Uncategorized

Holy, Holy, Holy

There is no one holy like the Lord; there is no one besides you; there is no Rock like our God. (I Sam 2:2)

 In the year that King Uzziah died, I saw the Lord seated on a throne, high and exalted, and the train of his robe filled the temple. Above him were seraphs, each with six wings: With two wings they covered their faces, with two they covered their feet, and with two they were flying. And they were calling one to another:

 “Holy, holy, holy is the Lord Almighty; the whole earth is full of his glory.”

 At the sound of their voices the doorposts and thresholds shook and the temple was filled with smoke.

“Woe is me!” I cried. “I am ruined! For I am a man of unclean lips, and I live among a people of unclean lips, and my eyes have seen the King, the Lord Almighty.” (Is 6:1-5)

God Most Holy, I am a man of unclean lips, a sinful creature. How can I comprehend Your holiness? And yet it is right for me to think on it. Show me Your blazing purity.  Give to me a vision of Your holy nature.  But have mercy.  Give me what I can handle but increase what I can handle so that I can know You more. Give me this vision not that I might merely know but that I might fall before You in worship and that I might live before You in right fear and with a right heart.

Whatever is holier than we is a mystery to us. Unholy people cannot understand a righteous man. His ways are an enigma to them. And the righteous man will be the first to tell you that he is not so righteous as people think. So if we have difficulty understanding a righteous man, what shall we do when we find a holiness so pure, so white, so bright and burning that viewing it would bring terror to the stoutest heart. Sometimes Christians talk too glibly about yearning to see God. We should have such yearning indeed, but seeing God is no small matter, and we ought not think of it lightly, as we might think of seeing our dad in Chicago. We can be like James and John asking for what we do not understand. To see God is to come before holiness. Take off your shoes. Cover your mouth. Fall on your face. The holiness of God is not some kind of relative holiness as we might find in a man or woman.  The holiness of God is absolute.  It is the fountainhead of all holiness.  Nothing on earth compares to it. Isaiah was a righteous man, but the veiled picture Isaiah saw in the temple caused him to bemoan his sinful state: “Woe is me. I am ruined.” To see the holiness of God is to see our own wicked hearts for what they are and to realize that we do not belong in such a presence. The person who sees himself as a decent fellow knows nothing of the holiness of God.

Everything God is and everything God does is holy. He is blindingly pure and fervently separate from everything we are and do. That is what holiness is. Separateness. God is not like us. Fresh snow is as scarlet beside Him. We cannot see or understand the holiness of God in the raw. We can have a sense of it. Luther did and it caused him to unravel. Some may have special visions of it as Isaiah did and perhaps the mystics. We worship Him because of it. We change our lives because of it, for His holiness is the source of ours, but we can never fully grasp the overwhelming purity and separateness of the Living God.

 

Posted by mdemchsak, 0 comments

Glory

Then Moses said, “Now show me your glory.”

And the Lord said, “I will cause all my goodness to pass in front of you, and I will proclaim my name, the Lord in your presence. I will have mercy on whom I will have mercy, and I will have compassion on whom I will have compassion. But,” he said, “you cannot see my face, for no one may see me and live.” Then the Lord said, “There is a place near me where you may stand on a rock. When my glory passes by, I will put you in a cleft in the rock and cover you with my hand until I have passed by. Then I will remove my hand and you will see my back; but my face must not be seen.” (Ex 33:18-23)

 …God the blessed and only Ruler, the King of kings and Lord of lords, who alone is immortal and who lives in unapproachable light, whom no one has seen or can see. To him be honor and might forever. Amen. (I Tim 6:15-16)

Oh God all glorious, let us humbly adore. Let us join the prophets and the angels and the litany of saints in falling face down before you. Open the eyes of our hearts to see even a glimpse of the Unseeable, and in seeing, let us worship. Let our minds and hearts be enraptured with your overwhelming beauty and glory beyond description, beyond classification, beyond all capacity to see and know. Blessed be Your glorious Name.

Ezekiel describes his vision into heaven — the throne, the great expanse, the brilliant light, the figure like the appearance of a man radiant with light, the likeness of a rainbow. He then responds to what he saw: “This was the appearance of the likeness of the glory of the Lord. When I saw it, I fell face down, and I heard the voice of one speaking” (Ez 1:28).

For us now to see God as He is would be instant death, like traveling to the center of the sun but infinitely more consuming. We are sinful, frail creatures, easily broken, easily killed. We have difficulty looking across a snowscape on a sunny day; we cannot look into an eclipse. Do we think we can gaze on the full glory of God? His is a glory that would penetrate through us and consume us entirely, for as He said to Moses, “No one may see me and live” (Ex 33:20).

The visions which the prophets and John the Revelator had were by necessity veiled images. God had to hide glory from them in order to show them the glory He did. They saw a fraction of a drop of glory and fell on their faces. Their little peeks of God unknit them inside out. Such is the nature of God. He dwells in unapproachable light. Who can see Him? Who can know the fullness of the Almighty?

Posted by mdemchsak, 0 comments

How We View God Matters

Lord, I want to know You.  I want to know what You are like.  I want to live in You, but I can’t live in You if I know nothing about You.  Reveal to me the glory of Yourself.  Then will I be able to live  right.

A man wanted to talk to me about a book he had read. In the book, the author, a well-known lawyer, claims that God has learned over time how to handle the human race. This lawyer apparently states that in the early days of Genesis, God did not know how to deal well with the human race. He condemned the world to the flood and destroyed Sodom and Gomorrah. In time, however, he learned to be more merciful, and when we reach the New Testament, he had gotten it right. Today, of course, God thinks as we do.

I’m not surprised at such a portrayal of God. Modern culture often has a small God, and this God is no different. I am sure that this lawyer is a fine lawyer, but he does not know God. His god is too small. The lawyer has made himself God’s judge. Unfortunately, that is not how God sees things.

The idea that we can think of God in any way we please is nonsense. It assumes that God has not revealed Himself. And it hurts us.

Our thoughts of God determine the quality of our faith. Tozer was right when he said that “the low view of God entertained almost universally among Christians is the cause of a hundred lesser evils everywhere among us” (p. viii. Knowledge of the Holy). We will not be morally pure if we worship a simplistic God. We will have no power to transform our world and no depth in our souls if our view of God is average. If our god is less than God, our lives will be less than Christian. Unfortunately, the Western church today suffers from this problem. Our view of God is too small. We are slow to attempt great things because we forget the greatness of the One we serve. We avoid risky steps of faith because we do not believe God is faithful. We are prone to make comfort our driving force because we subconsciously think that we are the center of life. We dabble with heresy because we ignore what is revealed. We play with moral impurity because we forget that God is a consuming fire. In each case above, you may say other factors also contribute, and I will not squabble with you, but our view of God is a foundational factor. If we really saw God for who He is, we would take more steps of faith, attempt greater things for Christ, and be morally purer and doctrinally truer.

Now our view of God must not be solely an endeavor of the head. Many people could technically tell you all the right answers about God if they were asked, but they don’t live as if those answers were true. They say they know God, but they don’t live as if they know God. They merely have correct answers. If we are to know well the Christian faith as it appears in the Bible, we must think often, with devotion, right thoughts of God. Any understanding of Christian beliefs begins with an understanding of God. When we begin to think of God aright, and do so from the heart, we will have the foundation laid for all other thinking about the Christian faith.

We must have before our hearts and minds a certain God. God is not any god, and we are not free to think of the Holy One in any way we please. The follower of Jesus believes that God has revealed Himself through the Scriptures and that we must thus base our thoughts of God on those Scriptures.  And since God is the foundation of theology, we shall begin our discussion of Christian beliefs with God.  Beginning next week, for the next few months I shall briefly highlight certain attributes of God as He reveals Himself in Scripture.

Posted by mdemchsak, 0 comments

Knowing the Unknowable

Now we see but a poor reflection, as in a mirror; then we shall see face to face. (I Cor 13:12)

You can know God. That is the whole point of the Bible. Yet you will never really know God, for He is God.

I do not contradict myself, and I believe that life gives ample examples for why I don’t. Consider. Imagine a neurologist talking about her knowledge of the brain — neurons firing, the functions for different parts, how it will behave to certain medications, etc. Imagine then that same neurologist saying that we really do not understand the brain. It is a mystery. You know what she means each time. Or imagine a husband saying that he knows that his wife will order the catfish platter at a restaurant or that she will chew out that manager who would not let her return the dress. You can picture the husband saying, “I know Marianne.” Now imagine that same husband later saying, “Marianne is a mystery. I don’t understand her.” No sensible person accuses him of contradicting himself. You know what he means each time.

Neurologists can understand much about brains without understanding everything, and husbands can know much about their wives without knowing fully what makes them tick. We can know without knowing everything. We can know brains and wives because they provide us with data that we can comprehend. We find them to be mysteries because the data is complex, and not all of the data can be seen. That is how knowing God is.

God has chosen to reveal Himself through the Bible. Because He has done so, we have data on God. We can, thus, understand some things about God and even know Him personally as a wife does a husband. But God has also chosen not to reveal the full picture. The Bible is self-confessedly an incomplete revelation of God. For our purposes, it is more than adequate, but God is bigger than what you see in the pages of the Bible. When you think about it, this is common sense. God is infinite. How can you cram everything about Him into a book? Yet we do have the book, so we have something; and when we look at that something, we find it to be complex. The data we do have on God is not always neatly categorized, but this, too, should be no surprise. If brains and wives are complex, how much more ought their Creator be?

Therefore, we can know God but never fully, and only where He reveals. This means that we are right to try to make sense of God through prayer, through reading the Scriptures, or through a systematic approach to theology like The Summa or The Institutes. God invites us to put the pieces of Him together in some coherent fashion. We are wrong, however, if in our efforts to understand God, we figure Him out. Do your best to understand Him, but remember…you are often going to fail. You are dealing with God.

We are also wrong if we never get to know Him personally, for personal, relational knowledge of God is the reason why God gives the intellectual. He wants us, not just our heads. If God had to choose between a three-year-old girl with little understanding but a simple love for Jesus and a college professor with books on the New Testament but a cold heart, he would take the child a million times over. The intellectual is good and important, but it must serve the relationship. It is to be fuel for the engine of the heart. If it is not, it is merely a lump of coal.

 

 

 

Posted by mdemchsak, 0 comments

Mystery and Doctrine Must Kiss

Can you find out the deep things of God? Can you find out the limit of the Almighty? It is higher than heaven  what can you do? Deeper than Sheol  what can you know? (Job 11:7-8)

 But as for you, teach what accords with sound doctrine. (Titus 2:1)

We have spent a number of blogs telling the Christian story. The discussion has been necessary because everything else about Christianity flows out of that story. The story is the foundation. Now we can start building. We will begin building by talking about Christian beliefs — also called Christian theology. These discussions will be basic. I want to describe God, Jesus, human nature, this world, the church, the afterlife, faith, and much more, and I want to do this in simple terms.

That’s a challenge when you think about it. I mean, how do you describe God in simple terms? In fact, how do you describe God at all? He is incomprehensible. Paul wrote, “How unsearchable are his judgments and how inscrutable his ways! ‘For who has known the mind of the Lord …’” (Rm 11:33-34a). It is true. I can’t capture God with my pen. And you can’t fit Him into your brain. He is God! That is a truth we must never forget.

But truth, like a good tool, must be used properly, and many people abuse the concept of the mystery of God. I have heard some theologians say that God is so mysterious that no one can possibly know anything about Him. People who claim that all religions point to the same reality often emphasize the transcendent incomprehensibility of God. To them, the mystery of God is necessary, for if we truly can know specifics about God, then not all religions are equal. Some will reflect what we can know better than others.

When people conclude that we cannot know God because he is so mysterious, they encounter a problem. You see, if we truly cannot know God, then how ever did we discover the fact? Theologians who talk this way do not believe their own theology. If they really believed what they said, they would quickly be out of a job; for if they are correct, we no longer need their services to teach us and write books for us. They would better serve humanity by being plumbers.

In addition, if it is true that we cannot possibly know anything about God, then how can anyone claim that all religions point to him? That claim itself assumes a type of knowledge about God. If you do not know the destination, you cannot know that every map points you in the right direction. We are, thus, stuck with this sense not only of a god but also of specifics. I don’t mean everyone agrees on the specifics. I mean merely that everyone agrees that there are specifics.

Anyone who worships God assumes something about him. We may have different forms and styles, different theologies and faiths, different religions all worshipping a god of some kind. Obviously, all these different worshippers cannot be correct, and they will disagree about issues of no little import, and some will certainly not be worshipping God. Yet every person who attempts to worship assumes that he knows something about God — namely, that He is worthy of worship. And once you begin to look at the various worship practices and traditions, you find that nearly every one of them makes significant knowledge claims about God: He is good, He is powerful, He is personal, He loves us, He is just, etc.

When the average person prays, he assumes knowledge of God, for he assumes God can actually do something, that God is greater than we are, that God listens, that God can be spoken to, that God still works in history. All these statements indicate to us that theists of all stripes believe that we can know something about God. They may disagree about the extent, but even the deists taught that God created the universe. That is a knowledge claim about God and says something significant about his power and provision.

“Ok, Ok,” you say, “all people who believe in a god believe something can be known of him. But that’s not saying much, and it certainly doesn’t help me understand God any better.”

Perhaps. But it is a start. At least it enables us to see through the sort of talk that says we cannot know anything about God but which then proceeds to tell us about him. This beginning may not point us to the right path, but it does eliminate one wrong path. It lets us know that the bridge is washed out on the path that opposes the mystery of God with the doctrines of God. In that sense it is helpful, for that path is well worn. Many moral people travel it, but if we push God’s mysterious character too far, we cut off the legs on which we stand.

God may be a mystery, but you can still know Him.

 

Posted by mdemchsak, 0 comments

When Earth Ends

Sometimes people talk as if the Christian story ends in the first century. It does not. In fact, if you read what Jesus said, you quickly discover that He often spoke of His future return. So then, the Resurrection is not the end of the story.   Indeed, the end of the story has yet to occur. Christianity is a religion that is in the middle of its story. As far as time on Earth is concerned, the Bible talks as if we are now in the last days. Peter spoke this way at Pentecost (Acts 2:16ff). So if history were a book, perhaps we are now in chapter 38 of 40 (or something like that), but God is not finished with the Earth.

“Heaven and Earth shall pass away,” Jesus said (Mt 24:35). In church, I have been preaching on the book of Revelation, which gives us a series of visions of the future of Earth. The book certainly has its share of passages that are difficult to interpret, but it also has many major themes that are clear. One of those themes deals with the destruction of this Earth. No matter how you interpret Revelation, it is rather plain that God speaks as if this Earth comes to an end. And Revelation is not the only place in the Bible that talks this way.

Thus, Christians see Earth as something like the Titanic. It is big. It is proud. It has its own sort of glory. But it is going to the bottom of the sea. People run around on it trying to get the best cabins or even to become captain, but if they build their life around the Titanic, they will go down when the ship goes down. And they will have no hope.

The idea that this Earth is mortal is, in many ways, common sense. It fits what we see everywhere else. Everything physical wears out and falls apart. Your bodies wear out. Your car wears out. Your pants wear out. Your computer dies. Your home falls apart. Even the rocks on a canyon wall wear away. Why do we somehow think that Earth is different? Nothing physical lasts. And this Earth will die. This fact is part of the Christian story. The Bible predicts it.

Now if you remember back to the beginning of the story, you will recall that sin entered the world and corrupted everything. The man was cursed. The woman was cursed. The land was cursed. Yes, that’s right. The land was cursed. The beautiful world that God had made was corrupted, and God insists on His beautiful world again. But this world is not that world. This world is so corrupted that God cannot merely tweak a few things and voila — Eden. No. This world is so corrupted that for God to get the world He wants, He must actually destroy this one and remake a new one. And He will. But in the meantime, in between the first Eden and the future Eden, God wants to save people from the Titanic. This is why He waits. This is also why He focuses so much on sin, for sin is why everything is corrupted in the first place.

So God, through Christ, makes His people new and clean and changes their lives so that they no longer live for the luxuries and the culture of the Titanic. But sadly, many people will not listen to God. They think that the Titanic is where they will be happy, so they chase their own happiness apart from God. Unfortunately, they will receive the very thing they choose. But they will not like it. They were made for God, not Earth.

After God destroys this world, Scripture says that He makes a new heaven and a new Earth. This place is holy, clean, bright, beautiful, glorious. It has no tears or pain or sorrow, and it is the place where God dwells and where we see Him face to face. It is the place God originally intended you and me to dwell in. But for you and me to dwell there, we must be different from what we are now, for our current bodies are corrupted with sin. Our current bodies could not handle glory. Thus, God must remake our bodies in order for them to fit this new world. This, too, is common sense. Just as a creature on Earth must fit its environment or it will suffer, so must we fit this new environment or we will suffer. So God gives us new bodies.

We must understand that people who do not accept the cleansing and power of Christ are turning down the ability to live in glory. If they were to experience this future, glorious world in their current state, they would not like it. That is correct. Most people would not like heaven if they found themselves there. They would be like polar bears forever confined to the tropics. The light of glory would penetrate their insides and they would forever be begging for mercy. We must understand that there is a real sense in which hell is merciful.

And when this heaven and earth have passed away, and God has created a new heaven and earth, and He has buried all of our sin and transformed our current bodies into glorious ones, then, and only then has the Christian story on this Earth ended.

But when that happens, we shall begin a new story in the presence of God, an everlasting story where each moment is grander and more wondrous than the best wedding celebration you could imagine. And that everlasting story is the whole point of the law and the prophets and the Cross and the Resurrection and the rest of the Christian story we have described.   You see, this story of Christ that we think takes up so much history is just a brief preface. The real book is yet to come.

Posted by mdemchsak, 0 comments

From the Manger to the World

In the days of the Roman Empire, during the reign of Augustus Caesar, when King Herod was tetrarch in Judea, a child was born to peasant parents in the town of Bethlehem.  They were Jews.  The mother’s name was Mariam.  God had told Mariam that He was giving her a child even though she had slept with no man.  God had said that the boy she was carrying would be great and would be called Son of the Most High, that this boy would sit on the throne of his father David and would “reign over the house of Jacob forever, [that] his kingdom would never end.”  Mariam surely knew the meaning of these words, though she did not fully understand what was to happen.  She gave birth and named the boy Yeshua, which in English translates to Jesus.  The boy then grew up in a Jewish family in the town of Nazareth.  He read the Law and the Prophets; he celebrated the Passover; he learned his father’s trade and became a carpenter.  In many respects, he was an ordinary boy.

Except he wasn’t really an ordinary boy.  About thirty years after his birth, during the reign of Tiberius Caesar, God called Jesus to proclaim the kingdom of God to the people and to verify his message by doing wonders.  Jesus became an itinerant preacher in the region of Galilee and began to draw large crowds because of His teaching and miracles.

He taught people to love God above all things and to love their neighbors as themselves.  He told people that they had to become like children in order to see God and that God demanded of them everything.  He said not to worry about food or clothing – that God would provide what we needed – but instead to seek first His kingdom.  He taught of a God who had mercy on sinners who repent but who had no mercy on those who think themselves OK.  He called the people to a faith that was deeper than the status quo; he called them to give away their lives.

He healed the blind and the lame and cast out evil spirits from those oppressed by them.  He was the rage of Galilee at the time, for people talked about him as people today might talk of a famous actor or a rising politician.  Could he be the Messiah the prophecies spoke about?  They would debate amongst themselves this question.

The large following he attracted did not go unnoticed.  Along with his admirers, he also gathered enemies.  Many leaders feared losing their influence, and, to them, Jesus was getting too influential.  Some feared what Rome might do.  If Rome caught wind that large crowds were flocking to hear a preacher whom many called Messiah, Rome might not be happy.  And Rome could be brutal.  Some were outraged at the things Jesus said.  He certainly did not mince words.  He called many of the Jewish leaders hypocrites, whitewashed tombs full of dead men’s bones, and he said that their father was the father of lies.  He told parables against many leaders, and he did these things with crowds of people standing in front of him.

In addition, he taught and practiced things that seemed to violate the law.  He forgave sins as if he was God Himself.  He healed on the Sabbath and even called himself “Lord of the Sabbath.”  He said, “I and the Father are one … if you have seen me you have seen the Father … no one comes to the Father except through me.”  He claimed authority for himself, and yet to many, he was just a carpenter’s son.  He challenged the status quo, and the status quo fought back.

Many Jewish leaders wanted Jesus out of the way.  They tried to trap him in his words and debated how to be rid of this troublesome preacher.  Finally, in the spring during the biggest Jewish festival of the year – the Passover – they saw an opportunity.  Crowds had flocked to Jerusalem for the festival, and Jesus had come to town as well.  After the Passover meal, at night, while the city slept, the Jewish leaders arrested him in a garden just outside town.  One of his disciples led them to the place.

Time was of the essence.  The Jewish Council (the Sanhedrin) met in a hasty midnight session to proclaim official charges against him.  They found him guilty.  The charge – blasphemy.  This man claimed to be God.  They then hurried him off to the Roman governor, Pontius Pilate, for only Rome had the authority to execute.  They had a difficult time persuading Pilate to condemn Jesus, but they finally did so by whipping up the crowd that had showed up early in the morning.

Pilate had Jesus scourged with whips and then executed for being “King of the Jews.”  The soldiers in charge spread his arms out wide across a thick wooden beam and then drove nails through his wrists.  They pounded nails through his feet and into another beam, the two beams forming a cross.  They then raised the cross and hung him there, battered and bleeding for all to see.  Jesus died that afternoon.

Some of his followers took his body and began to prepare it for burial according to their custom.  They used various spices and wrapped the body in linen with a separate piece for the head.  Because the Sabbath was approaching, they could not finish the job, so they put the body into a tomb that was like a small cave and then rolled a great stone in front of it.

After the Sabbath, on the first day of the week, early in the morning, just before sunrise, many women, including Mariam of Magdala came to the tomb to finish their burial customs.  They wondered how they would move the stone.  When they reached the tomb, however, they found that the stone had already been moved and that the tomb was empty.  Jesus appeared to Mariam and the women, and they ran and told his disciples.

Over the next forty days, Jesus appeared to his disciples in various locations.  Two were walking along the road to Emmaus.  A group was sitting in an upper room in Jerusalem.  Some were fishing in Galilee, and he called them to the shore.  A crowd of more than 500 all saw him at once.  He taught and prepared his disciples for his going away, for he was to pass on to them his authority and mission.  In the end, he returned to his Father from whom he had first come, but he gave a promise that he would return in like manner.

By late May or early June, the disciples were standing in the temple courts in Jerusalem and proclaiming that this “Jesus, whom you killed, God has raised from the dead.  And we are witnesses of the fact.”  Everywhere they went, the disciples proclaimed that the body of Jesus was resurrected from the dead.  They were beaten for saying it.  They were imprisoned for saying it.  They were threatened and ordered to cease this message.  Yet they insisted.  “No.  God has raised Jesus from the dead, and we saw it.”  Some were stoned, some were whipped, some were hung on crosses themselves, but the message stayed the same.

The followers of Jesus multiplied, and they began to see the story.  They saw the wreckage that sin had brought on the human race going all the way back to the garden.  They saw the ancient prophecies of a king who would free his people from their bondage.  They saw the ancient sacrificial system and the power of the shed blood to remove sin, and they understood.  Messiah did not come to deliver us from the bondage of Rome.  He did something much deeper and much grander.  He delivered us from the bondage of ourselves.  He took our sin and threw it into the sea.  He rose and conquered it.  He made it possible for the human race to fulfill its purpose once again.  Now, in Christ, we can know God, not because we have kept a moral code or certain rituals, but because He has opened the door.

 

That is the story of Jesus.  Remove it, and Christianity ceases to exist.  The fundamental premise of the Christian faith is that God’s work and God’s revelation in history provide the foundation for any change in a person’s heart or life.  Jesus today frees people from their sins because He really died under Pontius Pilate to free people from their sins. Jesus today has the power to change the darkest life because He really rose on the third day.  Jesus today brings peace beyond understanding and joy abundantly because He really was the Son of God born in Bethlehem to a Galilean peasant girl during the reign of Augustus Caesar.  The story is the substance of the faith.  Jesus does not call people to be moral.  He calls them to Himself.  He calls them to jump into the story.  He says to people, “Let my story change yours.”

Posted by mdemchsak, 0 comments

The Christian Story

Airplanes and Religion

Two men brusquely rushed through an airport terminal.  “I need to hurry, for my flight to New York leaves in 10 minutes,” said the first man.

“Oh, no hurry,” said the other.  “It doesn’t matter which plane you get on.  In the end, they all end up in New York.”

I know.  It’s a silly story.  But it illustrates a common misunderstanding about religion, for you have no doubt heard many people say that all religions point to the same god and end up in the same place.  I have sometimes wondered where people got this idea.  They didn’t get it from Jesus or Mohammad or Buddha.  They didn’t get it from Moses or Isaiah or Paul.  In fact, if you look at what the different religions actually say, it is like looking at different airplane destinations at the airport – New York, Beijing, Tokyo, Melbourne.  They don’t even pretend to be going to the same place.

So where did this idea come from?  Hinduism a little, perhaps.  It has its 35 million gods and has no trouble sliding the gods of other religions into its pantheon.  The problem is that it must radically distort those gods to make them fit in its pantheon, and once it distorts them, it no longer has the gods of those other religions.  It has a different god that it has shaped in its own image, and those other gods remain standing outside the pantheon.

So where did this idea come from?  Perhaps it sometimes comes from the fact that, broadly speaking, all religions are trying to describe something spiritual that people feel.  But this is like saying that all airplanes are trying to meet a need for people to travel somewhere.  It may be true, but it is so broad that it is of little use in picking a specific plane.

So where did this idea come from?  I think mostly it comes from our desires.  Have you ever thrown a party and then debated whom to invite?  You can’t leave out Aunt Jane, for she would feel bad.  If you invite Chris, then you must also invite Mai, for she will be sure to find out and be offended if she wasn’t invited.  You’ve experienced this kind of thing.  You want to include everybody because if you don’t, some people would be offended.  It’s a rather natural feeling.  I have it, too.  So people then say that Christians, Buddhists, Hindus, Muslims, Taoists, Jews and anyone else are all included in God’s kingdom.  That way we won’t offend anyone, and we’ll have the added bonus of knowing that we ourselves are true no matter what we believe.  It’s really a rather convenient notion.  Too convenient if you ask me.  It ignores the real world of what the religions actually say about themselves and replaces that real world with almost any belief we please.  It just doesn’t smell true.

The reality is that if you get past broad generalities, the major religions of the world are quite far apart.  Different religions, at their core, have different directions and emphases, and the essence of one faith is often peripheral to or contradicted in another.

For example, at the core of Buddhism is a philosophy.  I don’t mean that a philosophy is all there is to Buddhism nor that Buddhism is monolithic.  I mean simply that a philosophy is what seems to drive it.  It is the foundation for the Eightfold Path and the rest of Buddhist practice.  Remove the philosophy, and there isn’t much Buddhism left to talk about.

Islam, at its core, is a code of rules and laws.  Again, I don’t mean that rules and laws are all there is to Islam or that all Muslims would say exactly the same things.  I do mean, however, that submission of a code of rules lies at the heart of what it means to be a Muslim.  Remove the Five Pillars, for example, and you rip the guts out of Islam.

Other religions center on things like morality, cult practices, rituals, or festivals.

Faith in Jesus is different from these other religions.  It’s not that Christianity has none of these other things.  Christianity produces a philosophy, has a real moral code, and does practice certain rituals like communion or baptism, but none of these things lies at the heart of what it means to follow Jesus.  Christianity is not philosophy.  It is not a moral code.  It is not a set of rituals.

At its core, Christianity is a story.  But it is not any story.  It is the love story between God and the human race.  It is the story of Jesus.  It centers on who Jesus is and what He did.  Christian ethics, Christian philosophy, Christian doctrine, and Christian rituals are all grounded in the story of Jesus.  Remove the story, and you have torn the heart out of Christianity.

This is why Christians for thousands of years have focused so much on history, for history is nothing more than the story that is true, and the entire faith rests upon the historicity of specific events.  “If Christ has not been raised, our preaching is useless and so is your faith,” Paul wrote to the Corinthians (I Cor 15:14).  I know this idea sounds ridiculous to some people.  They elevate morality and put morality and history in separate compartments.  They believe they can have the morality of Jesus without having the Resurrection of Jesus.  Followers of Jesus see life more holistically.  We believe that our ability to live a godly life is grounded in the story.

Perhaps you have heard the story.  Even so, I still need to tell it.  It is a story worth telling a million times over.  Next blog we’ll pick up with that story.

The Greatest Story

I am in the process of describing Christianity for you.  Let’s review.  Remember.  Christianity is not a bunch of rules or laws.  Nor is it rituals.  Nor is it centered on a philosophy.  At its core, Christianity is a heart reaction to a story.   Christian doctrine, Christian philosophy, Christian ethics, and Christian rituals all flow out of that story.  Remove the story, and Christianity no longer exists.  Now.  Let’s get to the story.  I’ll tell it in parts.  It goes something like this.

Before there was time there was God.  He was extraordinarily powerful, loving, just, and glorious all on His own.  He did not need any creatures to fulfill Him, for He was perfectly content as He was, but He did desire creatures who could enjoy Him.  Therefore, He created the universe, complete with this world, its inhabitants, and what we call time.

Of all the species He put on earth, He gave to one species special abilities.  That species is the human race, and those abilities enabled that race to see, understand, and enjoy certain aspects of God.  Humans, thus, could talk with God, worship God, love God, and personally know Him.  These were the things for which they were made, much as flight is the thing for which a wing is made.

God knew, however, that real worship, real love, real relationship, and real communication could not be coerced.  If the human race were just robots programmed to worship, then the programming would render the worship meaningless.  God wanted something real, not just a bunch of robots.  So He gave the human race a real choice.  It could choose to honor and enjoy God, or it could choose otherwise.  Because the choice would involve an infinite God, the consequences of the choice would be immensely significant.  It was the choice between deep, everlasting bliss or deep-seated corruption.  It was the choice between fulfilling the purpose for which we were made or rejecting that purpose for something else.

The human race freely chose to follow its own desire instead of God.  When that happened, everything changed.  Sin entered a perfect world and broke it.  People still had the abilities to talk to, worship, love, and know God, but those abilities were greatly marred.  People no longer had the access to God that they once had.  Their sin had separated them.  They began to feel shame.  They began to recognize the emptiness of their choice.

God did not overrule their choice, but He did institute severe consequences: sickness, death, pain, suffering, and separation from Himself.  In addition, all of nature became corrupted.  Since the human race chose not to fulfill their purpose, they and the environment in which they lived would be subject to futility and corruption.  The consequences were just, for the choice was no light matter.

But the decision of the human race did not surprise God.  He knew this would happen and even planned for it.  He then began to work out in history the process of making right what we humans made wrong. He worked patiently with us.  His goal was not just to zap things and make them right.  He wanted real transformation of the human race from the inside out.  This would take time.  The spiritual history of the human race needed to progress at a natural pace, for the whole race was like a child growing up.  If humanity was in its infancy, God could hardly give it spiritual meat.  He had to reveal who He was in a way and at a pace that made sense to where people were.  He, thus, revealed Himself incrementally.  When the race was ready for something new, He would reveal it.

He revealed Himself through His dealings with the human race.  He exacted punishment on sin as if it was a serious matter.  When the entire Earth rebelled against Him and pursued its own evil ways, God judged it with a flood.  When kings got proud and confident in their power, He ended their lives or crushed their kingdoms.  When people worshipped other gods, He brought trouble and said, “Let those other gods save you.”  His purpose was twofold.  His punishments illustrated the perfect justice of His character, but they also served as a warning to people to change their ways.  If people received punishment or observed it in others and then turned to God as a result, they would be better off in the end than if they had never been punished at all.

God then wanted to show the human race that their purpose was to be a people set apart for Him, a special people, a treasured possession.  The best way of doing this was to choose one people and to use them as an example for all people.   God began this process with one man: Abraham.  He said to Abraham, “I will be your God.  You will be my man.  I will bless you.  I will give you descendants like the stars.  I will give you a beautiful land.  I will bless all nations through you.”  At the time, Abraham had no children, but in Abraham’s old age, God gave him a boy: Isaac.  God then tested Abraham.  He said, “Go to Mount Moriah and sacrifice your son to me.”  To us today, this command sounds strange, but in the cultures Abraham lived in, sacrificing children was common.  It was not so strange to Abraham.  But it was extremely painful.  Would he give to God his only son, the promised son?  Abraham took his son to Moriah, bound him and was ready to sacrifice him, when God said,  “Stop!  You will not sacrifice your son.  Now I know you fear me.”  Just then a ram caught its horns in a nearby bush, and Abraham substituted that ram for his son.  The scene was rich with meaning.  It showed Abraham’s great faith.  He trusted God even when he did not understand.  It showed that if we are to be a special people with God, then He wants to be first in our lives.  He wants everything, even our families.  It showed a picture of a substitute sacrifice and of a father sacrificing his only son.  It showed that God was different from the other gods, for they required child sacrifice, but God Almighty did not.  After Abraham and Isaac came Jacob, and next week we’ll start there.

A Covenant and a Rescue

Isaac had a son.  His name was Jacob.  Jacob was a schemer, a deceptive, crafty, wily man who cheated his brother out of their father’s inheritance and then deceived his father into giving him the family blessing.  Strangely, Jacob was the man God chose to build His people through.  It was not because Jacob was a righteous man but because God was a gracious God.  God was going to make His special people, His treasured possession, to come from this scheming man, but in doing so He would also transform that man.  One night, when Jacob was in distress, he met God.  Jacob wrestled with God that night, and God wounded him.  The next day, Jacob was not the same man, for when God wounds you, you are never the same.  In fact, to illustrate Jacob’s new nature, God gave him a new name – Israel.  God’s special people would be called Israel.

As God did with Abraham, He also did with Israel.  He entered into a covenant with her.  A covenant is a Bible word that means a holy agreement.  Marriage is a good example of a covenant.  In marriage, a man says to his bride, “I will be your husband, and you will be my wife.”  And the bride says in return, “I will be your wife, and you will be my man.”  And the man and the woman vow that they belong to each other until they die.  That is a covenant.  And that is what God did with the people Israel.  He said, “I will be your God, and you will be my people.”

We must remember why God did this.  He did not do it just for Israel.  God was after more fish than Israel.  God intended a relationship with Him to be special and exclusive – like that of a husband and wife.  Therefore, He gave the world two pictures of such a relationship.  The first, of course, is marriage itself.  And the second is God’s special relationship with Israel.  In marriage, we see the picture on the individual level – one person to one person.  In Israel, we see the same picture on the corporate level – one God for one people.  God wants you personally, individually.  But He also wants you to be part of His special people – His people who will be His bride.  Thus, God’s purpose for this covenant with Israel was not just Israel but the world.  God chose one people to become an example for all people.  He was not being narrow.  Far from it.  He was simply beginning with Israel and putting her in the display window.  He was using Israel to illustrate what a special relationship with God looks like.  But His goal was all nations, for He would use Israel to bless all nations.  That was part of His promise to Abraham.

Jacob then had twelve sons who became the leaders of twelve tribes.  Ten of these sons became jealous of son number eleven, Joseph, and decided to get rid of him.  So they sold him into slavery and Joseph was taken to Egypt.  The brothers then deceived their father and made him think that Joseph had been killed.

In a short time, Joseph found himself in prison for a crime he did not commit.  He was there for at least two years until Pharaoh (king) of Egypt had a dream.  Pharaoh discovered that Joseph could interpret dreams, so he called Joseph, who interpreted Pharaoh’s dream, which predicted that the land would have seven years of plenty followed by seven years of famine.  Joseph then advised Pharaoh on how best to navigate these coming years, and Pharaoh, seeing the wisdom in Joseph’s counsel, promoted him from prison to second in command of the entire country.

When the famine came, Israel began to suffer, and Jacob sent his sons to Egypt to buy food, for Egypt was the only place in the region that had food during this time.  When the sons arrived and met Joseph, they did not recognize him, but after their second trip, Joseph could hide his identity no longer.  He told them to go and get his father and bring him to Egypt, and Joseph would take care of the entire house during the famine.

The brothers returned to Jacob and said, “Joseph is alive and is second in command in Egypt.  He has invited you to come to Egypt where he will take care of you.”

Jacob at first did not believe them, but when he saw the gifts Joseph had sent, his heart cheered, and he said, “I will go and see my son before I die.”  He then packed up and took all his sons and all his household to Egypt.

When they reached Egypt, Pharaoh was glad and gave them choice land to settle in, but after a few generations of Pharaohs had passed, the reigning Pharaoh forgot about Egypt’s kindness to Israel.  The Egyptians then took the Israelites and made them slaves.


Moses

Remember.  I am telling the story of God’s dealings with the human race.  It is the story of Christ.  We saw that it began with the creation.  God made this universe and put the human race at the top of His creation, but we sinned against God, and in sinning, we messed up the good thing God had made.  The rest of the Bible is the story of God fixing what we messed up.  We saw that God instituted punishment for sin.  We saw that God called to Himself a special people Israel.  He took care of them in a famine, but they later found themselves in slavery in Egypt.

While in Egypt, Israel cried out to God for help, and God heard their prayers.  He raised up from among them a man named Moses, who went to Pharaoh and demanded that Pharaoh let God’s people go.  God did mighty signs to convince Pharaoh and the people that this truly was from God, but Pharaoh’s heart was hard, and he would not let the people go.   Finally, God said that He would slay the oldest son from every household in Egypt.  He would not, however, take the sons from those who painted the blood of a lamb over the doorpost of their home.  The blood would cause God to pass over that home.  Today, the biggest holiday in the Jewish tradition is Passover, a celebration of this very event.

Pharaoh would not listen and lost his son.  He then let Moses take the people of Israel away from Egypt, but after the people had left, Pharaoh changed his mind and came after them with his army.  Pharaoh had Israel trapped.  Behind Israel was the Red Sea.  In front of her were Pharaoh’s chariots.  But God fought for Israel, and God made a way of escape for her.  He prevented Pharaoh from reaching Israel and then parted the Red Sea to allow Israel to walk through it on dry ground.  Eventually Pharaoh chased Israel into the path created by the walls of water on both sides, but his chariots got stuck in the mud, and their wheels fell off, and the water of the Red Sea came crashing down on Pharaoh’s army, wiping it out.  Israel was free.

But Israel was not home.  They were stuck in the middle of the desert.  Slowly Moses led Israel toward the land God had promised to give them, but when they reached the border, Israel became fearful of entering and taking the land.  The natives were too strong, they said.  Since the people did not trust God, God said that He would not give them the land.  Instead He would give the land to their children, and Israel would have to wait 40 years.  Moses then led Israel back out to the wilderness, where they wandered for those 40 years.

During those wanderings, God provided for Israel water, meat, food and clothing.

During those wanderings, God gave to Israel a clear picture of who He was.  In a spiritual landscape of polytheism, God gave Israel a grounding in one God and one God only.  “Hear, O Israel, the Lord your God is one.”

During those wanderings, God gave to Israel written laws.  These laws revealed different aspects of God’s character.  They showed that God desires purity, holiness, integrity, honesty.  These laws also showed how far from God the human race had fallen. When the command said, “Do not covet your neighbors things,” it made clear the fact that what is normal to us is warped and wicked to God.  We humans needed this type of clarity.  We had become good at hiding our sin.  We had gotten into the habit of comparing our behavior with each other and concluding that we were OK.  We had become skilled in hiding our emptiness behind diversion or pleasure or religion and pretending we were all right. The law put God’s righteous standard in front of our faces so that we could see plainly that we weren’t righteous at all.

During those wanderings, God also gave to Israel an entire system of sacrifices in which sin and death were inextricably woven together.  He wanted a clear message of the severity of sin. It was as if He were saying, “You have sinned and justly deserve to die.  But I’ll tell you what we’ll do.  If you’ll take that lamb and cut its throat, I’ll count its blood for yours.”  Thus, God remained just in demanding a punishment, but He clearly illustrated His mercy as well. He also tied the payment of sin to the shedding of blood.  He wanted us to know that sin is more costly than we think.

During this time, God was delivering Israel, caring for Israel, and teaching Israel about His character and their sin.  Their sin separated them from God, but God allowed them to return to Him through the blood of a sacrifice.

At the end of the 40 years of wandering, God brought Israel into the land that He had promised to give them.  All of the first generation had died away except for a couple men, and the new generation was ready to trust that God would give them what He had promised.

 Toward a King

When Moses died, God used a man named Joshua to lead the Israelites into the land God had promised them.  They conquered the land and settled in it, but within a few generations, Israel began to worship the gods of the other peoples in the region, something God had expressly forbidden.

The nation then fell into a cycle that went something like this:  1) some king or ruler would oppress them, 2) they would cry to God for help, 3) God would raise up a deliverer among the Israelites, and this person would defeat the oppressive king, 4) Israel would then forget God and return to worshipping other gods, so God would bring them back to #1.  This pattern went on for hundreds of years, and Israel couldn’t seem to break it.  It was a spiritually empty time, a time in which “every man did what was right in his own eyes.”  God was showing the nation that if they wanted any real satisfaction, any real progress, any real fulfillment, they would have to honor God.  But if they just wanted to do what they wanted to do, they would go nowhere.  God does not honor our pursuits of our own ideas, for our ideas are quite different from God’s ideas.

Israel then wanted a king.  They did not want God to be king; they wanted a human king like the other nations around them.  They wanted to be like everyone else.  God gave them a king, but the first king, named Saul, turned out to be a wicked king who did not honor God.  Nonetheless, God had a plan to replace Saul.  He sent his prophet to the home of Jesse and told his youngest son, David, that he would be king of all Israel.  David was a shepherd boy, not a man of state.  He was from a small village called Bethlehem and not from a city like Jerusalem.  But most importantly, he was a man after God’s own heart. (I Sam 13:14)  He wanted God, and, therefore, he was qualified to rule God’s people.  When God chose him, he said, “… the Lord sees not as man sees:  man looks on the outward appearance, but the Lord looks on the heart.”  (I Sam 16:6)

Many years went by before David would become king.  During those years, David rose in rank and in estimation before the people, and Saul, being jealous, tried a number of times to kill David.  On two occasions, David had Saul in a position in which he could have killed Saul, but he chose not to.  If he was to be king, he was not going to be king by killing God’s anointed.  Instead, God would have to make him king.  David would trust God and not take matters into his own hands.

In time, Saul died in battle, and David ascended to the throne.  Though David was “a man after God’s own heart,” he was also a sinner.  He committed adultery with Bathsheba and then had her husband killed in battle.  He did not discipline his sons or his commander Joab but looked the other way when they murdered people.  This is the man whom God says has a right heart.  That right heart is obviously not shown in his sin, but when God confronts him with his sin, he repents and runs to God to be clean.  David was quick to confess his sin, and people with right hearts are likewise quick to confess.  They see their sin and grieve over it.

David united the people of Israel into one nation.  He called the people to God.  He wrote psalms (songs of worship) for the people to sing.  He brought the nation prosperity.  He began plans to build a temple for God.  It was not to be a place where God lived.  David knew that he could not contain God in a building.  It was instead to be a special place to honor God.  It was to be the place where the priests would sacrifice the animals that would take away the sins of the people.

God, for His part, made a covenant with David, just as He had done with Abraham many centuries before.  God promised David that one of his descendants would always sit on the throne.

And when David died, his son Solomon took over the throne.

Kings and Prophets

King David’s son Solomon enjoyed peace.  But Solomon’s son did not.  During the reign of Rehoboam, Israel entered into a civil war.  The nation split with ten tribes in the north going their own way, and two tribes in the south remaining loyal to the descendant of David.  This northern kingdom was called Israel.  The southern kingdom was called Judah, named after the tribe that David belonged to.  It is where we get the word “Jew” today.

The Israelite temple was located in Jerusalem — the south.  Therefore, Jeroboam, first king of the north, feared that his people would not remain loyal to him because the most important location in their religion was in the south.  So he said to his people, “You have gone up to Jerusalem long enough.  Behold your gods, O Israel, who brought you up out of the land of Egypt.” And he made gold idols and set them up in two cities within his own kingdom, and he called the Israelites to worship these idols in these cities.  (I Kings 12:25-33)  In essence, he instituted state-sanctioned idolatry in order to save his political hide.  The people mostly followed his lead, and the northern kingdom quickly fell into idolatry, sexual immorality, and various sorts of evil.  Because it rejected God, the nation had little stability.  It went through a series of about ten different dynasties in the span of a few hundred years. No family line could ever rule for long before a bloody upheaval would slaughter it and take its place only later to be slaughtered itself by another family line.

The southern kingdom had a somewhat different story.  It actually had some good kings — men who honored God and who called their nation to do so as well.  Of course, it had its share of bad kings, too, but its decline into idolatry was not so quick as that of its brothers in the north.  Judah enjoyed more stability.  The line of David sat on the throne for more than 400 years, but over time, Judah eventually rejected God to chase the gods of the nations around her.

As centuries passed and kings rose and fell, God sent to His people messengers who called them away from those other gods, away from their injustice, away from their murders and sexual immoralities, and back to the living God.  These messengers were called prophets.  In addition to their cries for moral justice and religious purity, these prophets spoke of a future king who would one day come and deliver his people from their bondage.  A deliverer is coming.  A deliverer is coming.  A deliverer is coming.  Century after century, the prophets kept hammering this idea into the souls of the people.  This deliverer the Hebrews called the Messiah, a Hebrew word that means “Anointed One.”  When Messiah comes, then we shall have peace and righteousness, the people would think.

But Israel and Judah did not listen to the prophets.  Most people rejected the unseen God and chose instead to bow before the “gods” they made.  God showed great patience and mercy toward them.  He sent prophet after prophet to warn them to repent, but only a small number would listen.  The rest chased their own desires and followed the cultures around them.

Eventually God’s justice overtook the two nations, and the people fell by the sword.  First Israel fell to the Assyrians in the 8th century BC.  Later Judah fell to the Babylonians in the 6th century BC.  Both Israel and Judah were carried away captive by their conquerors.  Most of the northern tribes of Israel mingled into the nations around them and were lost from history forever.  Today you will not find anyone who can tell you he was descended from the tribe of Manasseh, Naphtali, or Dan.

The leaders of Judah were carried off into exile by Babylon into what is modern day Iraq.  They were captives, slaves, forced to serve in a foreign land, but they longed for the day when they would return home. The prophets had promised defeat and exile if Judah did not repent, and defeat and exile came; but the prophets also promised restoration.  Could Messiah deliver them and bring them home?

After Exile

God drove Judah into exile because Judah gave herself to the worship of other gods.  Exile was a punishment for a violation of God’s law.  God had spoken through the prophets and forewarned Judah that this would happen, and it was just.  But God had spoken through the same prophets and declared that He would also restore His people.  Jeremiah predicted that after 70 years in Babylon, Judah would return to her homeland.  Isaiah predicted that a ruler named Cyrus would carry out God’s will and allow the Jewish people to go back to their land.

These very things came to pass.  Babylon, the nation that had subjugated the Jews, was itself conquered by Persia.  Cyrus was the first great king of the Persian Empire, and among the edicts that he issued was one that granted the Jewish people the right to return to their homeland.

And return they did.  They came in waves at different times.  They came with jubilation at the thought of having their own land again, but when they arrived, they found that they had a lot of work to do.  Jerusalem, the great city of Judah, was in a shambles.  It was small and its walls and buildings were falling apart.  A man named Zerubbabel returned and began to rebuild the temple.  Ezra came and taught the people the law of God.  Nehemiah rebuilt the walls around the city.  Slowly, Judah came to life again, but it was a struggle.

Many other peoples were in the area, and they opposed all forms of help for the Jews.  In addition, many Jewish people began following the cultures around them, so those who wanted to serve God often found opposition from without and opposition from within.  But by the grace of God, His people established themselves back where they had started.  It was as if God was saying, “Now, let’s try this again.”

It would be wrong to say that Judah never struggled with idolatry again.  The latter prophets show that greed, injustice, and the worship of other gods were still live issues after the exile.  But the extent of the idolatry was never the same again: the Jewish people never quite gave themselves over en mass to other gods.  Yet their former idolatry was still costly.  No longer did they rule their land.  They settled in the land, but other nations ruled them.  During this time, they taught the law God had given them.  They had their sects.  Some were strict with the law, others loose, but in many ways, the law was their life.  Persia conquered Babylon.  Alexander the Great and Greece conquered Persia, and Rome conquered Greece.  Through all these kingdoms, God’s people knew suffering and began to take hold of the ancient prophecies of a king who would come and deliver them from their bondage.  “If only he would come now,” they might say when political or economic oppression was strong.

Posted by mdemchsak, 0 comments

The Oddity of Truth

At the University of Texas, the main tower has these words inscribed on it:  “You shall know the truth, and the truth shall set you free.”  Most people at the university probably do not know that those words came from Jesus and that He was talking about living in His word and following Him as a disciple (see John 8:31-2).  Today when people see those words at a university, they likely think more about the pursuit of truth in different disciplines like science or philosophy.  But even here, scholars in different fields often see truth in different ways.  And for good reason.  Let’s talk.

Times have changed.  We live in a world that often does not think scientifically or rationally.  We live in a postmodern world.  In this world, people frequently think more subjectively than objectively.  They do not want to know what is true.  They are more interested in the context for what is true.  They want to know your story.  To them truth depends upon perspective, and often such people talk as if actual truth statements are naive.  Postmodern people can be quite skeptical of anyone who claims to know an absolute truth.  Instead, they would rather be good than right.    All this and more is part of the postmodern milieu, and that milieu has entered churches of all traditions, for ultimately, the church is composed of people who live in the real world.  There is no getting around that.

The postmodern and scientific mindsets disagree on many points, but at the heart of the disagreement lies the issue of how we view truth.   The scientific view emphasizes the “knowability” of truth.  It highlights the fact that truth is there, that it is orderly, and that we can perceive it.  In the church, this worldview stresses the importance of the central Christian doctrines.  The postmodern view, however, emphasizes the “unknowability” of truth.  It highlights the fact that the realities of God, humanity, and life are all bigger and more mysterious than any statements can capture.  It also stresses the idea that truth is ultimately experienced through the subjective filter of our own culture and personal biases.  Thus, to the postmodern, the idea of a systematic understanding of Christianity is suspect.

Perhaps this disagreement is understandable, for truth is an oddball.  We generally like to think of it as a precise beast.  And in one sense, it is.  Truth, by nature, must say that some things are and some things are not.  It is orderly and organized.  Science and math are based on that assumption.  Even reading and literature are based on that assumption, for you do not think my words mean that giant pimentos are invading earth from another planet.   Indeed, most everything you do assumes the order in truth.  The fact that you brushed your teeth, made coffee, stopped at red lights, drank water, fixed your sink, helped your neighbor, or corrected your kids all show that you assume a truth in each activity and that you think that truth to be orderly.  If you wish to raise objections to what I am saying, those objections themselves must assume an orderly truth, for objections without order are not objections.

Perhaps we would not be so wrong to think of truth being as regimented as a marine boot camp, as neat and orderly as a Japanese garden.  Two plus two really does equal four.  Words cannot mean anything we wish.  Logic requires certain things to be true, and overrules other things from being true.  Some events really happened, and others did not.  Truth is not something we can simply make up.  It is what it is, it is not random, and somehow we can understand it.

But for all the order in the world, there is something a little more to truth. It is not always so precise as we may wish.  In combat the regimented marine unit may scatter and find itself in a free-for-all; and that orderly Japanese garden, upon closer look, contains worlds of ants and beetles that do not fit the manicured image.  There is a sort of real life sloppiness to truth.  Truth has enough order to it for us to be able to use logic, yet there are times when logic cannot quite do the job.  Let me give some examples.

We like to think mathematics to be one of the most precise disciplines.  In mathematics we are able to explain that there is a relationship between the number π and a circle, so that we can use π to calculate the area or circumference of a circle.  But what exactly is π?  We cannot precisely pin it down, for it goes on, it seems, without pattern, forever.  Logic has helped us discover the number, but it has not helped us understand the number.  Somehow, out of an infinite range of numbers, this strange number is tied up with the properties of a circle.  We don’t know exactly why, and we really don’t even understand the number itself.  But there it is.

Or again, in math one can logically prove that the repeating decimal  .9999…  is equal to 1, for if 1/3  = .3333… , and if 2/3 = .6666…, then 1/3 + 2/3  =  .9999…., yet 3/3 does not repeat.

Or consider the common boy/girl paradox of probability theory.  A family with two children has at least one boy.  What is the probability that it has a girl?  Common sense says 1/2.  But probability theory says 2/3.  Or consider the Banach-Tarski paradox, which states that one ball can be cut up into many nonmeasurable pieces and reassembled to form two balls the same size and shape as the first. 

There is a sort of wildness in the ordinary facts of mathematics.  Basic, simple things like circles and the number one have mysteries and paradoxes to them.  But the phenomenon is not limited to mathematics, for the same sort of thing occurs in the atom, in light, and in the behavior of nations. In life, perhaps you have encountered the mystery of a mother-in-law yourself.  In reading and literature ambiguities abound, and often they are intentional.  It makes me suspect that if humans can intentionally put ambiguity and mystery into their creations, then God all the more can certainly cram them into His.  This is how truth is.  It is simple and complex all at once.  It is precise, predictable, and knowable, but it is also full of mystery and is as wild as the wind. It is logical, but it is not quite logical.  Or maybe it is just a shade more than logic, but it is not pure logic.  There is something else to it.  Truth contains a reality that transcends simple reason without at all destroying the legitimacy of that reason.  Indeed, reason helps discover the paradox and dig up the mystery.  It discovers that there is something beyond itself.

It is as if logic and order can take us on a road to the sea but not on a boat out beyond the land where the infinite horizon beckons.  Yet had we never walked the road, we would not have even known the sea was there.  Reason takes us to where we can smell the crusty salt air of paradox and hear the constant pounding of mystery and then leaves us there.

Thus, truth has a definite predictability; but it also has a wild side.  We can grasp it in propositional ways, but it is also beyond our understanding.  Sometimes we do not like that.

Now it is precisely here that I wish to address the impact of postmodern thinking on the church.  In one sense I have to say that the postmodern thinking is correct to talk of the unknowability of truth.  God is more real and complex and mysterious than any doctrines of Him, just as your own mother is more real and complex and mysterious than any statements about her.  He is grander and wilder and far more beautiful than you can ever imagine, and you can spend an eternity enjoying Him and still not reach the bottom.  That is a message the church needs to hear.  God is bigger than our doctrines.

And yet, the more rational approach is also correct.  The fact that Christian doctrine will never fully capture God does not mean that it is somehow suspect.  Indeed, it is the doctrines that show us the mysteries.  We would not see any mysteries at all in π if we did not first understand some basic doctrines about the properties of numbers.  Mystery does not exist all by itself.  Doctrines lead us to it.  Remove the doctrines and you remove the mystery.  The basic doctrines of the Deity and humanity of Christ together form the mystery of the Incarnation.  The central doctrine of the Atonement points us to a love unfathomable.  The foundational doctrines of God’s justice and mercy together show us a God incomprehensible.  The Trinity confounds us.  Predestination and free will, however you understand them, are still bigger than your mind.  The Christian loses his life to gain it, marriage is a picture of Christ and the Church, the husband is the head of the wife, yet they are joint heirs together, we are dead to sin but we must die daily.  On we could go.  The fact of the matter is that if we want to experience the highest mysteries, complexities, and realities of God, we must travel the doctrines to get there.

The postmodern emphasis is a good reminder that it is God and not the doctrines that is ultimate, but many postmoderns are too eager to conclude that, therefore, the doctrines are unimportant.  In doing so, they undercut the very thing they desire.  They want the mystery of God but then question the very things that take them to it.  They want something real, but deny themselves the ability to get at anything real.  They want to experience God and not just know facts about Him but forget that there can be no true experiencing without first knowing something.  They want to connect with the “ancient church” but don’t want the doctrines or the doctrinal emphasis of the ancient church.  They are, thus, left with nothing meaningful to connect with.  They want the wild side of truth but not the orderly side.  But the orderly side is what ultimately will lead them to the wild side. They deny themselves the very thing they want.

On the other hand, many people in various churches today have the orderly side down, but they stop there.  It is as if they know the map but not the land.  They have no experience with the wildness of God.  Their doctrine has sterilized God, though it was intended to glorify Him.  To these people, many of whom fear what postmodernism brings, I would say this:  the postmodern emphasis on mystery and on a real experience of God is nothing new.  You’ll find it in the psalms, Isaiah and Paul.  You’ll find it in the mystics.  You’ll find it in Clement, Chrysostom, Augustine, Anselm, Thomas a Kempis, Luther, Calvin, Jonathan Edwards, Spurgeon, Moody, Chesterton, Tozer, C.S. Lewis, and on.  And never will you find that one of these Christians somehow traded away doctrine to get it.  Rather, they found the wildness by traveling the doctrines.  They simply allowed the doctrines to touch their hearts.

That is the key.  It has always been the key, and while times may change, that is one thing that will not change. 

Posted by mdemchsak, 0 comments

The Importance of a Good Map

The purpose of these blogs is to help you live for Christ.  In the last blog I explained that you need both a right heart and right beliefs in order to live for Christ. God wants a holistic faith, not just a superficial one.  It is now time to talk a little bit about Christian beliefs, but before we delve into specific doctrines, I ought to take a couple blogs to discuss some broad issues related to truth and doctrine.

Doctrine is a foul word to some people.  To them, it represents silly arguments that people have fought and died over.  Of course, sometimes this portrayal has been true, but we should not throw away the meat with the bones.  Healthy doctrine is central to a healthy faith.  The things we believe actually impact us, and our ability to be effective in any field depends on what we believe within that field.  If you want to be a good doctor, you must know good medical doctrine. If you want to be a good lawyer, you must know good legal doctrine. Being a good follower of Christ is no different.  You must know good Christian doctrine.

Christian doctrine does get at the intellect, but it is not solely about the intellect. Paul tells Timothy to stay in Ephesus so that he might “command certain men not to teach false doctrines.”  Paul then says, “The goal of this command is love which comes from a pure heart and a good conscience and a sincere faith.” (I Tim 1:3-5)  In other words, good doctrine is necessary for real love, a pure heart, a good conscience, and a sincere faith.  If anyone wants these things, he should seek right doctrine.  Love and doctrine are friends.  Sometimes people say silly things like, “I would rather love my brother than believe the right things about God.”  They do not understand that they cannot love their brother as God wants them to until they first believe right things about God.

C.S. Lewis likened doctrine to a spiritual map.  Of course, any map is merely a picture and not the real thing.  And ultimately we want the real God and not the map, but it is the map that shows us what that real God is like.  We are fools if we engage in this lifelong journey without a good map.  The map is merely a tool, not the end, but if it is a good map, it helps us get to the end.  A hiker in the Alaskan wilderness knows the benefits of a good map.  If someone offered him one, he would not reply, “No thank you.  I am not interested in knowing how to get anywhere.  I’m interested in enjoying the beauty of this wilderness.”  We see the ridiculousness of such talk, but many people talk that same way about Scriptural doctrine.  They somehow pretend that doctrinal knowledge and enjoyment contradict each other when in reality just the opposite is true.

Good doctrine will not answer every question we have. In this respect it is like those maps of America that were made in the 1500s.  You can see the rough outlines of the Atlantic Coast.  Here’s New England, the Canadian Maritime provinces, Chesapeake Bay, Long Island, Florida.  You can make out a lot of things, but if you go inland any short distance, the map quickly dissolves into emptiness.  If someone from that time had looked at one of those maps and had asked, “What’s beyond these mountains?” no one could answer him.

Good Christian doctrine comes from the Bible. The Scriptures are the raw data, so to speak.  Where the Scriptures are clear, good doctrine needs to be clear.  Where the Scriptures are fuzzy, honest Christians may disagree. That Jesus has bodily risen from the dead is clear in Scripture.  To deny this is to cease to be a Christian.  What the end times will look like is fuzzy in Scripture.  Honest Christians may have differing opinions on this subject.

Some doctrines are more central to following Jesus than others.  That God fixes broken people through faith in Jesus is central.  That Jesus wipes away sin through the sacrifice of the Cross is central. That Jesus is our king, that you and I are sinful, that God is holy, that we must love our neighbor, that God calls us to righteousness, that people must repent, all of these things are central to the faith. They all get at the essence of what the Christian journey is about.

Some things, however, do not quite get at the essence.  Does communion represent Christ’s death or recreate Christ’s death? Should church governments be hierarchical or democratic?  Two people can be honest followers of Jesus and adhere to all of the central things above and yet disagree on the answers to these questions.  This does not mean that the answers are unimportant; it simply means that the answers are not part of what defines a follower of Jesus.  If a woman does not love, however, she does not follow God.  That is I John.  If a man does not think his sin to be that bad, he does not know God.  That is Romans 1.  If a woman lives in sexual immorality, she does not know God.  That is I Cor 6.  I suppose we could say there is a sense in which not all doctrines are equal, and this makes perfect sense, for not all parts of a map are equally crucial to your journey.

Posted by mdemchsak, 0 comments