Thursday, May 31, 2007

On Government

"For unto us a child is born, unto us a son is given: and the government shall be upon His shoulders...Of the increase of His government and peace there shall be no end...and upon His kingdom, to order it, and to establish it with judgment and with justice from henceforth even forever..." Isaiah 9:6, 7
Governments of man are meant to order and stabilize societies, to reward good and punish evil (Romans 13:1-7). Nowhere in scripture does it say that governments of men will be the final solution to earth's ills. They never can be, for as long as they are founded and headed by fallen humanity, they will fail eventually.
"That is the key to history," said Lewis, and he was right: great institutions, governments, organizations, movements, ideologies, sciences, and religions come forth claiming to be the cure-all for what ills you. Then corruption sets in, the evil people get to the top, morality erodes, and the whole thing slides back into the ruin that the movement, etc., was supposed to cure. "Cursed be the man that trusteth in man..." (Jeremiah 17:5a) How can man solve his problems when man is the problem? Their good intentions are more bricks for Hell's highway.
There is only one government that can save us, only one Governor that can bring peace and save humanity from itself; and His kingdom is not of this world (John 18:36). Thank goodness it isn't.

Wednesday, May 30, 2007

The New Exodus

"[So it shall be] as it was to Israel in the day that he came up out of the land of Egypt." Isaiah 11:16
The overarching narrative for Israel was the Exodus. The Temple came from it, many of the festivals and feasts days centered around it, and Messianism found its meaning in it. God's final redemption of His people would be "after the manner of Egypt." In a way, the Exodus was their central mythos, the one key event in their history that set their identity. Since then, they were no longer merely the wandering children of Abraham, but the covenant people of Yahweh, their faithful redeemer. That one grand display of God's presence and power in their lives affected their perspective on themselves and their circumstances when they became a nation, when they went into exile, came out of exile, when they were under foreign rule, and even today when they are a nation once more.
Now, Jesus was born right at the height of Messianic fever. Rome was viewed as the new Egypt, and many were declaring that the Messiah would come soon to lead a Maccabean-style revolt against the last and greatest empire of antiquity. When John the Baptist's ministry began, he preached that deliverance had come at last, and began to reenact the ending of the Exodus by having people "cross" (i.e., be baptized in) the Jordon River. Jesus' own ministry was inaugurated at the Jordon and then tested out in the wilderness immediately after, symbols that aptly identifying Jesus' ministry with the Exodus.
Near the end of His life, Jesus' ministry was further identified with the Exodus when at the Last Supper He proclaimed Himself to be the Passover Lamb, the same claim John the Baptist had made of Him three years prior. As the Messiah, Jesus was claiming something quite different from a Maccabean-esque revolt. He was claiming that He would be another divine shield against a terrible plague of death, and that such a deliverance would mark the end of a long tyranny. His disciples would have thought that the Caesars were undone. Instead, the prince of this world was cast out (John 12:31).
Jesus' ministry was started under the symbol of the crossing of the Jordon, i.e., the end of the Exodus. His ministry ended under the symbol of the Passover Lamb that was sacrificed, i.e., the beginning of the Exodus. Thus is the paradox. As Messiah, Jesus finished the first Exodus as expected, but He did it in a way that was unexpected. In ended the first Exodus by inaugurating a new one. Just as the old Exodus looked back to a key event that identified its people (i.e., the exit out of Egypt), so the new Exodus looks back to a key event that identifies its people (i.e., the passion of the Christ); and just like the people of old, we too wander for now in the wilderness, looking for Messiah to come and lead us to the Promised land, and those who wish to join us may come.

Tuesday, May 29, 2007

The Difference Between "Sin" and "sins"

This article is not only good apologetics, but also good theology in regards to the reality of man's inner disposition of sin; or as Oswald Chambers would put it, the difference between "wrong-doing" and "wrong-being."

This is Redemption

"[Creation] shall not hurt nor destroy in all My holy mountain: for the earth shall be full of the knowledge of the Lord, as the waters cover the sea." Isaiah 11:9
Habakkuk 2:14 says the same as Isaiah 11:9, except it puts it, "the knowledge of the glory of the Lord." (emphasis added) In scripture, to have "knowledge" of something is to have a complete understanding of that thing. The "glory" of God is found in Who He is: it is His character and His person that makes Him glorious to our eyes and drives us to worship. Where Habakkuk expands slightly, Isaiah cuts to the chase: a filling of all with the complete understanding of God is what will bring peace to creation.
"They shall not hurt nor destroy in all My holy mountain..." This turns our idea of what is natural in creation upside down. The relationship of predator and prey is thought to be a natural part of the "circle of life." Here we find that such a relationship is actually unnatural, an aberration that will be removed when the created order is made new, i.e., restored to the way it should be. The natural animosity that exist between animals (and humans) will vanish when the whole of creation understands and is full of Who God is.
"...the earth shall be full of the knowledge of the Lord..." To the fullest extent that it can be, inside and out, creation will understand all that God is. This filling of creation starts with us. That is what Romans 8:18-23 is all about. When Christ comes again, our bodies will be redeemed at last. Finally, the flesh will no longer be the barrier that resisted the Spirit of God in us. Redeemed from corruption, our mortal bodies will be the perfect transparent conduit for manifesting the Spirit of God, i.e., the presence of God, i.e., "the glory which shall be revealed in us." (Romans 8:18b) The "manifestation of the sons of God" is the unabated pouring forth of the glory of God Almighty through us, and that pouring forth will fill the earth with the knowledge of God, and the world will be made new as God Himself is manifested in our redeemed flesh.
"...as the waters cover the sea." As intrinsic as water is to the oceans, so intrinsic shall the knowledge of God's glory be to creation. It will not be that creation merely apprehends a fact, but that creation's very being will have changed; transformed, if you will. The glory of God will fill all, so that all may be "full" of Him as the seas are "full" of water. All that God is will become (as it was meant to be) an intrinsic part of creation's being. To paraphrase Chesterton, God will once again walk in the garden, in the cool not of the evening, but of the dawn.
In all points, redemption is found only in God. Our souls and spirits are redeemed because Christ has brought us back to God and has filled us with His Spirit. Our bodies (and the whole of creation) will be redeemed when Christ brings the presence of God back to earth, and the whole world will be full of His glory. This is redemption: Immanuel, God with us. It has always been, and ever shall be. Amen.

Monday, May 28, 2007

Glorious Rest

"...and His rest shall be glorious." Isaiah 11:10b
I suppose we cannot fathom the glory of perfect rest.
Perhaps it is like awakening from sleep without the aid of an alarm clock obnoxiously buzzing in your ear, and lying sandwiched in cool covers with sunlight creeping in through your covered windows. You shuffle around on your mattress slowly and lazily, knowing that there is nothing to do today: no rush, no appointments, no assignments, no schedules, no nothing pulling you into a thousand pieces. So you lay for just a few seconds more with the wonderful knowledge that you could lay betwixt those cool sheets as long as you want and you would not waste the day.
Perhaps it is like sitting in a recliner in your living room, your feet reclined, a blanket covering your legs, your dog napping quietly between your knees. A good book is in your one hand, a cup of hot chocolate in the other, and a cold November day is blowing the leaves around outside the window to your left. No one else is stirring, so the house is peacefully still and quiet, the only sound being the stately "tick-tock" of the grandmother clock hanging on the wall behind you. As the leaves blow, the drink steams, the dog sleeps, and the pages turn, you wish everything in this moment was endless so you would not have to move ever again.
Do you think that is a small glimmer of a shadow of what glorious rest is like? Oh, when shall we know the whole of it?

The Branches of the Branch

"And there shall come forth a rod out of the stem of Jesse, and a Branch shall grow out of his roots..." Isaiah 11:1
"I am the vine, ye are the branches..." John 15:5a
"The Branch" was another Old Testament symbol for the Messiah. He was to be of David's family lineage, which Christ was (Matthew 1:6, 16; Luke 3:23, 31, 32). All of Jesus' disciples (being first century Jews) would have known that Jesus (since He was the Messiah) would be "the Branch." Needless to say, they probably were a little taken aback when Christ said that they would be, in effect, the branches of the Branch.
In John 15, Jesus was speaking about more than mere life and strength that comes from Him. He was talking about life and strength that comes from Him in order to DO something, i.e., "bear much fruit," carry on the mantle of the Messiah. What Christ started, His followers were to continue.
We have a small view of salvation and sanctification. We think Christ merely saved and sanctified us from something, when the truth is He saved and sanctified us from something into Himself. We did not just escape from Hell. We are now a part of the Branch, and everything He is, we are.
We do not take sonship seriously. We are the children of God, His sons and daughters; and if there is one thing our Elder Brother taught us 2000 years ago, it is that to be God's child is about more than privileges: it is about responsibility. "Herein is my Father glorified, that ye bear much fruit; so shall ye be my disciples." (John 15:8) To be Christ's follower means to take up the work that He left for us, i.e., "the kingdom of God," the preaching of forgiveness of sins and deliverance from evil, the praying for God's kingdom to spread, and everything else that the Lord's prayer was about (Matthew 6:9-13).
As Elisha took up Elijah's mantle literally, so we take up the Messiah's mantle figuratively, i.e., we are the body of Christ. We are to continue on earth what Christ started 2000 years ago and what He will finish at the time appointed.

Wednesday, May 23, 2007

The Hand that Smites II

"And it shall come to pass in that day, that the remnant of Israel, and such as are escaped of the house of Jacob, shall no more again [depend] upon [Assyria]; but shall [depend] upon the Lord, the Holy One of Israel, in truth." Isaiah 10:20
This is to be the result of the smiting of God: a solemn return to sole dependency on God. Israel once looked to Assyria for help. Now they will go back to the true source of all help: the Holy One of Israel.
Too many of us think that God smacks us upside the head because He wants us to fix something we did wrong. You have no such power in you to fix anything. God smacks you upside the head so that He can fix you. The true problem is not what you did wrong, but what went wrong inside you that led to the wrong that you did. When He smites, return to Him so that He may correct you. Let all else go, including your desire to fix it yourself.
The devil would have you turn to self-pity. God smacks you and you collapse into a quivering pile of wimp jelly, constantly blubbering something about how "wrong" you are, or "bad," or "sinful," or whatever. You are completely on the wrong track. Self-pity is self-focused, and therefore it is a form of pride. God does not want to hear how wrong you are. He knows how wrong you are; that's why He smacked you in the first place! He wants you to return so He can fix what's wrong.
The prodigal son had a speech prepared upon his return, but his father would not let him finish it (Luke 15:17-24). Job answered God by confessing his sinfulness, but God was not satisfied with that answer (Job 40:1-7). Repentance is not stating what you've done; that is confession, which is step one. Repentance is step two, and it is simply returning to God. May His blessing and smiting draw us closer to Him.

God-in-a-Box III: Sovereignty and Freewill

"When the Lord hath performed His whole work upon mount Zion...I will punish the fruit of the stout heart...of Assyria...For he saith, By the strength of my hand I have done it, and by my wisdom...Shall the ax boast itself against Him that heweth therewith?" Isaiah 10:12-15

What we see here is the incredible dance of sovereignty an freewill. God's sovereignty is found in that Assyria's role as Israel's punisher was all part of God's "whole work." Assyria was as an ax or saw in God's hands. On the flip side, Assyria's freewill is found in its pride, a pride that was their own choice. This is a classic example of the old saying, "God chooses what you go through, but you choose how you go through it."
Sovereignty and freewill are not at odds with each other: they go hand in hand. Anyone who says otherwise has either too small a view of God or too big a view of man. God's sovereignty is not that He planned everything, but that He planned everything through our choices.
"For whom He did foreknow, He also did predestinate..." (Romans 8:29a). To "foreknow" means to "know beforehand." To "predestinate" means (in a nutshell) to "plan beforehand." Foreknow is the cause to which predestinate is the effect: God can plan before hand because He knew beforehand. In other words, when God set down to create the universe, He could see in His mind (before the universe was created) the whole scope of the universe, from its beginning to its end and all that was in between. He knew beforehand what would happen, and therefore He could plan His work within that knowledge.
Look at it this way: some view God's sovereignty like He was an author or an architect, i.e., the reason He knows how it will be is because He planned it that way. The truth is more complicated. God's sovereignty is more like God was planning to set up a line of dominoes, but before He set them up He imagined them in His mind. If He set this one line that way, it would do "A". If He set it the other way, it would do "B". He knew that if He set it a certain way that it would go a certain way. Therefore, God set up the universe so that our freewill choices (and their consequences) would and will still bring about His will in the end.
If you knew how the dominoes would fall, given any specific situation or variable, then you could set up the dominoes so they could fall in such a way so as to exactly go the way you want it to go without manipulating the dominoes while they fall and allowing them to fall as they will. It is the same way with God: He planned it such-and-such a way because He knew it would be such-and-such a way.
God's sovereignty does not negate man's freewill. Likewise, man's freewill does not negate God's sovereignty. They work hand in hand, united in a singular dance. To separate them in order to understand their workings is an error. "He who breaks something to see how it works has left the path of wisdom," said Tolkien. To divorce sovereignty and freewill from each other's arms is to lose much of the depth and riches of the wisdom of God.

Monday, May 21, 2007

God-in-a-Box II

"O Assyrian, the rod of mine anger, and the staff in their hand is mine indignation." Isaiah 10:5
For God to use evil is not an issue of contradiction, but of His sovereignty. Remember: God is the only one who can use and punish evil and still remain true to His nature. God does not enjoy punishing (Lamentations 3:32, 33; Ezekiel 18:23, 32; Ezekiel 33:11), and of course He does not enjoy evil. The fact that He can use such things for good is a testimony to His sovereignty, and not to any flaw in His character.
We stagger so much at the problems of this world because our view of God is telescopic instead of panoramic. We need to drag out the REAL character of God (as revealed in Scripture) from underneath all of our preconceived human notions, limitations, and ideas. Let us, with fear and trembling, get back to understanding and believing Who the Bible says God is. Let us set this image before the world so that they may be shocked and awed, not bored out of their skulls or driven to ridiculous subterfuge. If Who God really is destroys some pet belief of yours, then let it be destroyed. You were better off without it. All chaff will be burned away before the consuming fire that is the Holy Lord of the Universe.
If we want to understand anything about creation, we must first know the Creator. Dust off the imago dei and set it on center stage. You may be surprised and frightened by what you find, but you will also fall on you knees and worship. May the glorious image of our Holy Father never be lost beneath our vague humanity.

Whence Comes Strength?

"And what will ye do in the day of visitation...to whom will ye flee for help?...Without me [you] shall bow down [with] the prisoners, and you shall fall [with] the slain..." Isaiah 10:3, 4
"...for without me ye can do nothing." John 15:5

Our helplessness outside of God should really make our own self-assertions seem quite ridiculous. "There is no point," says C.S. Lewis, "in our asking God for peace and happiness outside of Himself. There is no such thing." How can we possibly find joy, love, peace, meaning, purpose, strength, and all things virtuous and true outside of their Source? We are not even chasing the wind; we are chasing nothingness, and we are the greater fools for it.
"What will ye do in the day of visitation?" What on earth do you plan to do when the King comes to judge and you are not at His right hand? You will be another prisoner, another slain. There is no other way about it. There is no help for drowning outside of the One standing on the shore; all else (whether it be good or evil) will sink with you.
"Without me ye can do nothing." How often do we do things for Christ instead of with Him? How many of us are His workers and not His co-laborers? How many of us go and do without consulting Him? In addition, how many of us are burned out because we go and do apart from the source of strength? We do all that work apart from Christ, only to find out that our work is hay and stubble for the fire because apart from Christ our work is as nothing.

Thursday, May 17, 2007

Life and Death III

"For wickedness burneth as the fire; it shall devour the briers and thorns..." Isaiah 9:18a

Earlier in Isaiah, we found the whole of Israel covered in briers and thorns (Isaiah 7:23, 24). Now we see wickedness consuming them all, i.e., consuming the whole land, until the people "shall mount up like the lifting up of smoke."
There are two things that are consuming fires in the Bible: evil (Isaiah 9:18) and God (Hebrew 12:29). This is the essential nature of both good and evil, life and death, God and not-God. When you yield to one, you are releasing its consuming fires from you, whether it be the consummation of God unto holiness of the consummation of evil unto death.
"To whom ye yield yourselves servants to obey, his servants ye are..." (Romans 6:16). Which consummative nature do you bind yourself to? Some of us may believe that our actions create some kind of ripple that may have some consequences to consider. Most never think about actions and consequences. Who amongst us truly believes that our choices and actions will either release the full force of the presence of God, or release death with hell right behind him?
Your decisions decide your destiny. What destiny do you choose for yourself today: "of sin unto death," or "of obedience unto righteousness?" (Romans 6:16) Choose wisely what you let consume you.

Wednesday, May 16, 2007

The Hand that Smites

"For the people turneth not unto Him that smiteth them, neither do they seek the Lord of hosts." Isaiah 9:13
God is not being malicious when He smites. He is not a sadist (Lamentations 3:32, 33). He finds no delight in causing affliction. Affliction is a necessary evil. It is always meant as an attention-getter, meant to make us turn around and seek God in the matter. If He smacks you on the back of the head, like any good father would do to a misbehaving child, He does not want you to wilt like a dead flower and whimper like a quivering puddle of spinelessness. His smiting is to smack you back to reality so that you, with all the power and honor of a child of God, pull yourself up by your bootstraps and say as Samuel said, "Here am I, Lord."
How quickly we fade like chaff in the wind under the hand that smites. It should not be. Through Christ we come from hardier stock, i.e., the bloodline of God Himself. There is no whine or whimper in a child of God, only the rousing of yourself up by the power of the new man within to seek the Lord while He may be found.
"There is no possibility of lying like a limp jellyfish on God's providence," says Oswald Chambers. God's smiting is meant to rouse you to seek Him, not shatter you into whining pieces of self-pity. There is no backbone in Christendom anymore: we do not really believe that all things are working for our good, including the smiting of God.

Tuesday, May 15, 2007

On Leadership

"For the leaders of this people cause them to err; and they that are led of them are destroyed." Isaiah 9:16
I believe it was Abraham Lincoln that said, "If you want to discover a man's character, give him power." How true. Leadership has power, but it is not about power; it is about responsibility. Leaders err when they think their position is about power. Leadership is never about what others can do for you, but about what you can do for others (see Matthew 20:25-28).
This is why husbands can be monsters, kings can be tyrants, and presidents or prime ministers can be reckless and malignant: they treat leadership as power instead of responsibility, as prestige instead of servanthood. Even the church is infected with this. To be a pastor is viewed as a position of power: if it does not have the ear of the government, the media in its back pocket, and a six figure salary, than it is not worth taking.
As Christians, we are the keepers and enforcers of what is good and right, true and holy. That makes us the leaders of the world. As salt and light, we are to be the example for the rest of the world, the example that God laid down in Christ. To be a Christian (and a leader in general) is to be wed to the idea of servanthood: to be, as Oswald Chambers put it, "broken bread and poured out wine," to be the sacramental channel of God's presence (with all His terror and beauty) to the people. God did not justify and sanctify us through Christ so we can sit and do nothing. We are to blaze the trail of the narrow way, and call to others to follow us.
To lead is to serve. Not serve in the sense of bondage (see I Corinthians 7:21-24), but serve in the simplest sense, i.e., the sense of service, to be given for others. The sacrificial serving love of Christ is the same love that can burn through us and inspire the lost to seek what we have found. To be a Christian means having power, but it is never about power. It is about what God can do for others through you.
"You can take what you want from me.
Empty me until I'm depleted.
I'll be around if I'm ever needed."
-Switchfoot

Leave It Alone

"And all the people...that say in the pride and [arrogance] of heart, 'The bricks are fallen down, but we will build with hewn stones: the sycamores are cut down, but we will changes them into cedars.' Therefore the Lord shall set up adversaries...against [the people]..."
Isaiah 9:9-11
This is the inverse of the marriage petition: "What God has torn asunder, let no man join together." There are parts of us that must go, elements in our lives that may not be necessarily bad, just not God's best. There are things in your life just now that God wants to raze to the ground so He can rebuild with something better. It may be a habit, a ministry, a relationship, or whatever; it may even be something good and noble from the human standpoint. Whatever it is, God wants to take it away and give you something better. He wants to exchange your tin for silver.
However, we stand in God's way and cry, "No! I must have this! I cannot bear to let it go!" You must if you are to have God's best. We try and rebuild what God is tearing down, and we find ourselves fighting against God. If we resist, God will not force us; but we will have sacrificed the best for the good.
God does not expect us to bring calamity and poverty on ourselves and go live in a cave. What He does expect is for us to trust Him so much and hold everything else so loosely that when He rearranges your life for your good there will be no pain, no frustration, no despair, only the sweet joy of seeing your Father intimately working in your life.
If you try and rebuild, do not be surprised if you face divinely appointed adversity that lets you know that what has been torn down must stay torn down. May our fingers grasp only to God, and may all else be shadows.

Monday, May 14, 2007

Chickens and the Human Soul

This article is an excellent summation of the Christian stance in regards to science and the soul.

This post is for those of us who are sick unto death of seeing Time magazine articles that say, "Science's Search for the Soul."

Thursday, May 10, 2007

The God of Zeal

"The zeal of the Lord of hosts will perform this." Isaiah 9:7b

If anyone approaches you with the image of God as a flat deity, an emotionless smog of reason and rationality, do not tolerate it. Take the hammer of truth and smash it to pieces, and then grind the pieces down until they are dust to be blown away. Do the same to any image of Christ as a pacifistic ninny. Cast them into outer darkness where they belong. They are false gods that will lead many astray.
Read Ezekiel 5:13. Tell me if that sounds like Ben Stein, or a limp jellyfish. That is the same God alive and ruling today, that is the same God who came in the flesh with a mission known as His "passion" (Acts 1:3), and the same God who, when speaking of sending the Messiah, said that He would do it out of zeal--not sentiment, not duty, but zeal, fiery passion and determination.
There is more than brain up in Heaven. There is heart, and the brawn to be used by it. We must rescue the image of God from anything that pictures Him even a fraction less than what the Bible reveals. Perhaps God does not reveal all of His characteristics to us in His word (again, perhaps), but he revealed enough so that we need not misunderstand who He is.

Tuesday, May 8, 2007

A Petition for the Dissolvement of Christendom

What you are about to read is a paper I wrote for a class just this semester. I found myself unable to gather my thoughts for it as what I wanted to say and what the topic was about did not seem to flow together. One prayer and two hours later, this paper was produced. Maybe it is not the most intellectually stimulating, but it has been my heart's cry for some time now. Enjoy, and Soli Deo Gloria:
Exactly what is the fate of Christendom? It depends on who you ask. For some (esp. “relevancy” Christian circles), things could not be better: the “gospel” (pick your poison: social, love, or prosperity) is being received, church attendance is up, self-esteem is up, positive-thinking is up, and some 80% of people say they believe in “God.” If you listen to most of mainstream Christendom it would seem as though the Kingdom of God is just ‘round the corner.
Others, however, are not so optimistic. A few dissenters claim that Christendom is going the way of the dodo, that the Gospel is absent, that the churches are full of nothing but the religious and not the regenerated, that no one understands being acquainted with grief or living by faith, that suffering is avoided and replaced with apathy, that “relevancy” is a cancer to the Church, and that the “God” that 80% of people believe in is not the God of the universe Who will one day judge the world in power and righteousness. What these pessimistic few are trying to say is that true Christendom is, in fact, disappearing. Slowly but surely, it is fading away, merging ever so diabolically with worldly ideals, goals, projects, and processes, so that soon you will not be able to tell Christendom apart from the world it is reputedly trying to save. It will have been assimilated, and resistance is futile.
Now is the time where I am supposed to inject something about Tan and Miller’s books (Foreign Bodies and A Canticle for Leibowitz), but I find it difficult to do so. You see, what I gathered from the books and what I actually want to say somehow meshes, but unfortunately, the meshing does not allow direct quotes are citations. Instead, it deals with the over arching themes of both books. There is, however, something on my chest that must come off, something brewing in me ever since Endo’s Silence shocked me out of lethargy with his literary image of the “crucifixion of the soul,” of Christ being made sin. Tan and Miller’s themes, not so much the stories themselves, helped shape my thoughts.
The theme of Tan’s is about foreign bodies, and not just the wounds that shape our lives, but also the place of Christendom as a “foreign body” (demonstrated by Mei seemingly being the only Christian in Singapore). Therefore, Tan’s theme is twofold. Miller’s theme is twofold as well: (1) the depraved nature of man will invariably lead to man’s destruction, and (2) the place of Christendom as the preserve of what is good and right, i.e., as “salt and light.” The latter of these two author’s themes is where my thoughts are going: Christendom as a foreign body, and Christendom as the preserver of the good.
The question of Christendom’s fate is ultimately bound up in the question of Christendom’s purpose. Here is where the battle lines are drawn. On the one side, you have a Christendom whose purpose is based on relevancy and positive-thinking, on best-selling books and fat bank accounts, on well adjusted lives and amiable souls, on self-esteem and therapy, on grandfather God and peaceful Jesus, and on doing whatever it takes to reach the world with this message of peace, prosperity, and toleration, even the sacrificing of Christendom’s own integrity. This Christendom will be known in this paper as “Modern Christendom.”
On the other side of the battle line, you have a Christendom whose purpose is based on Scriptures and tradition, on the synthesizing of grace and law with truth, on Trinity and Incarnation, on sacrament and transcendence, on the Lord Almighty and the Passover Lamb, on sacrificial love and holiness, on sanctification and justification, and on the stubborn insistence that God is not to conform to the world, but that the world is to be transformed by God, or (as Dorothy Sayers put it), “[not] to adapt Christ to men, but to adapt men to Christ.”[1] This Christendom will be known in this paper as “Christianity.”
If you cannot tell where my loyalties lie, then you are obviously not paying attention. I believe that Christianity is the right way and Modern Christendom is nothing but heresy, a farce, a lie, and damnable. It (like its kissing cousin “political correctness”) is a cancer of the West, a vicious, infectious tumor, and the sooner it is cut out, the better.
This is where my thoughts are headed: the basic question our professor raised in class is “Will Christendom fade away in the future?” My answer to that is a solid “Yes and no.” Tan would say “yes.” Miller would say “no.” I agree with both.
With Tan, Christendom will fade away. Its osmosis with the world will eventually lead to Christendom’s destruction, leaving behind it a Christendom that is only a foreign body, i.e., a lone outsider that no longer relates to the world. Christendom will fade away, and that is a good thing. It is good because the Christendom that will fade away is Modern Christendom. It is the one trying to augment the church with the world; and as I said before, the sooner that damned nonsense ends, the better.
In Tan’s world, the only examples of Christendom are Mei and Andy, and even they have their issues. Mei and Andy live in two places at once: (1) Singapore, a place that is paradoxically both a bastion of modernism and a haven for oriental tradition that is naturally adverse to “western” ideas, such as Christendom; and (2) a post-modern world, a place where values are subjective, and individualism is the sole standard for judgment calls. The post-modern mindset is chillingly embodied in Loong, a diabolical, amoral character whose worldview is summed up thusly: “God determines what is right and wrong. And so the trick is to be God. When you rule, you make the rules.” Loong is a direct result of the post-modern world that Mei and Andy live in, the world we live in. Such a world does not bend or conform; it sucks in and molds in its own image because it makes the rules, and if your want to be a part of it then you bow to its rules and do not enforce your own. That is the world that Modern Christendom is conforming to, and in conforming, it will fade away into nothingness. We can only pray that this happens soon. Why? Because in a world where Christendom is whittled down to a foreign body, it ceases to be Modern Christendom and becomes Christianity, it becomes real and solid, full of substance and meaning. Despite all of their flaws, give me the faith of Mei and Andy, and let all the noise of relevant, Modern Christendom fade as chaff in the fire. Thus, I say, “Yes, Christendom will fade away, and that is good. Let the conforming traitor that is Modern Christendom collapse under its own weight and to hell with it!”
For Miller, Christendom will not fade away. The faith grounded in reality, in the real God and what He really said and did, has stood the test of time and will stand it still. Even when man’s vacuously destructive course finally swallows itself in oblivion, Christianity will be there, stubbornly sticking to defending the truth in spite of the mindset of the culture. The book-leggers will defy the Simplification and protect knowledge of the past, the abbot will not concede to new renaissance thinking that man is not responsible for his own wickedness, and even when man’s evil brings oblivion again, Christianity will still be there, taking the truth to where it will be heard.
When Christendom tries to mesh with the world, it will be welcomed, but it will also become a mere shadow of itself as it is slowly consumed into the black abyss that the world is. Thus is Modern Christendom. When Christendom is despised and hated of men, then will its reliance be upon God and God alone, its truth upon His word only, and its faith real and reconciled to desolation and glory, pain and pleasure, sorrow and joy, tears and laughter, death and resurrection. Thus is Christianity, and thus is my petition: let Modern Christendom fade away; we were better off without it. Let Dorothy Sayers prayer be realized—let the dogma of the church be dragged out “from under the dreadful accumulation of slipshod thinking and trashy sentiment heaped upon it, and set [upon] an open stage to startle the world into some sort of vigorous reaction.”[2] Let the slipshod thinking and trashy sentiment be absorbed into the darkness; that is where it belongs. The sooner Modern Christendom fades away and Christendom returns to being the minority, the outsiders, the foreign bodies, and those outside the camp, the better.
Will Christendom become a minority? We can only pray that it does. Free from institutions, politics, individualistic agendas, greed, power, and corruption, and solely the body of Christ—that is Christianity, that is what turned the world upside down, and that is what can turn the world upside down again. Christendom was never meant to be some corporation, some institution, some political party or platform. It was meant to be the minority, those who walk a narrow way that few will find, those who carry about in their bodies the death and life of the Lord Jesus, those who bring into the world the presence of God with all His terror and beauty, those who bring with them “not beautiful phrases, not comforting sentiments, nor vague aspirations to loving-kindness and uplift, nor the promise of something nice after death—but the terrifying assertion that the same God who made the world, lived in the world and passed through the grave and gate of death. Show that to the heathen, and they may not believe it; but at least they may realize that here is something that a man might be glad to believe.”[3]
I am unsure as to how you will take this paper. I am not quite certain as to how I take it either. I can only say that this paper is speaking of what has been brewing in my heart, not only within this class, but also throughout this semester. This class has helped it boil over, and Tan and Miller were helpful catalyst in crystallizing it into ink and paper. Desiring to be an author of Christian commitment myself, I have been reconciled to the fact that if I am to write about what Christendom really says, to be a follower of Christianity and not Modern Christendom, I will be left out in the cold, the foreign body, the lone book-legger, the small potatoes next to the big fish of Modern Christendom’s literati. Though I may be unfaithful to the Modern church, I will not have been unfaithful to my Lord, and that is all that matters.
End Notes:

[1] Sayers, Dorothy, “The Dogma is the Drama,” Letters to a Diminished Church (W Publishing Group, 2004), p. 21
[2] Ibid.
[3] Ibid.

A New Kind of War

"For every battle of the warrior is with confused noise , and garments rolled in blood; but this shall be with burning and fuel of fire." Isaiah 9:5

"...He shall baptize you with the Holy Ghost, and with fire." Matthew 3:11b

Two things are learned from Isaiah chapter 9: (1) Messiah's coming is as a warrior's battle. We should be sick unto death with all this noise about how Jesus came to teach us how to "love one another." Jesus taught His disciples to love one another (John 15:12-17). The world knows only hatred towards such love (John 15:18-25), and it cannot know such love until Christ overhauls their life with His.
"I am come to send fire on the earth...suppose ye that I am come to give peace on earth? I tell you, Nay; but rather division." (Luke 12:49a, 51) Jesus came to draw battle lines in the sand. "Now is the judgment of this world: now shall the prince of this world be cast out." (John 12:31; c.f. I John 3:8b & Hebrews 2:14, 15) Jesus came to do battle with the god of this world.
(2) Messiah's coming would be a different kind of battle, a new kind of war. Many in first century Palestine were looking for bloody revolution at the hands of the Messiah. Then Christ comes and tells them that the Kingdom of God will come on the shoulders of the poor, the mourning, the meek, the hungry and thirsty, the merciful, the pure, the peacemakers, and the persecuted (Matthew 5:3-12). Oh, it was to be a revolution, but not of swords. It would be a revolution of subtle subversion through submission. By submitting to your enemy you somehow subverted their power and authority and heaped coals of fire upon their heads. Matthew 5:38-42 is a study case of this (if you look at it with a first century Jewish perspective). It was an inward revolution: something would change in a person so that meekness, humility, and submission would be the weapons that conquered the world. That is what the whole of Matthew 5-7 is saying.
The change Jesus was bringing was an inward change, the battle an inward battle. A fire would fall amongst the people, a new Spirit would fill them, and change them into new kinds of warriors, in a new kind of war. This change would bring division (Matthew 10:34-37; Luke 12:49-53), hatred (John 15:18-25); all the sounds of warring hearts.
Messiah came as a warrior to fight a new kind of war. It would be a war of two kingdoms, one darkness and one light. The darkness would have power, hatred, and violence; the light would have meekness, humility, and submission, and somehow the weapons of the light would subvert the weapons of the dark. This is what Messiah has done: through death He destroyed death, and He has given us the same mission and the same power. May we remember that we fight a new kind of war; not of swords, but of Christ in us.

Thursday, May 3, 2007

Racial Reconciliation is smokescreen for Marxism?

First, read this article from Stand to Reason.

Then, the next time we have a "Racial Reconciliation and Diversity" seminar, chapel, or plug-in, pay attention to what is said and ask yourself if the rhetoric does not sound the same.

Tuesday, May 1, 2007

No More Middlemen

"...should not a people seek unto their God? for the living to the dead?" Isaiah 8:19b

The immediate context of this verse is applying to mediums and psychics, but the general idea is this: anything other than God is death, for life is found only in Him (John 1:1, 4; 17:3). It is amazing the things we will turn to (even psychics) instead of our Father in Heaven. Christ's death has opened the way to the throne of grace, and yet we will walk down every other path and swim into every other side eddy under the sun before turning to the only true source of peace, hope, understanding, wisdom, and truth. Why do we not believe that life is found only in God, and all other ways (no matter how pretty, noble, or logical) are the paths of the dead?
"What if the family turned to Jesus, stopped asking Oprah what to do," said Casting Crowns. It is a novel thought, and sad that it is novel. What are we thinking? Turn off Oprah and Dr. Phil. Put down your self-help books, positive-thinking guides, and Joel Olsteen best-sellers. Throw away the numbers and e-mail addresses of therapeutic and psychic hotlines. Cut out all the middlemen, and go straight to the Source: get down on your knees and pray to your Father, the Lord Almighty, Who will "answer thee, and show the great and mighty things, which thou knowest not." (Jeremiah 33:2, 3)
Says the old hymn, "Oh what peace we often forfeit! Oh what needless pain we bear! All because we do not carry everything to God in prayer!" Let us get back to believing that life is as simple as praying to our Father. Let us cut out the subterfuge, claim that Christ's triumph at the Cross has removed all barriers between us and God, and boldly declare, "No more middlemen!" Why seek ye life amongst the dead, peace amongst the confused, wholeness amongst the broken? Take your burdens to your Father, the Living God of the Universe, and deliberately leave them there. (see Psalm 55:22)