but our obedience and the measure of our spirituality aren't our ecstasies but our obedience  Worship is not passive but active and we are participants in our own way.   Soli Deo Gloria!

Friday, March 27, 2020

Preaching The Good News...

"The Desire of All Nations shall come" (cf. Haggai 2:7).
"Preach the Word, be instant in season and out" (cf. 2 Tim. 4:2). 
"Proclaim the message, persist in it whether it is convenient or not..." (2 Tim. 4:2, HCSB). 
"... And how can they believe without hearing about Him?  And how can they believe without a preacher? And how can they preach unless they are sent? ... " (Romans 10:14-15, HCSB).  

"Where there is no vision, the people perish," (cf. Prov. 29:18, KJV).  Our mission statement and vision from above should be to spread the word--the message of Christ.  "We do not preach ourselves, but Christ Jesus as Lord," according to 2 Cor. 4:5.  But we cannot preach the good without the bad!  This is also called preaching law and gospel. Salvation is freedom from the yoke of the Law and put under a much easier yoke of  God's will and Christ's yoke.  We must get them lost first and make them realize their depravity and predicament before getting them saved!  The discerning theologian can distinguish law and gospel in the Scriptures.   Law is what God requires of us and how we measure up and fail; the gospel is what Jesus did and does for us and what we receive by grace.  Jesus and John the Baptist both inaugurated their ministries:  "Repent for the kingdom of God is at hand!"  clearly Law and our duty to God.  NB:  Although repentance is demanded of us, it's a gift of God (cf. 2 Tim. 2:25; Acts 5:31; 11:18).

We must first be convicted of our sins before we can confess them! It's not our job to convict--that's the prerogative of the Holy Spirit who shall convict the world of sin, righteousness, and judgment (cf John 16:13).  No one is more lost or blind than the one who doesn't know his sin or realizes he's lost!  Jesus told the Pharisees that because they said they could see, they were really blind; for He came to seek and to save the lost--the precondition for salvation is that we realize we don't qualify for it.  In a play on words, we sue God for peace in His divine court!  We are spiritually bankrupt and have no options but to repent and turn to God in faith! He dictates the terms and makes the rules.

Preaching is a bad news/good news announcement and preachers ought to know where the parishioners are spiritually and reach out to them in love, not over their heads, nor getting personal, nitpicking, pointing to or stressing any one sin over another as a hobbyhorse or agenda such as taking up a campaign against smoking.  We aren't doing anyone any good by bypassing or skipping the bad news of sin, judgment, and hell but giving aid and comfort to the enemy and confirming people in their sins. Having false assurance is worse than no assurance.   It's really an act of love to tell it like it is and to warn people of the wrath to come and that there's only one escape through Christ's blood.

We must not ignore the hard sayings of Jesus or the offensive truths that people don't feel comfortable with because the preacher not only can comfort the afflicted gut afflict the comfortable--false assurance is worse than no assurance.  "Speak the truth in love!"  (cf. Eph. 4:15).  To preach the Word means to do it in love and honesty, not to water it down or domesticate it!  We don't gloss over the truths that seem like a hard pill to swallow! Martin Luther said that the sinner doesn't see his sin, and it's the preacher's job to show it to him.  Only when we know the whole truth are we able to appreciate the good news and put everything into a spiritual perspective.

In sum, Arthur W. Pink said, that "there some who say they are saved, even before they have any feeling that they are lost." We must see that the gospel must be preached clear enough to be rejected too; we must not preach easy-believism or cheap grace as Dietrich Bonhoeffer called it and offer salvation without repentance but realize that repentance and faith go hand in hand and can be distinguished by not separated--believing repentance or penitent faith--they cannot be divorced! Soli Deo Gloria! 

Sunday, July 14, 2019

The Gospel In Its Purity

The Reformers' formula for salvation was that we are "saved by faith alone but not by a faith that is alone," and they defined this faith:  by grace alone, in Christ alone, giving God alone the glory, and the Scripture alone as the authority--known as the Five Only's (by grace alone, through faith alone, in Christ alone, Scripture alone as authority, to God alone be the glory: sola gratia, sola fide, solus Christus, sola Scriptura, and sola Deo gloria).  We are to have Bible verses as our spiritual birth certificates, not taking the authority of a teacher, preacher, or church to certify our salvation--it's not their job description!  Our assurance comes from the Word of God coupled with the inner witness of the Holy Spirit (cf. Rom. 8:16).  We are to examine our own hearts, and become fruit inspectors of ourselves! 

Grace means we cannot add to it, we cannot substitute for it, we don't deserve it, we cannot earn it, nor can we ever pay it back--grace all the way!  We cannot put faith in the church or the pastor/teacher or even ourselves but the object must be Christ--it's the object that saves, not faith per se. Faith doesn't save:  Christ is the Savior!  Faith is the instrumental means or channel of grace.

The battle cry or rallying cry of the Reformation was that we are "saved by faith alone"; yet Romanists said that the Bible doesn't say that and they couldn't point to any certain passage in particular.  When we are arguing or proof-texting we have missed the boat and don't see the big picture. Many cults like to point you to some verse and catch you off-guard, unprepared for their interpretation.  You are either grace-oriented or not!  Yes, they are technically right, but no text says Jesus is God per se, in so many words, or that God is a Trinity either!  Some seemingly obscure doctrines we deduce from accepted dogma and plain, obvious passages or verses.

But with the Romanists, faith is seen as agreeing or acquiescing with what the Church (in their case the Roman Catholic Church) teaches or espouses.  Faith of this kind is merely head belief, not heart belief,  that doesn't enter the inner being of man and grow as a living and saving faith.  Saving faith is an obedient one!  We obey the gospel!  The Holy Spirit is only given to those who obey:  "We are witnesses of these things, and so is the Holy Spirit whom God has given to those who obey Him" (Acts 5:32, HCSB).  (CF. Heb. 3:18-19). THE POINT IS THAT FAITH AND OBEDIENCE ARE ETERNALLY EQUATED IN HOLY WRIT! THEY ARE TWO SIDES OF THE SAME COIN; "ONLY HE WHO BELIEVES IS OBEDIENT; ONLY HE WHO IS OBEDIENT BELIEVES"

NB:  The Judaizers were guilty of mixing law and gospel, works and faith, merit and grace!  This confusion led Paul to delineate the gospel message and condemn anyone who preaches an unbiblical evangel. 

Rome distorts the pure gospel message in multiple ways:  it adds works to faith, merit to grace, the Church to Christ, tradition to Scripture, and diminishes the glory of God as a result and outcome. For instance, they may have a lot of faith in their priest or in the Pope as being right.  Of course, they see faith as necessary, grace as necessary, and Christ as necessary even Scripture as necessary, but they refuse to acknowledge them as sufficient.  We believe grace is not only necessary but also sufficient to save us, as we are saved by grace, not by works, as Paul said, "My [God's] grace is sufficient for thee" (cf. 2 Cor. 12:9).

What Rome has done is make faith a meritorious work and in effect enabled man to save himself by what's called an analytic is a tautology, adding no new data, inherent righteousness and infused justification, not a synthetic, meaning we add data, alien righteousness (belonging to Christ, not us), and imputed justification of Christ--they see man as getting qualified or meriting salvation and he must make himself worthy in some way with some presalvation work--this is like stealing God's glory and giving yourself a pat on the back.  "Salvation is of the LORD," (Jonah 2:9) and is a completed work of God, not a cooperative venture.  If we had to do anything, we'd fail.  (Inherent is what we already possess and analytic means we add no new info--a triangle has three sides-- and this implies he already has the capability and is just and it's only latent, and it's infused which means inspired or quickened--so God just instills our latent righteousness--whereas synthetic means we add new data we don't have to the equation, and alien means foreign and not our own--so God imputes Christ's righteousness to us, it's not our righteousness that saves us!  In other words, God declares us righteous by virtue of Christ's righteousness, we are not made righteous and have no natural righteousness of our own--our righteousness is solely God's gift to us, not our gift to Him.

We must not believe in ourselves but in Christ and the object of our faith must be Christ, not Christ plus something or someone, not even us--we must give up trying to save ourselves.  It is heresy to add anything to Jesus in our salvation:  Jesus plus alms-giving, Jesus plus churchmanship, Jesus plus tithing, Jesus plus witnessing, Jesus plus any good behaviors--we are not saved by good behavior, but unto good behavior and if we don't have it our faith is suspect and may not exist.  Dead faith cannot save and that refers to a faith that is unfruitful and is not shown or demonstrated by works or deeds to prove it and validate it.  The faith you have is the faith you show, is what I always say.

The present-day evangelicals like to preach an easy-believism and/or play down the lordship of Christ in making a decision to follow Him and open the door of one's heart to die in Him, taking up one's cross after Him in obedience.  Christ will not save those He cannot command according to A. W. Tozer and what this means is that we must accept His ownership over our lives and surrender our wills at salvation and constantly renew that surrender as is fitting and proper.  In other words, true saving faith involves trusting Jesus alone as Savior, and submitting to His authority or lordship over our lives--only then do we own Him as our Lord and Savior.  He will not be a divided Christ, we accept Him for who He is or it's rejection.  

We must not confuse the gospel with the law either!  Law involves our duty to God and gospel is how Jesus settled the sin question and all He did on our behalf.  The two can be distinguished but not separated: we have responsibilities as well as privileges as the flip side!  They go hand in hand.  Parishioners must see their duty as well as the grace of God.  The Law was given to break and make us realize we cannot keep it; we don't break it, however, it breaks us!  What we do break is God's heart!  Preachers must get them lost ( cognizant of conviction of sin) before attempting to save them (preach salvation via the gospel) and some actually believe they are saved having never sensed they were ever lost sheep!  All we like sheep have gone astray!  We all need to be corralled into the flock now and then and a sermon ought to be able to give us a spiritual inventory as we get our regular checkup and connect with the preacher and one another with the message in mind.

The slogan "Just do it!" is relevant to following Christ; a disobedient follower or disciple is a contradiction in terms!  Remember the obedience of Peter:  "Nevertheless, at thy Word, Lord, I will cast down my net."  We are like soldiers in God's army and the line for the poem by Alfred, Lord Tennyson comes to mind:  "Ours is not to wonder why ours is but to do and die!"  If Christ can be obedient unto death for us, we must follow our Exemplar and do likewise, for He doesn't ask us to do anything He didn't do.  Those who question orders don't belong in the military and likewise, with our Lord, we should obey wholeheartedly, and in full compliance.

In regards to law and gospel, we must never separate faith and repentance.  There is no saving faith without genuine repentance, and no genuine repentance without accompanying saving faith--they're two sides of the same coin, going hand in hand and one is the flip side of the other; you could call the command to penitent faith, or believing repentance, for you can distinguish them but never divorce them without compromising the truth.  Acts 20:21, ESV,  says that the apostle was "testifying both to Jews and to Greeks of repentance toward God and of faith in our Lord Jesus Christ." Note that these two active verbs are juxtaposed and forever wed in Scripture.  We see other passages where we are enjoined to repent unto salvation and in others to believe in the gospel.   We make a turnaround from sin (repentance) to Christ (faith).  The first words preached by John the Baptist and Jesus were to repent; Jesus added to believe in the gospel! 

NB: The Reformation was inaugurated because of a revolt against so-called tradition of the Roman Catholic Church as well as the restoration of the gospel, and during the Counter-Reformation in the Council of Trent (1545-63), the Church declared tradition on a par with the Bible in authority as well as condemn (pronounce anathema) anyone who believes we are saved by faith alone; i.e., the Protestants!

In sum, we must learn as the gospel hymn goes, "Trust and obey!"  Paul was a good example for he was not disobedient to the heavenly vision and warned of those who distort or pervert the gospel (cf. Gal. 1:7) and even preach another gospel, another Jesus, and another Spirit (cf. 2 Cor. 11:4).  Soli Deo Gloria!