Tuesday, December 25, 2007

Checking in!

I'm just back from South Dakota and just over being sick. The internet is down at our village. So I'll post something on South Dakota soon, because I do want to say something. Maybe, though, I'll post it at http://www.rosecreekvillage.com rather than here.

For now, I just wanted to mention that my wife told me today that my blog page is awful pink and reminds here of Pepto-Bismol. She asked if that's because some of the things I write are so hard for some people to stomach.

I think I'll change the color as soon as I have time.

Until then, merry Christmas!

Sunday, December 16, 2007

Help for the Weary

I am sitting in a South Dakota living room for the kingdom of God this morning. Weather underground says it's 4 degrees outside. Just last week I was sitting in Yangon, Myanmar, where it was at least in the 80's and where it is 7:00 in the evening rather than 6:30 in the morning, like it is here. I've been up since 4:00, because I still can't get over the time change. 16 hours in the car two days ago didn't help.

Why am I doing all this? It's not that I'm suffering much. In fact, I'm not suffering at all. I'm happy, healthy, and I have great friends around me every day. But I must be hopping all over the world for some reason. It's not tourism, because I stay too busy to see anything in any of the places where I go.

I thought about the missionaries I met in Myanmar. I thought about the people I traveled to Myanmar with. I am thinking about the people I'll meet today here in Dell Rapids, South Dakota, and the people I've talked with for the last two days. Why do I talk to them? What do I want in all the traveling and speaking I've done?

I want everyone to know the fullness of the Gospel, and almost no one does. This includes the Pentecostals and charismatics who refer to themselves as "full gospel" churches. They do exactly what everyone else does, and they get the same results that everyone else gets. They can be 'confident of this, that he who has begun a good work in them will complete it in about 10% of them...maybe.'

The Gospel is all about grace. Grace is the wonderful power of God that those under the Law did not have. It is the power to overcome sin (Rom. 6:14). It is the power to fulfill the righteousness that the Law set out to describe (Rom. 8:3,4). It is the inexplicable effluence that trains us in godly living and makes us zealous for good works (Tit. 2:11-14). It is the wellspring of spiritual power that produces the miraculous gifts of the Spirit (1 Pet. 4:10-11).

But so few know how to stay within that grace, because they don't know where it is found. The reason that they don't know where it is found is because they don't know where Christ, the source of grace, is found.

Where is Christ to be found? He is to be found in the same place you are to be found: in your body!

Sigh...there's so much to say. If I just blurt it all out, it will be confusing and boring. Let's take this one step at a time.

Where is Christ?

He's sitting at the right hand of the Father, right? Okay, sure he is, but that won't do you any good. You're sitting at the right hand of the Father, too (Eph. 2:6), but if your spouse asked me where you were and I told her that, your spouse would be mad at me. Saul of Tarsus was on his way to Damascus when he was struck down by light and blinded. Despite the fact that Jesus, the head, was right there in front of him, visible to him, Jesus did nothing for Saul. "Go to Damascus," he said.

It was there that Paul really met Christ, not on the road in Damascus. And it happened through Christ's body. Ananaias laid hands on Paul and baptized him, and thus Paul had his sins forgiven, his sight restored, received the Spirit of God, and was commissioned for his future mission.

This, I'm certain, is at least part of the reason that people came to Christ through baptism in the Bible, not through a sinner's prayer, that can be done alone in your room with a tract.

The Gospel, as I said, is all about grace, and there is one place where great grace can be found, and that is in Christ's body. Not only does Acts tell us that great grace was on the disciples when they were "of one heart and one soul" (4:32,33), but Psalm 133 tells us that it is where brothers are living together in unity that God commands the blessing of eternal life. There's reasons for all of this, my brothers and sisters. The Scriptures aren't wrong when they tell you that you and the head won't cut it. You really can't say "I don't need the eye" or "I don't need the hand." You are likely to perish without your brothers and sisters, despite your Bible and your relationship with Christ. At least, that's what your Bible says (Heb. 3:13).

We have spiritualized John 15, and we have suffered for it badly. There, our Master tells us that we have to remain in him if we are to bear much fruit. So therefore we attempt to spiritually meditate on him as though we were Hindus and not Christians. No, no, no! It's much simpler and harder than that. He is found in his body. Remaining or abiding in Christ is as simple as staying in the church, remaining in fellowship with your brothers and sisters on a daily basis. You cannot bear fruit unless you abide in the vine, the vine is Christ, and Christ, according to the Scriptures, consists of many members, not just the one in the heavens sitting at the right hand of the Father (1 Cor. 12:12).

The Church and Christ

Jesus never meant to separate himself from his church. When Saul saw Jesus, Jesus asked Saul why Saul was persecuting him. He didn't ask Saul why he was persecuting the church, but why he was persecuting Jesus himself. Jesus is as possessive of his body as you are of yours.

Look at 1 Cor. 12:12. It says that just as a body has many parts, but all those parts remain one body, so also is Christ. That's an important sentence. Notice that it does not say "so also is the church." We all know the church is composed of many members, but we are not used to thinking of Christ as being composed of many members. We need to get used to it, because the reason we fail so badly is because we are looking for Jesus in all the wrong places. He is found in his body.

Don't miss the fact that Jesus himself sent Saul to Ananias in Damascus. It is not what we would do today. In fact, it is the exact opposite. We, as members of the body of Christ, sit in front of people and tell them to close their eyes and attempt to envision the invisible head of the body and ask him into their heart. Not only did the apostles not do such a thing, but Jesus himself didn't, either! He didn't tell Saul to ask him into his heart, despite the golden opportunity. The head was not invisible to Saul, he was visible. Nonetheless, Jesus sent him to Ananias to have his sins forgiven by washing them away in baptism (Acts 22:16).

The Power of the People of God

I don't know about you, but I grew extremely tired of being confident that about 10% or less of the people I "went to church" with would continue maturing in Christ. Paul was confident that the whole church would! You can be, too!

How can I be confident what I'm telling you works? Because I see it work every day. I am confident that he who has begun a good work in the members of his body will complete it until the day of Christ Jesus. In fact, God continually renews my amazement at his power to transform people without missing anyone. It's really happening, right here in these good ol' United States, right in the midst of enough decadence, pride, individuality, and wealth to corrupt even the best of souls.

The growth of the church was always meant to be together. The Scriptures say that the growth of the body happens as each part does its share (Eph. 4:16). But it doesn't only say that such growth depends on every part doing its share, it also says that the growth of the body happens "together." We grow up together into the fullness of the measure of the stature of Christ (Eph 4:11-16).

Here's the catch. There's a pretty hefty cost involved.

#1: Nothing I'm saying works for those who limit themselves to the "ask Jesus into your heart and get your sins forgiven, then go to heaven" gospel. What I'm saying is only true for disciples, who deny themselves, take up their cross daily, and follow him.

#2: Nothing I'm saying works for those who consider the church to include those who limit themselves to the "ask Jesus into your heart and get your sins forgiven, then go to heaven" gospel. What I'm saying is only true for disciples in fellowship with other disciples, and anyone who will not deny themselves and take up their cross daily cannot be Christ's disciple and thus cannot be part of the church.

#3: I'm not talking about a Christian club, where people who perhaps are open to, or enjoy, or are attempting to follow Christian teachings and ideas get together a couple times a week to have a meeting to sing and talk and collect hefty membership dues that are as stiff as ancient Israelite taxes. I'm talking about a family, where disciples don't just say they are brothers and sisters, but actually live like they're brothers and sisters, being willing to share lives, possessions, and to take care of one another should any of them be in trouble. It actually has to be disciples together enough that when one hurts, they all hurt.

#4: If you even begin moving in that direction, you'll probably be thrown out of your "church" (Christian club), banned from most other Christian clubs, called a cult member, and persecuted in ways you never dreamed of by people you'd have never suspected.

#5: You'll never be able to do it alone. You'll probably need our help. It seems likely that will get us called a cult one more time, but I'd be lying otherwise. People attempt to be together in the way we see in the book of Acts all the time in the U.S., but it almost never lasts. I wish we could point you to dozens of other thriving churches, full of disciples, where we are confident that he who has begun a good work in them will complete it until the day of Christ Jesus, but since that's not the Gospel preached in the United States and since the devil thoroughly persecutes and seeks to destroy any place that begins to get light on the church, churches are RARE. If you know any, tell us about them, and we'll send others to get help from them. Of course, you'll probably still be getting help from us, because real churches love one another and stay in fellowship with one another, so you can hardly tell the difference between them.

Well, that's what I'm doing in South Dakota. I'm hoping that everyone who hears about Christ will get to grow up inside of Christ and know that remaining in Christ means remaining in his body, because that's how you bear much fruit and continue to the end...with the help of your brothers and sisters, who are really your brothers and sisters, not just in name only.

"Unto him be glory in the church by Christ Jesus throughout all ages, world without end. Amen."

Saturday, December 8, 2007

Meditate on his Promises

I put this on my web site at http://www.oldoldstory.org as well. I'm not sure it's edited well enough to be on the web site, but oh, well. I wrote this on the plane on the way back from Myanmar.

Today I read, "I stay awake through each watch of the night, to meditate on your promise" (Ps. 119:148, Holman Christian Standard Bible). This came right after verses about crying out to the Lord in order to keep his statues and testimonies. There are indeed promises about keeping the commandments of Christ. This verse in Psalm 119 tells us that one way to obtain the provision of those promises is to stay awake at night thinking about them.

Many of us struggle with sin all the time. We want to do the will of God in everything. We want our eating, our entertainment, the use of our time, our speech, and our finances to be under his control. We are told that no useless word should proceed out of our mouth, but that we should say only what is needful for building up at that moment. Yet, who can obey such a command? James tells us that we all sin in many ways, but if anyone can control the tongue, he is a perfect man, able to bridle the whole body. Oh, what a delight that would be! How can it be obtained?

This issue is on my mind because of my trip to Myanmar. I am writing on the plane on the way back. I am stricken about my inability to control simple things like how much I eat. Never mind my weight. That is not the issue. If I hunger, immediately I'm stricken with the need to rummage through the cabinets or run from work to the store for the snack, or at least to drink a cup of coffee. On a previous trip, David Servant tells me that he asked when lunch was, and a Myanmar man said, "Oh, we are not like you Americans. If there is food, we eat. Otherwise, we don't think about it." Ouch!

I have returned from Myanmar wondering if I am even a Christian. I would like to be able to say with Paul, "All things are lawful for me, but not all things are profitable. All things are lawful for me, but I will NOT be brought under the power of any." I would like to be able to tell those who hear me, "I buffet my body, and I bring it under subjection." Unfortunately, too often my joke about the word buffet there meaning a banquet is only too true! May God grant me to be a doer of his word, making no provision for the desires of this body, my temporary dwelling place in this world.

The Psalmist tells me that one of the provisions for receiving the benefit of the promises is to stay awake meditating on them. So be it! But today I want to talk about the greatness of those promises.

The Scripture expressly calls those promises great. "His divine power has given us...exceedingly great and precious promises, that by these you might be partakers of the divine nature, having escaped the corruption that is in the world through lust" (2 Pet. 1:3,4). Yes, this is exactly what I want!

The promises of the New Testament are awesome. American Christianity is prone to "dumbing down" the promises of the New Covenant. American Christianity tells us that grace will allow us to continue in sin, but we'll go to heaven anyway. This is not the mind of the apostles. The apostles conceived of great and precious promises that would deliver us from sin's power, allowing us to boast with Paul that "I have lived to this day in all good conscience before God and man." This was such a shocking claim even to the religious and Law-keeping Jews that the high priest commanded Paul to be slapped for saying it. The high priest did not have Paul's, nor our, exceeding great and precious promises.

We are told in the letter to the Romans that sin won't have power over us because we are under grace. We are told that Christ died for us specifically so that what the Law could not enable us to do, his death would enable us to do; that is, to fulfill the righteous requirement of the Law by the power of the Spirit. It is something we must do. If we live according to the flesh, we will die, but if, by the Spirit, we put to death the deeds of the body, then we will live. Those exceedingly great and precious promises are given to us so that might happen.

Brothers and sisters, who are bombarded daily with the self-serving advertisements and lifestyle of the outrageously rich western world, we are not just exhorted to strive for holiness, though we are exhorted to do so. We are told that we can use the promises to be partakers of his divine nature! Christ used his divine nature to overcome the desires of the flesh, which tempted him just as they tempt us. He does not need to have an advantage over us. He is offering his advantage. You can become a partaker of his divine nature! You can be not mere men, but gods, as it were!

We are horribly frightened of such wording, but our ancestors were not. The church fathers commonly quoted Jesus' statement that God himself called them gods, to whom the Word of God had come. Justin Martyr made the claim to the Greeks that Jesus Christ could 'make mortals immortals, make mortals gods, and transport them to the realms above Olympus' (Discourse to the Greeks, ch. 5, c. AD 150).

Brothers and sisters, let us meditate on his promises. Let us stay awake through the watches of the night, considering what he has promised. Let us reject the dumbed down Christianity of the masses and find the narrow way that leads to life. I am not speaking of something easy! I am speaking of something impossible for man. It will take the intervention of God. If God is not real, and if our Gospel is not the power of God to salvation, then we will not succeed. We must fail. But if Jesus Christ is really the Son of God, then his statement is true that what is impossible with man is possible with God, and even the outrageously rich, like you and I, can be saved and enter the kingdom of heaven! The life of American Christians makes us doubt, but there have been Jim Elliotts, Amy Carmichaels, C.T. Studds, and others--some whom I know and live with today--who make it known to us that it is possible.

To God be the glory! Let us stay awake through the night watches, considering his promises to give us divine power and make us sons of God, younger brethren to Jesus Christ, the Word of God and Lord of all. Such promises are so great that they make the ministry of condemnation--the Law, which caused Moses' face to glow so brightly that it had to be hidden--seem inglorious by comparison.

Brothers, meditate on these things.

Thursday, December 6, 2007

Back from Myanmar...sort of

I'm in Bangkok, in a hotel room waiting to go to bed so I can get up less than six hours from now. We arrived from Myanmar this afternoon. After the in and out, very slow internet we had there, the connection seems to fly here in Thailand!

I was able to get on this blog page one time in Myanmar, while I was at Yangon, thus the two posts from Nov. 26. The next time I was able to link to my blog from the Rose Creek Village home page, but I was not able to post on it. After that, I couldn't even go to it. Their "filter" system is very effective over there.

Kalaymyo, Myanmar was my favorite place I have ever visited. I loved the town, and the people were as nice as I've found them to be in all poor countries. Kalaymyo, or Kalemyo or Kalay Myo means "a city surrounded by four mountains, one on each side" according to one of our translators there. I told him that's a lot of meaning for three syllables. After he had told me that Myo is the part that means city, I asked him if Kalay basically meant "diamond," and he said yes. I found that exact translations were as hard to come by in Myanmar as they are in Africa.

Some things that stood out: people wearing sweaters, jackets, and even coats because the temperature dropped into the 70's; people wearing scarves and winter hats when they rode their bikes in the mornings with the temp in the 60's; lighters hanging on string from the ceiling in restaurants so people could light their cigarettes; restaurants with no walls and dirt floors with all the food cooked over a fire; people who had never ridden in a car in their lives; and the orphans...

The orphans are why we went over there, of course. We were wanting to see the work of Heaven's Family, and they support a lot of orphans in Myanmar. Noah, Chashaq, Chasah, and I went with eleven people, four of them from David Servant's family, who run Orphan's Tear, the branch of Heaven's Family that takes care of orphans. The people were wonderful, hard-working, and they loved God. It was a blessing to be with them. Ok, back to the orphans.

It was awesome to see all the happy children, none of whom even have beds and some of whom get only one meal a day. Orphan's Tear, despite sending thousands of dollars to Myanmar every month, has not raised enough to sponsor all the orphans in the few orphanages they are aware of and can help. If you think it's awful that a child should be eating one meal a day in an orphanage, you might want to sign up to sponsor a couple orphans, which will raise the standard of living of the whole orphanage. Just go to http://www.orphanstear.org, or you can sponsor children through Mercy Homes in India, which we have also visited. In both cases, ALL your money will get to the orphanage.

Anyway, we learned--once more--that money really can't buy happiness. The fact is, those orphans are significantly happier than American children and more secure. Admittedly, they wouldn't be if they were alone and starving, as many were before being brought to the orphanage, but they are happy and grateful now just for a subsistence living and balloons to play with at Christmastime. We brought a soccer ball to an orphanage with 90 children, and they all cheered when we tossed them the ball. 90 children, and there was no money for just one soccer ball. Yet the children were happy, and they had prepared for our coming by learning songs and dances, including a very impressive bamboo pole dance. It was awesome to watch a small boy conducting the other children as they sang. He was good!

Chashaq and I watched the gratefulness of the children and the love and self-sacrifice of the missionaries who take care of them while devoting their lives to the Gospel, and we were ashamed of our American ways. We discussed it several times, talking about what it would be like to be a real Christian like the people we were meeting.

Coming back from one of the orphanages one day, something came up about heaven. I told the several people in the back of the truck with me that if God let a rich slob like me into heaven, it would reflect badly on God. I told them I figured it was a waste of time for me to worry about heaven; I just want to get busy helping the people who really are worthy to go to heaven with the work they're doing, and that would be enough for me.

I know, I know...none of us are worthy. Bull! Read Rev. 3:4,5. Some are worthy, some aren't, and the unworthy won't make it.

Sorry, I didn't write the rules, I just tell people about them.

Everyone in the back of the truck agreed. I told them that the people the Bible says entered heaven were surprised they were going there, anyway. When Jesus told them they were going to heaven and why, they asked him what he was talking about (Matt. 25:31-46). I told them if we were actually busy helping, we might end up real Christians after all. Chashaq said it was the best sermon I ever preached.

I could give a good, solid Bible lesson about how none of that is good theology, but let me give you some things to think about. When we talked about being rich, fat Americans with no right to enter the kingdom of heaven, we were thinking about things like hanging out in Burger King overeating, or indulging in our "right" as Americans to $40 meals that could feed three hungry children for a month. I mean, hey, those terrible sinners who smoke and damage their "temples of the Holy Spirit" can be written off as carnal, but fat preachers polishing off dessert after a steak are spiritual.

It's not that kind of thing that makes me wonder if I'm a real Christian. What I ask God is if I'll go back to America, then slowly forget about what I've seen and decide "I deserve a break today." It's happened before. Thank God for all the wonderful and real Christians who don't slip into the American Way. They're rare. It was Jesus who said that it is hard for the rich to enter the kingdom of God. If you eat three meals a day, and you know you'll eat three meals a day tomorrow no matter what, you're rich, my friend, and your satisfaction and wealth are a risk to your soul. It'd be easier to run a rope through the eye of a needle than for you to go to heaven. Yes, you.

Jesus doesn't leave it at that. What's impossible with man is possible with God, you know. What makes it possible, asking Jesus into your heart? Do you really think it's hard for a rich man to ask Jesus into his heart? Heck, no, it's impossible for a rich man to call nothing his own and share and be generous. It's so impossible that the rich, young ruler couldn't do it when Jesus asked him to. It's so impossible that you, the average American Christian, can't even believe Jesus told you to do it, much less actually do it. He only told the rich young ruler to do that, right? No, my friend, he said that to us all. Look at Luke 12:33.

Then, when you're done, look at the next verse, too. I'm telling you that America's treasures steal my heart away from God all the time.

Should every trip to a restaurant be foregone and the money sent to help the poor or shared with a more needy brother? Maybe not. Of course, how many trips to a restaurant have you foregone for the needy? How many meals have you skipped and spent the saved money on those with nothing to eat? How many meals have you cut back on, "suffering" through a meal of rice and beans or bread and water--a meal that others, some of them that you claim are your brothers and sisters in Christ, beg and grovel for, but which you consider difficult to bear--how many times have you cut back to such a meal and given the shared money to a good cause? In the early church, it was standard for all Christians to do that during daylight hours every Wednesday and Friday. The Jews did it, too, but on different days.

Now you may consider what I just said harsh; I don't know, but I'm not talking to you, anyway. I'm talking to me. May God give me the amazing, miraculous grace that would allow a rich American like myself to be a real Christian. I consider eating three meals a day of beans and rice to be suffering, too. Shoot, I get disappointed when I have one such meal a week. It's "hard" for me when there's no cereal or nuts in the house to snack on before I go to bed.

Again, I don't think the occasional snack is a sin. I don't think eating Thanksgiving dinner and walking away gorged is a sin. I think the American lifestyle is sinful. Rich Americans don't know any better. Christians ought to. It would be awesome to be a real Christian. Chashaq had a picture taken of him and me so that he can put it up in his house to remind him that we're going to try to actually be Christians when we get back to the states.

It'll take a miracle.

Monday, November 26, 2007

Myanmar #2

Nov. 26 (second time), 2007

We are on our way back to Yangon after visiting three orphanages. It’s 3:30 in the afternoon right now. It’s very warm, probably close to 90 degrees out. We’re in a 11-passenger van if you only count the regular seats. There’s two seats that fold down and block off the passage to the back after everyone’s in, so that gets the total up to 13 seats. There may even be a couple other fold down seats I don’t know about in here somewhere.

We broke up into two teams today. Abba, Chashaq, Chasah and I were on a team with Tim and Chuck, both from PA and about my age, and Bebo, which is what David calls his daughter Elisabeth.

It’s very easy to get your heart completely stolen while you’re there. We asked before we left about how to act around the children. Do we shake their hands, hug them, what? We were told that it’s best to watch. Sometimes the children will hug you, and then it’s certainly okay to hug them back. What we didn’t know to ask, but we do know now, is what do you do if they grab your hands, worm their way under your arms, surround you, wrap their arms around you and stick with you wherever you go.

Actually, at the first orphanage, the children were a little more reserved than that. We had a very inexperienced crew, and we learned how to play games with that many children at the first one. We handed out presents, many sent by some of you, and gave them candy. At the 2nd and 3rd orphanages the children were just as affectionate as I described. One young lady, Ting Sui, gave me a bracelet, and whole groups of them won our hearts so much it was painful to leave. The games were much better, too, because we learned at the first one. Hot potato worked real well. Like the Mercy Home children, they are really good sports.

At the third orphanage, Chasah taught them to dance the grapevine. Abba played his _Rejoice, O Israel_ song. It was very fun. Then we played Hot Potato, too, and gave them their gifts. It’s so fun to be with them that when we leave, I pull the window open and we slap hands and say bye all the way out the gate.

Uh, that’s it for this update. Nothing more to tell except that we sang a little in the van on the way back (we’re still on the way back) and Bebo can really sing, but Chuck, uh, doesn’t sing as well as Bebo. He belts it out, though, and he’s a joy to be around. Very cheerful, enjoyable man.

Much love!

Shammah

On trip to Myanmar

Nov. 26

I don’t know if we are going to have internet access in Kalaymyo, but apparently we are going to have it the whole time in Yangon.

There’s not much to tell yet. We got to Bangkok on Saturday night after leaving Friday morning. There was no Friday night, however. We left at 8 in the morning to Washington DC, which is an hour ahead of us. From there we flew west, so we crossed about six time zones, going back six hours, before we hit the international date line. At that point, what was Friday afternoon suddenly became Saturday afternoon. Think of it as daylight savings time on steroids.

You don’t fly due west, as you may think. The world is a sphere, and apparently it’s good to fly above land rather that water, so from DC we flew Northwest, eventually heading due west only when we were at the northern edge of Canada. Because it’s late November, and we were flying up near the arctic circle, it got dark even though it was only two or three in the afternoon local time. We then flew across Alaska, zipped over a very small portion of the Pacific south of the Bering strait, and then followed the Russian coast down to Japan.

We landed in Tokyo at about 4 pm on Friday turned Saturday afternoon. Then we jumped on a plane for a seven hour flight to Bangkok, Thailand, crossing Vietnam and part of China (I think) in the process. We did amazingly well being in the air 23 hours in a 26 hour period that all occurred on one day (though which day it was changed in the middle of the afternoon). Chasah got motion sickness the last several hours of the Bangkok flight, but Becky, David’s wife, had Dramamine for her to take.

We stayed overnight Saturday night at a hotel called Convenient Resort. Our plane didn’t leave until noon, so we had a little time to walk in the morning. Our hotel seemed to be in the middle of a wilderness but on the edge of a city. A multi-level highway passed behind the hotel, but it was separated from us by a very large field with grasses some ten feet tall. The field wasn’t dry, but looked like a marsh, with a green, powdery algae floating in the spots where you could see the water. Meanwhile, in front of the hotel was a similar field, but dryer, and the city was on the other side of it. I couldn’t see the city, just the tops of buildings over the tall grasses.

It was amazing watching the hotel staff in the morning. Due to jet lag, I was downstairs before 5 a.m. There were about five people asleep on stairs and in chairs in the hallway. In fact, I passed the first one I saw on the second floor stairs. He was in a sitting position with his head in his hands, elbows on his knees, but he was obviously asleep, because he didn’t look up when I walked past him.

When those same people had to load us up for the trip back to the airport, that was the amazing part. They were trying to get 15 people and 45 bags into one van and two cars. They did it. Maybe someone took pictures. There’s no explaining it.

The flight to Yangon, Myanmar yesterday (Sunday) was short. Friends of David picked us up in a bus. They drive strangely in this country. In every other country I’ve been in, if you drive on the left side of the road, the steering wheel is on the right side of the car (Like Britain, Kenya, India, and Japan). If you drive on the right side, then the steering wheel is on the left (like the US, mainland Europe, and Ethiopia). Here, however, they drive on the right side, like the US, but the steering wheel is also on the right side, like England. Thus, the passenger side of the vehicle is in the middle of the street. So, when they picked us up at the airport, they didn’t load the bus through the door, which opened in the middle of the street, but they handed the bags up through the driver’s side rear window. There were a lot of bags. We took pictures of Matthew, a 15-year-old on this trip, sitting on them with his head pressed sideways against the tall ceiling of the bus.

The hotel here is beautiful. The city has lots of areas of vegetation. There are trees everywhere. I’m looking out the hotel window at some really massive shade trees. It’s not the trunk that’s so big, but the really wide spread of the top of the tree.

Today we’re going to visit three orphanages. We’re really looking forward to it.

Oh, the money. The exchange rate is 1275 to one dollar. I don’t know the name of their money yet. It sounds something like Chen, but it’s not that, I don’t think. I can’t read the letters on the money. There biggest bill is a 1,000 bill, so when you exchange a hundred dollars you get a big wad of cash. Even a $20 that I exchanged yesterday gave me a whole handful of bills.

Ok, now the spiritual stuff.

David told me about a guy he had met at an orphanage here. He asked him how the orphanage got started. The man said, “I got a good job making $25 per month, so I thought I should do something with all that money. I thought I’d better start an orphanage or something.”

I heard that story around 6:15 this morning. Around 5:30 this morning I was reading Mark, and I found the passage that says, “It is difficult to enter the kingdom of God.” Now, the next sentence is that it is harder for a rich man to enter the kingdom of heaven than it is for a camel to go through the eye of a needle, but the first sentence didn’t mention rich people. It just says it’s difficult to enter the kingdom of heaven. 1 Peter 4:18 says something similar, that it is only with difficulty that the righteous are saved.

When I heard the story about the guy with $25/month who felt compelled by his sudden “riches” to start an orphanage, I wonder whether people like me have any hope of going to heaven. I’ll bet he never checked on the price of a TV or motorcycle before he started the orphanage.

Oh, well. I quit worrying about going to heaven years ago. If that happens, it will only be because God has an inordinate amount of mercy. I think I’ll be happy just to be a part of helping real men of God like that orphanage guy do good. It is simply amazing how much work there’s available to do around the world. When you see the needs, it’s very clear that the difference between giving a child a fish and teaching him to fish is a huge and important one. It can be very important to feed people, but it may be even more important to put in wells and irrigation and provide training.

In fact, looking at people’s houses in Kenya, India, and other places has really made it clear why Jesus spoke of God providing food and clothing without ever mentioning shelter. Shelter’s pretty important in places where it snows, and shade can be important in places like Tennessee. However, in America we really overestimate shelter. People live quite happily in all sorts of homes, both with and without doors, and almost none of them in other places are all sealed up like ours are. If they do have a home that happens to have walls and a roof with no large holes in them, they leave a gap between the walls and roof so the air can move. I suspect we were made to live outdoors, breathing moving air.

Well, I love all of you. I’m told we’re going to meet more incredibly wonderful people today that we’re going to fall in love with. I think it’s possible that Americans are the grumpiest people on earth, though Europeans probably compete with us. Money and happiness are truly not much related to one another. There’s a bumper sticker I’ve read that says, “Money can’t buy happiness, but it can buy the things that make you happy.” That’s pure hogs’ wallow. The best things in life can’t be bought with money. May our children, who get to grow up with both village life and surrounded by American extravagance, prove to all America the truth of that.

Great grace be with you.

Oh, everyone’s doing well and healthy. Chashaq and Chasah, new to Asia, are loving it. I walked to a 7-11—yes, a real 7-11—in Bangkok with Chashaq, and he bought a big gulp there with a few bhat that he had gotten as change when he paid for internet at the Convenient Resort. Elisabeth, David’s daughter, was there with us. It was fun. Ratatouille was available with Thai subtitles on DVD in that 7-11, but it was 169 bhat, and I didn’t have any to buy it with. Sorry, kids. Besides, if I’d have bought it, I’d have probably felt so guilty today after hearing about the orphanage guy that I’d have been depressed the whole rest of the trip.

I’m not depressed, though, I’m thrilled to be alive, to know y’all, to be a part of this trip, to be with the friends I’m traveling with, and to know that we are learning how to live our the life of Christ in a world of great needs while living in a country of great deception.

Love,

Shammah

Monday, November 19, 2007

The Church and the World

Yes, and the Caesars too would have believed on Christ, if either the Caesars
had not been necessary for the world, or if Christians could have been Caesars.

~Tertullian, Apology 21, c. AD 210

This statement by Tertullian, a lawyer by profession, is not an argument, but a simple statement of fact. To him, all Christians knew this to be true.

In case you're missing what he's saying, let's parse it a bit. This sentence is part of a letter written to the Caesar. In the letter, he points out that it seems impossible to stop the Christians. There are so many, he says, that if Caesar banished them all from the empire he would have no one left to rule. This is an exagerration, of course, but his point stands. There were many Christians, and Tertullian is famous for the statement made in this letter, "The more often we are mowed down by you, the more in number we grow. The blood of the martyrs is seed" (ch. 50).

His point in the statement at the top of this page is that if it were possible to convert the Caesar, it would have already happened. Two things would have to be true, though, for a Caesar to believe on Christ. Either, one, the world would have to have no need of Caesars, or, two, a Christian would have to be able to be a Caesar. Neither, however, according to Tertullian, are true.

It would be possible for a Caesar to believe on Christ if he could just quit being Caesar. However, the world has need of Caesars. Or, if a Christian could be a Caesar, then the Caesar could believe and remain Caesar. Alas, a Christian cannot be a Caesar.

Again, Tertullian is not arguing this point. He is stating it as something that apparently all Christians understood. There are two reasons that I can see in their writings for why this is so.

One, Christians have their own kingdom. Theirs comes from heaven. An early anonymous Christian letter stated, "As citizens we share in all things with others, and yet endure all things as if foreigners. Every foreign land is to us as our native country, and every land of our birth as a land of strangers" (Letter to Diognetus 5). "If my kingdom were of this earth," Jesus said, "Then would my servants fight for me." Their kingdom is from heaven, however, and their weapons are spiritual. Thus, the early church understood that the prophecy that we would beat our swords into ploughshares was fulfilled in the church, not in a future millennial kingdom. It is not the job of Christians to rule an earthly kingdom.

Two, Christians cannot use the sword, and the government must use the sword. Governments are the ministers of God, says the apostle Paul in Romans 13, to use the sword to correct evildoers. Christians, however, cannot do so. They must forgive, turn the other cheek, and pray for those who do them wrong. These two ministries are incompatible, and thus every person must choose one or the other. They cannot do both.

The early church did not lose this view until the 4th century, when bishops began to be appointed by and paid by the Roman government. Even as late as the Council of Nicea in AD 325, a council at which the Roman emperor presided, it was stated that Christians cannot join the military "like a dog returning to his own vomit" (Council of Nicea, Canon 12).

This did not mean that Christians were of no value in war. Justin's letter to the emperor contains an account of a victory accomplished by the prayer of a battalion of Christians that refused to bear the sword. The very heavens battled against Rome's enemies at their prayer; a withering hail drove them from the battlefield (Justin Martyr, First Apology 68, appendix, c. AD 155). Tertullion himself argued that "it is the immense number of Christians which make your enemies so few" and called the emperor to take into account "the important protection we afford you" (Tertullian, ibid. ch. 37).

Oh, that we had the same faith today, the ability to trust God for our safety and for the safety of the lands we dwell in; that we would call on the same weapons that the early church called on and that we, too, would believe in their power.

Monday, November 12, 2007

Christianity after Constantine

I often object to things that people blame on Constantine. For example, Constantine did not change the Sabbath to Sunday. Saturn was the chief god of the Roman pantheon, and, as you may be able to figure out, Saturday was the day that was named after him. The whole idea that the Romans wanted to celebrate Sunday over Saturday isn't true. The only people who honored Sunday over any other day of the week were the Christians, who called it the 8th day and honored it because Christ rose on that day.

However, things did change drastically under Constantine. I like to call it the great judo throw. In judo, in order to throw an opponent, you push him first, getting him to push back against you. Once he does, you pull him toward you and use his momentum to perform the throw.

That's exactly what happened under Constantine. First, Diocletian orchestrated "The Great Persecution" from AD 303 - 311. Then Constantine gained control of the empire and saw his famous vision. He issued the Edict of Toleration, finally granting Christianity official approval to be practiced in the Roman empire. Up to that point it was a forbidden religion only because its adherents refused to sacrifice to the Roman gods or the Roman emperor.

The favor granted by Constantine proved to be too much for the church. They granted the emperor rights within the church that should never have been his. They failed to keep the separation of church and state, and they paid a terrible price for their courting of imperial favor. Those that want America to be a Christian nation would be wise to learn from the example of the 4th century church. The separation of church and state did not come from America's Constitution. It came from Jesus and his apostles, who proclaimed the kingdom of God, which is from heaven and not from earth. Christians can and should be subject to governments, but they cannot be the government. As Tertullian put it back in AD 200, "The Caesars, too, would have believed on Christ, if either the Caesars had not been necessary for the world, or if Christians could have been Caesars" (Apology 21).

What brings all this up for me is something I read today in Getting to Know the Church Fathers by Bryan Litfin. I haven't read much from the Post-Nicene Fathers (those after Constantine and the Council of Nicea that he presided over), so it's nice to have an introduction like his. In this case, I was reading about John Chrysostom, a late 4th and early 5th century church leader. He began as bishop of Antioch, but in AD 397 he was chosen by the emperor to be bishop of Constantinople. This competed with Rome as the most powerful bishopric in the world, since Constantinople was now capitol of the empire. John gladly took the position, the book tells us.

Now, it's important to keep in mind here that just this part of the story violates many principles held just decades earlier by all the church. Church leaders did not jump from church to church or city to city in the Pre-Nicene church. Elders were men chosen from among the congregation for their godly lives and leadership. They were raised up in that congregation, and then they served in that congregation. They did not do things like move from Antioch to Constantinople, and they certainly didn't do it at the bidding of the emperor.

It gets worse, however. It turns out that Theophilus, the bishop of Alexandria in Egypt, had someone groomed for that position. He was miffed that his man didn't get it, and it was made all the worse that the replacement came from Antioch a long-time rival city of Alexandria. Litfin tells us, "Perhaps you can imagine Theophilus's frustration when he found out that, not only had his candidate been rejected, but that John Chrysostom--an Antiochan!--was to be given this powerful position" (p. 202). In the margin, I wrote, "Only if Theophilus was no disciple."

Of course, I can't imagine that! I'm not in a state church. In the church I'm a part of, leaders serve. They are not in positions of power that they have to fight over, and if they did, it would prove that they are not worthy to lead. Hopefully, should something like that happen, we would take the advice of Cyprian, the great bishop of Carthage, who was fortunate enough to live prior to Nicea, and remove that leader from his position*!

Litfin writes, "From that day, Theophilus became John's sworn enemy. He was an ambitious schemer who wanted to advance Alexandria's power against Antioch or Constantinople. This was the ugly world John entered as a brand new bishop in the imperial capital (sic)" (ibid.). It seems that Theophilus was not the lover of God that his name suggests.

I suppose there's one nice thing in all of this. It reduces the number of church fathers that it's important that we are familiar with. It appears the ones after Nicea were no more familiar with what it is like to live in an apostolically established church than we Americans are.

*footnote: Cyprian wrote: "A people obedient to the Lord's precepts, and fearing God, ought to separate themselves from a sinful prelate, and not to associate themselves with the sacrifices of a sacrilegious priest, especially since they themselves have the power of either choosing worthy priests or of rejecting unworthy ones" (Epistle 67, from The Ante-Nicene Fathers, vol. 5).

Monday, October 29, 2007

He Has Made Us Able

Only 5 days since my last post this time. Getting better!

I want to share with you a passage from an early Christian writer that changed my life. I don't have space here to tell you how it changed my life, but I can give you the heart of the passage.
"As long, then, as the former time (i.e., the Old Covenant) endured, he
permitted us to be borne along by unruly impulses, being drawn away by the
desire of pleasure and various lusts. This was not that he at all delighted in
our sins, but that he simply endured them...He sought to form a mind conscious
of righteousness, so that being convinced in that time of our unworthiness of
attaining life through our own works, it should now, through the kindness of
God, be vouchsafed to us."

If the quote were left here, we American evangelicals would be confirmed in our belief that Jesus' death caused God to overlook sin and changed the way God would judge us. It doesn't end there, however.
"...and having made it manifest that in ourselves we were unable to enter
into the kingdom of God, we might through the power of God be made able"
(Anonymous, Letter to Diognetus 9, c. AD 100-130).

This one sentence resolved years of confusion over the issue of faith and works. It is not that this sentence carries authority in itself. It is that these few words handed me the key to unlock the seeming contradictions in the verses about faith and the verses about works in the Bible.

Many years ago, I used to keep a list of verses in the back of my Bible. It was a list of verses on works that I couldn't explain. It had passages like Rom. 2:5-8, where Paul says that God will not only judge us by our works, but that he would also give eternal life to those who pursued immortality by doing good. It had verses like James 2:24, which says that we are not justified by faith alone. It had statements like 2 Cor. 5:10, which says that we will be judged by our works, both good and bad.

Somewhere along the line, I realized that the answer to issues like these would be found in the writings of the early church, because they wrote the same way Paul did. On one page, they would say that works have nothing to do with our salvation, but on the very next they would tie salvation to obeying God's commandments. Paul does this throughout the end of Galatians, saying that we won't inherit the kingdom of heaven if we practice the works of the flesh (5:19-21) and that we'll get eternal life by sowing to the Spirit and not growing weary in doing good (6:8,9). Ephesians, however, has a very clear example of the contradiction. In chapter 2, he tells us--in the passage we all know--that we are saved by grace through faith apart from works, but in chapter 5, he tells us that if we are immoral, unclean, or covetous, then we'll have no inheritance in the kingdom of God, but instead we'll be judged like the disobedient! Ouch!

As a result of noticing these things, I was rather excited when I found the same seeming contradiction in Polycarp, a disciple of the apostle John as a young man, in his letter to the Philippian church. Polycarp was head elder of the church in Smyrna, and in the first chapter of his letter, he quotes Paul and says we are saved by grace, not by works. In the second chapter, however, he says that God will raise us up with Christ if we keep his commandments and do his will! (All these writings, by the way, are available on the web at http://www.ccel.org.)

Okay, now back to our passage from the Letter to Diognetus (one of the earliest, most readable, and most enjoyable of the early Christian writings). First, the anonymous author tells us that God was showing us throughout Old Testament times that we could never attain to heaven by our works. We all know and believe this. That doctrine of justification by faith apart from works has been hammered home to us since the Reformation, 500 years ago. In the meantime, we've all wondered why in the world James, the Lord's brother and leader of the church at Jerusalem, whom Paul called a pillar of the church, would say that justification is by works and not faith only. (That's a direct quote of Jam. 2:24, by the way.) Martin Luther had an answer. His answer was that the letter of James was a "right strawy epistle" that has "nothing of the nature of the Gospel about it." That's really not a very satisfying answer for me.

But the Letter to Diognetus doesn't leave us hanging. He gives an interesting answer to the dilemma we are in. We are incapable of attaining to life by our works. What's the answer? We Reformation-descended Christians would say that God killed Jesus in our place, and so now he can ignore our works and give us life no matter what we do. The problem is, that's not a very Biblical answer, since the Bible says that if we live according to the flesh, we will die, and that we will only live if we walk according to the Spirit (Rom. 8:13).

Our anonymous author's answer is that God would make us able to enter life by his power.

I don't know what that does for you, but for me it answered all my questions. Further, I was absolutely astonished how Biblical this was.

We are saved by grace through faith apart from works, says Ephesians 2. What does this produce? Going to heaven without works? No, not at all! It produces works! "For we are his workmanship, created in Christ Jesus to do good works" (Eph 2:10). Titus 2 speaks of "the grace of God that brings salvation" as well. What salvation does it bring? "[Jesus] gave himself for us, so that he might redeem us from all inquity and purify for himself his own special people, zealous for good works" (Tit 2:14).

Oh, what we couldn't do on our own, God did for us. We could not attain to life by our works, but we could not do on our own, God did! Paul writes, "For what the Law could not do, because it was weak because of our flesh, God did!" (Rom 8:3). It is still nothing we can do on our own, but "the righteous requirement of the law may be fulfilled in us who do not walk according to the flesh, but according to the Spirit" (Rom. 8:4).

Oh! No wonder Paul says that we must walk according to the Spirit to live (Rom. 8:13). No wonder that Paul says we must sow to the Spirit to reap eternal life (Gal. 6:8). No wonder Paul says the unrighteous will not inherit the kingdom of God (1 Cor 6:9). No wonder John says that those who don't keep Christ's commandments don't know him (1 Jn. 2:3,4).

And..no wonder that Peter says the righteous will be saved only with difficulty (1 Pet. 4:18). The KJV puts it as the righteous "scarcely" being saved. In his next letter, he tells us that if we want to "make our calling and election sure," "never fall," and have an abundant entrance into Jesus' kingdom, then we had better "add to our faith virtue" and a lot of other qualities which must be increasing, or else we have "forgotten that we were purged from our sins" (2 Pet. 1:5-11).

I hate to tell you this, but Jesus didn't die to change the judgment. The judgment was always just. The slander about God that he ever intended to burn people in hell forever for one little white lie has never been true. It is true that all have sinned and fallen short of the glory of God. However, that's in Romans chapter three, and that chapter says the problem is that we have poison of asps under our tongues and our lips are full of deceit. We haven't done one little sin. We are bad people. We need serious redemption. Paul has a much more decent view of God than we do. God will justify those who have lived according to their conscience (Rom 2:15). Ezekiel, long before Christ died, told us that God, who is merciful and kind, would give life even to sinners who turned from their evil ways and began to do righteousness (Ezek. 33:15).

God didn't need Jesus to die for him in order to make him merciful. God was already merciful. That passage in Ezekiel,--as well as others like Psalm 51, where David testifies that God doesn't need sacrifices to forgive David's adultery and murder--says that God was always "faithful and just to forgive our sins and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness" if we would confess our sins.

It was us who needed Jesus to die for us. We were wicked and full of sin. In coming to Christ, we are made new creatures. Old things pass away, and all things become new. We can walk in the Spirit and not fulfill the lusts of the flesh. We become his workmanship, created in Christ Jesus to do good works.

If this is not the salvation you have experienced, then you've experienced something short of Christ's salvation. Perhaps that's because you've heard the wrong Gospel. You can only become a disciple of Christ if you forsake everything, including your own life (Luke 14:26-33). This is what belief in Christ means. What good does it do to say you've believed in Christ if you don't believe him when he says you can't be his disciple without forsaking everything?

Just as likely, however, is that you've heard another form of corrupted Gospel. You've been told that "there's no salvation outside the church" is a doctrine of St. Augustine and other early church fathers caught up in the tradition of the Roman Catholic Church. It is not. It is a doctrine of the apostles found in Hebrews, where the writer says, "Exhort one another every day, while it is called today, lest any of you be hardened by the deceitfulness of sin" (3:13). It is a doctrine of Paul, who said, "The eye cannot say to the hand, 'I do not need you.' (1 Cor. 12:21).

We were never meant to make it on our own. You have need of your brothers and sisters. You need them to encourage you every day. You need to confess your faults to them and have them pray for you so that you may be healed. You need the great grace that is poured out in the place where the family of God shares their lives together (Acts 4:32-33). It is grace that breaks sin's power over you (Rom. 6:14), and great grace is found where brothers dwell together in unity. Psalm 133 calls it the blessing of eternal life (v. 3).

This is awful long for a blog post. Awful important, too, though.

Wednesday, October 24, 2007

What's on Your Face?

It's been over a week since I wrote on here. That's hard to believe. I guess it's been more hectic than I realized the last few days.

I dropped into WalMart this morning on the way to work and found out I can read minds!

Wait, wait! Don't go anywhere! I don't mean telepathy.

What I mean is the place a mind is supposed to be read, on someone's face. We can write our thoughts there for all to read.

I've found that as I've gotten older and picked up some gray hair, I've also picked up a bit of respect. In fact, a better word would be intimidation. When I was younger, if I got impatient waiting in line at a store, and my irritation showed on my face, the cashier would scowl at me. Now, though, if I want to look irritated, I generally get an apology that it took so long. It makes me feel bad, though, because "I'm irritated with you because of something you have no control over" is hardly the message I want to communicate to a stranger. Yet my face can actually say that to them.

This morning, I was walking out an automatic sliding glass door at the same time a lady was coming in it. Through the door, I could see she was writing thoughts on her face. There was awkwardness there, and a little fear, too, because it was still dark outside and there was no one else visible in the area. As the door slid open, I could tell she was going to look down and nervously slip past me.

It seemed a crummy way to start the day to me, so before she could do that, I fixed some thoughts in my mind. "This isn't an awkward situation, it's a funny one. Here are two strangers standing there, waiting for a glass door to open, and the whole scene seems surreal, like we're on Captain Kirk's enterprise or something." Then I smiled at her, and I know she could read the "Isn't this situation funny?" on my face. I watched her whole face brighten, her awkwardness disappear, and she smiled broadly and stepped past me.

Not telepathic, but definitely mind-reading. Absolutely silent communication, but remarkably full.

That happens to all of us every day. We don't think about it much, so we just communicate thoughtlessly with people on a regular basis. The fact that it's silent communication gives us "plausible deniability." How can we be held responsible for what we're thinking?

Sociologists say that some 60% or more of our communication is non-verbal. As Christians, that seems like an awful lot of talking to waste when we've been told that we will give account for every word that proceeds from our mouth. Maybe we should start thinking about it.

What's on your face today?

Monday, October 15, 2007

Necessities for Unity

"Walk worthy of the calling with which you were called...endeavoring to keep the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace...till we all come to the unity of the faith"
Eph. 4:1,3,13


I skipped a lot of verses there between the part about the unity of the Spirit and the unity of the faith. However, the point I'm trying to make stands. We are supposed to be working hard to preserve the unity of the Spirit, but unity of the faith comes from working hard on something other than the unity of the faith.



American churches specialize in trying to have unity of faith. They have statements of faith, classes for new people, Sunday school for children, Bible studies for adults, and systematic theologies for their pastors. Despite their incredible efforts, it is hard to imagine that anyone could be any more unsuccessful at something than American churches are at having unity of faith.



The problem's not a mystery. Unity of faith is the result of doing something else. American churches fail miserably at that something else. Thus, no unity. It would be foolish to expect any other result.



What is that something else? Well, let's look at the part of Ephesians 4 that I skipped:

And he gave some to be apostles, some prophets, some evangelists, and somepastors and teachers for the complete furnishing of the saints for the work of ministry and for the building up of the body of Christ, until we all come to the
unity of the faith...


If you've ever heard anyone teach on this passage, then surely you've heard that the Greek of this verse makes it clear that these gifts—apostles, prophets, evangelists, pastor/teachers—are to equip the saints to do the work of ministry, not for the aforementioned gifted ones to do the work of ministry. I first heard that in an Evangelism Explosion course, and I've heard it dozens of times since. Everyone knows that. Everyone teaches that. Hardly anyone does it.



Of course, how are they supposed to do it? What does a pastor know about the work of ministry and the edifying of the body of Christ? All he's done is go to a Bible school and study hermeneutics, which will provide you no equipping whatsoever for the work of ministry and the edifying of the body of Christ. Shoot, it doesn't even equip you to pay any attention to the Bible, which could be taught in a school, so how is it going to teach you something like building the body of Christ, which could never be learned in any school anywhere.



That was rather a brash statement, so let me back it up. It is obvious from the Bible that pastors were not selected from some distant Bible school. Shoot, it is obvious from the Bible that they weren't called pastors, but elders or overseers. But, since that's not on too many denominations statement of faith, they neglect it in Bible school. I didn't go to Bible school, however, so I'm allowed to pay attention to the Bible, rather than ignoring it for my denomination's statement of faith.



I know I'm being sarcastic enough here to seem very rude. I don't mean to be rude. Please take these words as friendly jibes. However, let me show you how badly our American churches have this whole pastor thing wrong, and you'll probably want to take up the sarcasm yourself!



According to Acts, Paul and Barnabas appointed elders right out of the churches they started (14:23). They didn't mail order a graduate from the apostles' school of the Bible in Jerusalem to come to Greece and Asia Minor and preach sermons every week. This was a lifelong pattern for Paul, and it continued for centuries afterward, until under Constantine the emperor of Rome decided he could appoint elders. They were brought in from outside a lot after that.



So catch this, okay. Paul wrote letters to Timothy and Titus. These letters are known as the "pastoral epistles," because supposedly they're written to pastors (Timothy and Titus). Unbelievable! Do we send people to Bible school for four years so that they can believe such utter nonsense! Did anyone try actually reading those "pastoral epistles"???



Those "pastoral epistles" command those "pastors" to appoint pastors and leave!



In Titus, it's specifically said. Paul says, "For this reason I left you in Crete, so that you should...ordain elders in every city" (Tit. 1:5). Then he tells him in 3:12, "Be diligent to come to me in Nicopolis, for I have decided to winter there."



In Timothy, you have to think a little (a very little) to see it. In Titus 1, Paul follows his exhortation to appoint elders with a list of qualifications for the office. In 1 Timothy 3, he doesn't specifically say that Timothy is to appoint elders (he uses the word overseer there), but he does give Timothy the same list of qualifications that he gave to Titus. What should that tell you? It should tell you that Timothy was not left in Ephesus to pastor, but to appoint elders to pastor, then to move on and see Paul, just like Titus. He follows these qualifications by telling Timothy that he'll be along as soon as possible (1 Tim 3:14). We already know from 1 Thessalonians that Timothy was an apostle (1:1 with 2:6), not a pastor, and apostles appointed elders and moved on. That's what they did. Timothy traveled with Paul, he didn't stick around in Ephesus and pastor. This would be why Paul ends 2 Timothy, where Paul wasn't coming to Timothy as he was in 1 Timothy, by telling him, "Be diligent to come to me before winter."



We're still on the subject of unity. Why is all this important? It is important, because elders should be people who have proven, in the church, that they are able to watch over others and build up the body of Christ. This way, they can do what Ephesians says they are to do, which is train the saints to do the work of ministry and build the body of Christ. This will result in the unity of the faith, says Eph. 4:13. Bible studies will not result in unity of the faith, which we prove every day in America. As usual, the Bible's way is better than our way. Amazing. You'd think we go to Bible school just so that we can get smart enough to figure out ways to make the Bible actually defend our vain traditions, rather than opposing them, as it clearly does if you just read it.



If you read on there in Ephesians, you'll also find that the unity of the faith is completely tied to our growth together. There's no comments in there about us growing as individuals. No, the body of Christ is to be built, and we are to grow up "together" in the knowledge of God into the stature of Christ. This can happen, says 4:16, only "as every part does its share."



So why do our American churches lack unity? We don't have trained pastors (properly "elders") who can equip the saints to do the work of ministry and build the body, and we make no arrangements for every part to do its share. I'll bet, if you're an American Christian, that you think church services build the body of Christ. Nothing could be further from the truth! Do you really see "every part doing its share" on Sunday morning? How about Sunday night? Wednesday night?



No, the body is built on a day to day basis as the saints "encourage one another every day, while it is called today." Ephesians calls it speaking the truth to one another in love. That is only going to happen when our lives become intertwined and we are together daily.



How is that going to happen? It's not like it's common for church members to see each other every day. Well, let's go back to the verse we started with:



"...endeavoring to keep the unity of the Spirit..."


The Holy Spirit really does shed the love of God abroad in the hearts of his disciples. However, the enemy has created a system designed to shut down that love. A constant diet of meetings and Bible teachings designed to justify a statement of faith and demonize heretics is really quite effective at destroying any unity of the Spirit there might be among the few disciples that find themselves in our American churches.



Let me give you a small statement of faith that flies in the face of most statements of faith in evangelical churches. I'm going to go ahead and go out on a limb, since this statement of faith is only one sentence long, and it's a Bible quote.



Jesus became the author of eternal salvation to all that obey him.


It's a mess, isn't it? Let me see if I can sum all this up. Here's the way it works. We become his disciples by giving our life to him. We forsake everything, take up our cross, and go after him. He saves us and gives us his Holy Spirit. We, filled with love that comes from that Holy Spirit, can't help but be around one another as much as we can. Jesus, the giver of good gifts, provides us with gifted elders who can teach us how to build up the body of Christ, and we all do that together. We all grow together, carefully preserving the unity that the Spirit gives us, never allowing our stupid and ridiculous doctrines, formed by our warped minds that we're supposed to hate, to get in the way of that unity, and encouraging one another on to follow Christ by his Spirit.



What a delightful picture that would be!



However, there's a line in there that might make it seem not delightful to you. I called your mind warped and said you're supposed to hate it. I said our doctrines are stupid and ridiculous. Let me quickly justify that.



First, your mind is part of your soul, and Jesus said only those who hate their souls will keep them to life everlasting (Jn 12:25, where the word for "life" is psuche, soul). Second, sound doctrine includes things like being sober, patient, loving, avoiding much wine, teaching good things, loving your spouse, keeping the house, being a good employee at work, etc. (Tit. 2:1-10).



Sorry, but when I read Tit. 2:1-10, I find it stupid and ridiculous to ask church member to study verses and put them together to in some exact "faith only" doctrine when the Bible says, "You see then that a man is justified by works and not faith only," and to ask church members to explain the relationship between the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit that has been a source of argument among theologians for nigh on 2,000 years! I don't believe in modalism, dear reader, which is the "Jesus only" doctrine, but I do know that Tertullian, "the father of the Trinity," whom I do agree with, said that the majority of the church would always be simple people, and in his day, AD 200 or so, most of those simple people held to modalism (Against Praxeas 3).



Fortunately for Tertullian, who was not an elder, and for the other Christians of his day, they still had elders, appointed by the previous elders, who knew how to equip saints for the work of ministry and who still knew what sound doctrine was. Therefore, those churches enjoyed great unity and proclaimed the Gospel around the whole known world "as if they had but one soul and one and the same heart" (Irenaeus, Against Heresies I:10:2).



I hope my sarcasm hasn't offended you so badly that you can't hear any of this. The things I've written above are drastically important. I hope you will be able to open up your heart and hear them.



Oh, the things written above work. You ought to see the grace, power, and life that God, in his mercy and kindness, has showered on us on Christ's behalf as we have practiced what I have written above. http://www.rosecreekvillage.com/. We really love Ephesians 4.


Thursday, October 11, 2007

Unity and the Life of the Early Churches

"As I have already observed, the Church, having received this preaching and this faith, although scattered throughout the whole world, yet, as if occupying but one house, carefully preserves it. She also believes these points just as if she had but one soul, and one and the same heart, and she proclaims them, and teaches them, and hands them down, with perfect harmony, as if she possessed only one mouth."

Irenaeus, Against Heresies I:10:2, c. AD 185


It's commonly believed that the church fell away and grew cold after the time of the apostles. Often, Jesus' letters to the churches, found in the Revelation of John, chapters two and three, are cited as evidence of this, as well as some of the problems found in Paul's and John's letters. For example, 3 John speaks of a church leader who had rejected the apostle John and the brothers with him.


It is true that the gnostic heresy--which taught that the earth was created by an ignorant god, called the Demiurge, and that Christ was a spirit who descended temporarily on Jesus of Nazareth in an attempt to turn people from material interests to spiritual ones--gained a large foothold in the early churches. However, history testifies that the churches responded well to the letters of John and to Jesus' admonishment through John. Letters from Ignatius, bishop of Antioch in the late first and early second centuries, show the battle he was fighting against gnosticism in the churches. In fact, the work quoted above, Against Heresies, gained its name from the battle that still raged with gnosticism.


However, Ignatius' battle was not a futile one. Sometime in the early 2nd century, the gnostics were driven out of the churches, and Irenaeus' late 2nd century work was directed against gnostic influence that came from outside. Inside the church, however, we see that the churches had settled into a time of unity and peace. This was not a lazy peace. Athenagoras, writing just a decade before Irenaeus, boasted that the testimony of Christians of his day was much better than that of the philosophers:


"[The philosophers] never cease with evil intent to search out skilfully the secrets of their art, and are ever bent on working some ill, making the art of words and not the exhibition of deeds their business and profession. But among us you will find uneducated persons, and artisans, and old women, who, if they are unable in words to prove the benefit of our doctrine, yet by their deeds exhibit the benefit arising from their persuasion of its truth"

Athenagoras, A Plea for the Christians 11, AD 177


Their testimony was not marred by the efforts of the Roman empire to turn them away from the faith. Minucius Felix, a Christian of the second or early third century, wrote:


"Do I compare men with [your Roman heroes]? Yet boys and young women among us treat with contempt crosses and tortures, wild beasts, and all the bugbears of punishments, with the inspired patience of suffering."

M. Felix, The Octavius 37, AD 130-230


There are many who have heard how the early Christians endured persecution. Less realize the kind of patience, peace, holiness, and honesty with which they lived among their neighbors. The first century is noted for apostles like Paul and Barnabas and evangelists like Philip and Stephen, but there are no famous evangelists of the second century. Instead, Justin describes the way Romans were converted in his day:


"Many...were of your way of thinking, but have changed their violent and tyrannical disposition, being overcome either by the constancy which they have witnessed in their neighbours lives, or by the extraordinary forbearance they have observed in their fellow-travellers when defrauded, or by the honesty of those with whom they have transacted business."

Justin Martyr, First Apology 16, c. AD 150


If it is not many who realize the sort of unity, love, and good works practiced by the early church, almost none realize that the intimacy of life that extended even to the sharing of possessions seen in Jerusalem continued throughout the second century churches. It was already the beginning of the third century, when Tertullian, a lawyer from North Africa, wrote:


"'See,' they [i.e., the Romans] say, 'how they love one another,' for they themselves are animated by mutual hatred; 'how they are ready even to die for one another,' for they themselves will sooner put to death....the family possessions, which generally destroy brotherhood among you, create fraternal bonds among us. One in mind and soul, we do not hesitate to share our earthly goods with one another. All things are common among us but our wives."

Tertullian, Apology 39, c. AD 200


This is what the churches of the second century were like. Should this surprise us? These are the churches of the apostles, who gave them the Gospel that is "the power of God unto salvation." They had received the grace of God, bringing salvation and "teaching us that, denying ungodliness and worldly lusts, we should live soberly, righteously, and godly in this present age" (Tit. 2:11,12). Being possessors of that grace, this is exactly what they did.


My prayer is that their words create in you the same deep longing that they create in me. Dear Father in heaven, how may I live as they lived? The answer lies in a rich source of grace: the church. When the church of Acts was 'one in heart and soul' and 'did not hesitate to share their earthly goods with one another,' it was then that "great grace was upon them all" and the apostles bore witness to the resurrection of the Lord Jesus with great power (Acts 4:32,33).


Again, this should not surprise us. Even King David, a thousand years before the New Testament was put into effect, knew this truth. "Behold," he said, "how good and pleasant it is for brothers to dwell in unity." But his words do not stop there. "For there," he says, "the Lord has commanded the blessing--life forevermore." The blessing of life is commanded "there," in the place where brothers dwell together in unity.

It is high time for those of us who long for that life to experience unity. In the next post, I will deviate a bit from historical posts to talk about what is necessary to have that unity.

Wednesday, October 10, 2007

Atheist Attacks

Today I heard a Christian radio station say that a movie should not be watched by Christians because it was written by an atheist bent on attacking the church. I read the books that led to the movie, and I have to say that the author, Philip Pullman, was notably unsuccessful at presenting an atheist message. I'd like to talk about the God presented in his book, as well as the one presented in another popular teen novel that produced a movie, Eragon, but first an introduction is necessary.

In Unspoken Sermons: Series I, II, III (Johannesen, 2004) George MacDonald mentions an attack on Christianity by a person who claimed it was impossible to know anything about God. The man wrote:


The visiting on Adam’s descendants through hundreds of generations dreadful penalties for a small transgression which they did not commit; the damning of all men who do not avail themselves of an alleged mode of obtaining forgiveness, which most men have never heard of...are modes of action which, ascribed to a human ruler, would call forth expressions of abhorrence; and the ascription of them to the Ultimate Cause of all things...must become impossible (p. 385).

This agnostic is horrified that God would be accused of "visiting dreadful penalties" on Adam's descendants for his "small transgression." He thinks it abhorrent that men would be condemned for not obtaining forgiveness in a way that most of them have never heard of.

George MacDonald is a famous Christian author. He was a licensed minister. C.S. Lewis, the great apologist and author of Mere Christianity, credits him with being his mentor. How will George answer these awful accusations?

He wrote, "I entirely agree...almost it feels an absurdity to say so." Then he adds, "I never yet heard a word from one of their way of thinking, which even touched anything I hold" (ibid., p. 385).

When I heard the comment about "The Golden Compass" on the radio today, I could identify with George MacDonald. I read the trilogy that begins with The Golden Compass. It is most definitely an attack on a church and an attack on a god. Which church, I suppose I could guess, and which god, I know for certain. However, I must say with George MacDonald, "There's not a word in her way of thinking when even touches anything I hold."

I do not recommend the trilogy. The first two books are relatively clean, but the third is slimy, and the conclusion extremely unsatisfying, perhaps even stupid. That was disappointing, because the second book especially was a delight to read. However, the books are far from being atheistic.

Eragon is similar. It was written by an atheist home-schooled teenager, Christopher Paolini. It's sequel, whose name I've forgotten, contains a two or three page argument in defense of atheism given by one of the elves, a race respected for their wisdom in the book. However, the elf's words are strangely hollow, because the whole book proclaims an all-powerful, all-wise, and benevolent God on every page.

So does The Golden Compass trilogy. It is almost a requirement of modern fantasy that there be some purpose, some destiny, behind everything that happens in the novel. Things happen by chance, but the books make it clear that these things are not really chance. They are meant to be. There is a "destiny" in all modern fantasy novels, and The Golden Compass and Eragon are no exceptions.

So let Philip Pullman take potshots at the little god that must be defended by his narrow-minded followers. It is we religious people, with our vain attempts to defend, not God, but our own inbred superstitions, that deserve the attacks such movies throw upon us. Let us learn to be like George MacDonald. Such attacks should never touch anything that we hold. The church of The Golden Compass trilogy is one we should all despise. We, too, should be able to say, "I entirely agree. In fact, it seems absurd to have to say so."

My God will be found, not between the lines of those books, but above them. He controls all things, including destiny. Those things that seem to happen by chance, but which are not really chance--those things are the product of my God's attention and care.

Richard Dawkins is one of the most famous and aggressive atheists in the world. Yet in a debate with the great thinker Francis Collins, a Christian and the head of the Human Genome Project, he was forced to admit the possibility of the existence of God. To gain such an admission from a man like Dawkins is a rousing victory in the intellectual defense of theism. But the much greater victory, if we will but take it up, is the common atheist explanation for Dawkins' embarrassing admission.

Atheists were quick to qualify Dawkins' admission. "Dawkins...does not rule out science's discovering something that might be called God. But it is extremely unlikely that this being will be the God of the Jewish or Christian Scriptures."

Is it? Is it so unlikely? The God of the Jewish and Christian Scriptures exactly fits the description Dawkins gave of what God would be like if he were found. Dawkins said, "There could be something incredibly grand and incomprehensible and beyond our present understanding." Collins replied, "That's God."

Dawkins argues, vainly, that this God could be any god, and the chance that he's Yahweh, the God of Jesus, is "vanishingly small." Why is this? If you were to ask Dawkins that question, I can, having read several of his books, give you his reply. He will list all sorts of stories, teachings, and ideas he doesn't agree with that some Christians somewhere believe or have interpreted from the Bible. All of that is meaningless. God is who God is, and there is nothing in the idea that God is "incredibly grand, incomprehensible, and beyond our present understanding," that makes it impossible for God to be Yahweh, the God of Jesus. In fact, that completely agrees with Jesus's description of God, because he said, "No man has ever seen God at any time." He made it clear than no one could ever comprehend or understand God without the Son revealing him. The God of Jesus is indeed "incredibly grand, incomprehensible, and beyond our present understanding."

What Dawkins misses, or dismisses, is the tremendous every day evidence that God--the only God there is--does indeed exist and invades the world of men. The very fact that the name Jesus is on the lips of billions of people around the world--despite the fact that by secular standards he was nothing but a crucified criminal and a leader of a tiny, insignificant cult of Judaism--stands as proof that he possesses the power of the "incredibly grand and incomprehensible" God.

Dawkins would argue that the atrocities committed in the name of Christ throughout history stand as proof that he is not who he said he was. Au contraire! That Jesus' name has survived the horrors perpetrated in his name by ill-meaning men stands as proof that he is who he said he was. Why do people continue to name the name of Christ despite these crimes against mankind? Why do people continue to name the name of Christ despite the boring, lifeless churches that are the majority of Christendom?

Why? Because to this day, the name of Jesus brings intervention from the "incredibly grand and incomprehensible" God into the lives of men. Acknowledging Jesus transformed my whole world 25 years ago. Perhaps that was a mental delusion. If so, it is a mental delusion shared by enough people to have kept the name of Jesus alive for two millennia no matter what adversity thrown against it.

The problem, Mr. Dawkins, with your argument is that the name of Jesus continues to be the source of a real and powerful salvation, and as long as this is so, the chance that the "incredibly grand and incomprehensible" God is the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ is not vanishingly small, but undeniably large.

One last thought to tie this all together. Sorry, I know this isn't a poetic conclusion. The Golden Compass and Eragon's sequel do not attack God. They attack the sons of the devil who have dragged Jesus' name through the mud for centuries. Don't miss the "incredibly grand and incomprehensible" God that they acknowledge, seemingly by oversight or chance, but really not by chance at all.

Monday, October 8, 2007

Augustine of Hippo

Well, I promised to write this "tomorrow," and I didn't get to it. I thought I'd said I'd write this "next time," knowing that probably wouldn't be "tomorrow." However, since no one could possibly be reading this yet, I suppose it doesn't matter much.

Augustine of Hippo. One of the most famous of Catholic saints. He is both loved and vilified. Quoted by Protestants and Catholics alike, he is also charged with teaching the church that it is okay to convert by the sword (true, see http://ctlibrary.com/4360). There are plenty of web sites on Augustine, so I won't bother with references or a deep foray into his life. I just want to talk about a couple things I know about him.

Augustine is famous for his saying, "There is no salvation outside the church." This was really not a new doctrine, but was basically the belief of the whole church from the beginning. Cyprian, for example, 150 years before Augustine said, "For it is the church alone which, conjoined and united with Christ, spiritually bears sons" (Epistles 73, par. 6). Irenaeus, another 70 years earlier than Cyprian, said of the church, "For she is the entrance to life; all others are thieves and robbers" (Against Heresies III:4:1).

We Protestants balk at such statements, but in the first few centuries after Christ, there was but one church of God. There were not competing denominations. Such statements were not a defense of papal doctrine or a testimony to apostolic succession. They were the product of a unity among those churches will held to "the faith once for all delivered to the saints." Those saints were one, bound to one another, and they treasured the truth and the life of Christ that had been delivered to them by the apostles.

But Augustine was also the founder of a very Protestant idea, that of predestination. In reaction to a heretic named Pelagius, Augustine developed a doctrine of the complete soverereignty of God, even over the choice of men to believe, that was adopted by both John Calvin and Martin Luther, who had been an Augustinian monk (see http://www.iep.utm.edu/l/luther.htm) when he was Catholic.

What I really want to tell you about, though, is Augustine's era, which was radically different than that of Cyprian (died AD 258) or Irenaeus (died c. AD 200). Augustine was baptized in 387, became a presbyter in 391 and bishop in 396, then finally died in 430. The church, however, had experienced a drastic change in the early 4th century. After the Great Persecution under Diocletian (AD 303-311), the emperor Constantine had a vision and made Christianity an official legal religion for the first time (AD 313). An AD 325, he presided over a council of just over 300 bishops in an attempt to stop a massive division in the church over Arianism, a dispute over the nature of the divinity of Christ. At this point, the church was not only tolerated, but supported. Bishops were paid by the state, opening the door for political battles for the position. Constantine and his successors began to depose and appoint bishops based on their theological positions.

This, combined with a massive influx of the unregenerate into the church, created massive chaos. Nowhere is it seen better than in two volumes of church history, The Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers, Second Series, Volume I and Volume II. The first of those volumes contains The Church History of Eusebius and the second contains The Ecclesiastical History of Socrates Scholasticus. Surely no two histories of the same people, written merely 50 years apart, could read more differently. Eusebius' history is a history of faith and martyrdom, a delight to any Christian to read. It was written in AD 323, just two years before the Council of Nicea, over which Constantine presided. Socrates' history, produced in AD 375, however, is one of political intrigue, violence, and court battles, well worthy of a Hollywood film (though none has been done yet).

Eusebius' history, though it contains stories of the church's battle against heresies that arose, testifies of a united church, peaceful and holy, who would take up the sword neither for themselves or Rome. Socrates' history testifies of bloody battles between Christians in the same city and bishops pitted against bishops with the backing of local authorities and even the emperor's legions. The Christians of Constantinople, meeting in two competing congregations, once fought each other "until the blood ran into the streets" over the body of a dead bishop. Another time they beat a general to death with their bare hands, because he had been sent by Constantius to depose their beloved bishop.

Councils met throughout the 50 year period that Socrates' history covers. Athanasius, a key figure in the battle over Arianism, was banished by the emperor no less than five times. Arius, too, banished at the Council of Nicea, was repeatedly recalled and restored to the emperor's favor.

This was the world that Augustine was converted into. While in Cyprian's world, perhaps 10% of the empire was Christian, in Augustine's world, some 90% were. Augustine was converted only a decade after Socrates' history was produced. Much had been lost. Where the Council of Nicea had suggested a 13-year ban from the communion table for those Christians who joined the military "like a dog returning to his own vomit" (Canon 12), most of the military in Augustine's day were Christian.

It's my experience that neither Protestants nor Catholics that I meet know these things. Everyone knows of "the church fathers," but it is rare that anyone really knows who they are. Augustine and Cyprian cannot really be lumped into the same category. It is safer to lump Cyprian and Ignatius together, who are at least both Pre-Nicene--that is, prior to the massive changes that happened around the Council of Nicea--but it is still not accurate. Ignatius, a bishop said to be appointed by the apostles over Paul's home church of Antioch, belongs to the apostolic age, not even a generation removed from the apostles. Cyprian, a century and a half later, presided as bishop in an era of much greater tradition and authority.

Their stories are fascinating, but mostly unrelated. Ignatius led the church at a time when the gnostics, with their bizarre teachings about an ignorant Demiurge who created the world and a non-material Christ who sought to redeem it, were still in the church. He battled for the purity of the church, and he was successful! His life ended in a glorious martyrdom, killed by beasts in the Roman Coliseum. His famous line, "I am the wheat of God, and let me be ground by the teeth of the wild beasts, that I may be found the pure bread of Christ," ought not to be forgotten by any of us who seek to serve Christ today.

Cyprian's devotion and leadership, too, ought not to be forgotten. Remembered by Catholics for his strong words about the authority of the bishops as having received the keys of the kingdom from Peter, he was perhaps the first Protestant as well. His level-headed leadership, peaceful spirit, and fervent love for truth helped him check the aspirations and errors of Stephen, bishop of Rome, with whom he battled throughout his time as bishop. There is preserved for us the decisions of a council of 82 bishops that he called in North Africa to correct Stephen's caving in to heretics.

History is a wonderful thing, giving us insight into the Gospel that was handed down to us by the apostles. It was a powerful thing. The glory it produced ought to inspire us. Athenagoras, a 2nd century apologist, described the result of the Gospel in these words:

But among us you will find uneducated persons, and artisans, and old women, who, if they are unable in words to prove the benefit of our doctrine, yet by their deeds exhibit the benefit arising from their persuasion of its truth: they do not rehearse speeches, but exhibit good works; when struck, they do not strike again; when robbed, they do not go to law; they give to those that ask of them, and love their neighbours as themselves (A Plea for the Christians, ch. 11).

This power was lost, not just during the time of Constantine, but it was being eroded even before. It is said that those who do not know history will be condemned to repeat it. It is not just the sayings of God, but his actions as well, that teach us. Jesus said he did only what he saw his Father doing. Peter calmed the Jewish believers in Jerusalem over the introduction of Gentiles to the church by describing what God had done (Acts 11:1ff).

There is much to see in history of what God has done, and there is much to learn. What caused the church to wander from the power that caused "uneducated persons, artisans, and old women" to so gloriously display the life of Christ. Paul's preaching, he said, was in "demonstration of the Spirit and power" (1 Cor. 2:4). As we see from the quote above, not unique in second century literature, so was Athenagoras' preaching. Origen, writing in AD 225, was still able to answer the accusations of Celsus the Roman by appealing to the irreproachable lives of Christians in the Roman cities (Against Celsus III:29).

Who that names the name of Christ does not long to live as they did, in the holiness and power of God? It is not unattainable. Jesus Christ has not grown old, but the faith once for all delivered to the saints has been mostly forgotten. Let us not fear to look and to return.

This is going to sound like an altar call or something, but I would be remiss if I did not encourage you to see the only proof we can offer that the Gospel is indeed as powerful as it ever was: the people of God.

Wednesday, October 3, 2007

Getting Some Direction

Despite the fact that I always have something to say about some issue, it's been hard to find something worth writing on the internet about. Today it dawned on me that I could discuss one of my favorite issues: early church history.

I've devoted a lot of time to studying the churches that the apostles started. There are a surprising number of writings from those churches. Just the writings from the late first and second centuries fill over 1,000 pages of small print (available in _The Ante-Nicene Fathers_, 10-volume set published by Hendrickson's and Eerdmans or free at http://www.ccel.org). Reading those writings can be a real eye opener. Imagine getting an idea of what was important in the churches the apostles started themselves!

I want to begin by passing on a quote I just found today. The 2nd century churches, as you may or may not know, had no set "canon" (the list of books that make up the Bible). They also quoted a lot of books as Scripture that you may never have heard of. One interesting one that's commonly quoted is 1 Enoch, which is also quoted in the letter of Jude in the Bible.

This is from Augustine of Hippo:

Now, in regard to the canonical Scriptures, he [i.e. "the skillful interpreter of the sacred writings"] must follow the judgment ofthe greater number of catholic churches; and among these, of course, a high place must be givento such as have been thought worthy to be the seat of an apostle and to receive epistles. Accordingly,among the canonical Scriptures he will judge according to the following standard: to prefer thosethat are received by all the catholic churches to those which some do not receive. Among those,again, which are not received by all, he will prefer such as have the sanction of the greater numberand those of greater authority, to such as are held by the smaller number and those of less authority.If, however, he shall find that some books are held by the greater number of churches, and othersby the churches of greater authority (though this is not a very likely thing to happen), I think that in such a case the authority on the two sides is to be looked upon as equal.
~On Christian Doctrine II:8:12, AD 397

This was fascinating to me. Note that it's almost AD 400, and Augustine, one of the most famous Christians of all time, is saying that there is no agreed canon!

Now I knew that the formation of the canon did not occur until almost that time, but I would never have dreamed that Augustine would leave the subject so open. Surely he, like Athanasius a generation before him, would have a list of books that he was sure were best. Au contraire! Fascinating.

I do need to point out that there was NOT widespread disagreement on what was Scripture. Athanasius was not the first to produce a list of which books constitute the Scriptures, and those lists are relatively similar. They don't start appearing until the late 2nd century, but quotes in the earlier writings prove they accepted the same basic books.

On the other hand, nailing the Bible down to exact books was obviously not important to the church, because they waited four centuries to do so!

I need to add here that we ourselves miss much by our strict adherence to a closed canon. I mentioned 1 Enoch above, for example, which is not only quoted by Jude, but also provides the earliest description of a hell (ch. 21) that matches what Jesus describes in Luke. The Martyrdom of Isaiah, a book no longer extant, is the source for the comment about a person "sawn in two" in Hebrews 11. The story of Tobit, part of the Roman Catholic Apocrypha, was familiar to all those in the early church, as was the angel Raphael, a key figure in the story. We evangelicals may complain that the Catholics added Bel and the Dragon and Susanna to the book of Daniel as chapters 13 and 14, but you'd have to be spiritually dead not to enjoy the stories and recognize them as typically Hebrew.

I'll tell you more about Augustine, his relationship to both Protestants and Roman Catholics, and a little about the time he lived in, but tomorrow. Good night!