Sunday, April 26, 2009

God chose the short people in the world to shame the tall

Saul was taller than any of the people of Israel (1 Samuel 9:2).

Eliab (David's brother) was also tall and Samuel though that he must be God's chosen replacement for Saul, but God said 'do not look on his appearance or on the height of his stature, because I have rejected him' (1 Samuel 16:7).

Goliath's 'height was six cubits and a span' (1 Samuel 17:4). When he called to Israel 'Give me a man, that we may fight together' he was probably looking for Saul to come forward and battle 'giant' to 'giant'. Instead David who was not big enough to wear Saul's armour stepped forward, won the victory, and shamed those who avoided the fight.

Christ won a more complete victory, though he too was 'esteemed not'. He leads a kingdom which seems as insignificant as a mustard seed and which is only made up of weak people. Nevertheless, as I learnt today: our God reigns.

The Church of England in 1551

Edward VI on the throne, Thomas Cranmer as Archbishop of Canterbury, and Martin Bucer as Regius Professor of Divinity at the University of Cambridge. The Church of England must have been pretty strong then... not like today...

an inspection of the diocese of Gloucester in 1551 revealed that 168 priests out of a total of 311 were unable to recite the Ten Commandments; 34 did not know who had formulated the Lord's Prayer, and 10 did not know it by heart.

(p.239, Martin Greschat, Martin Bucer: A Reformer and His Times)

... maybe not then.

Tuesday, April 21, 2009

Trusting God by stopping

Rest is something I keep on thinking about these days. Some people may say I think about it too much. Anyway one thing I keep coming back to is what I read many years ago by Scott Hafemann:

The Sabbath signifies something fundamental about God's relationship to his people: it is a weekly bulletin that God, as Creator of the world, not only can but also will meet Israel's needs, because she is his chosen people. God called Israel to keep the Sabbath because, of all the peoples of the world, God created Israel to be his people. The Sabbath thus stood firm as a divinely established memorial to the covenant commitment God had made to his people. For her part, Israel was to "rest on the Sabbath" as a reminder of what she should do every day in relationship to the Creator who is committed to be her Provider: "call upon him" to meet her needs. God "keeps the Sabbath" by working for his people; his people "keep the Sabbath" by trusting him to do so.

(p. 49, The God of Promise and the Life of Faith)

Have you ever thought that all your service may actually be an expression of unbelief? Mine often is. Sadly often my rest is just laziness though. Can't get away from sin!

Monday, April 20, 2009

Abstracting doctrine

As I read systematics I increasingly find that so much that contemporary biblical studies thinks it is 'discovering' in the bible was actually being batted around by systematic theologians a generation before. I'm not sure whether I should find this disturbing or not.

Anyway, a recent example of this was reading TF Torrance criticising the Reformed Catechisms:

None of them really gives us Christian doctrine in its inseparable relation to the whole history of redemption in Israel, to the whole life of the historical Jesus Christ, and to the Baptism of the Spirit at Pentecost and the founding of the Christian Church. Certain great moments of the Heilsgeshichte are singled out, the creation and fall of man, the giving of the Law, the birth of Jesus, His crucifixion and resurrection and ascension, but Christian doctrine cannot be abstracted from the whole course of God's intervention in Israel, and the whole course of teh life work of Christ, without alteration and misunderstanding.

(p.xx, The School of Faith)

I think I need to hear that again and again. I too often go abstract. I can almost hear Tom Wright in my head sometimes when I read Romans these days. He would agree passionately with Torrance's comment written in 1959!

The world judged by the Mosaic law

Now we know that whatever the law says it speaks to those who are under the law, so that every mouth may be stopped, and the whole world may be held accountable to God. (Romans 3:19)

There are two possible interpretations of how Paul comes to that verse as far as I can see (this may again be due to my lack of research).

  1. Having established that Gentiles are condemned by natural law (as is clear by the blatant sinning of Gentiles displayed Romans 1) Paul then had to show that the religious Jews are also sinners. This he does in Romans 2-3:18. Therefore having dealt with both he can conclude that the whole world is sinful because everyone is either Gentile or Jew.
  2. The law condemns Israel. Israel represents the world as a priestly and kingly nation. Therefore the rest of the world is condemned 'in Israel'.

I think 2. is the right interpretation. Therefore the whole world is judged by the same law but in an order - the Jew first, and then the Greek.

This post parallels my last in being a reflection of my continuing feeble attempts to understand Romans. I would love to hear criticism. I should also do more reading, but I am so constrained by time. Out of ignorance I make wild stabs hoping over time and continual reading something sticks.

God's righteous judgment is revealed

I have a theory, which could probably be shot down by someone who knows Greek and has read more books than me. Nevertheless I will be bold and share it.

I think the 'Righteousness of God' in Romans means something like 'God's righteous judgment' (ala Romans 2:5). I think this combines many of the strengths of the other interpretations being debated.

In what sense then is the the righteousness of God revealed? I think it is revealed in three ways (the colours tie into the senses in which God's righteous judgment is revealed in Romans 1-3 in the quotations below):

  1. Present/visible
  2. Future/final
  3. In Christ's death and resurrection

When reading the OT you often feel that Israel is not the only party to the covenant who fails to keep to it. God says do this and you will live, fail to do this and you will destroyed (Deuteronomy 28; Galatians 3:10-12). However, Israel never fails to fail and yet God does not destroy them. He does reveal the righteous judgment and is not mocked but he always only partially reveals his judgment. This leads to Habakkuk, the Psalmists, Qoheleth, Job etc to be endlessly confused. Where is God's judgment?

Naturally this leads to a hope for a final judgment in which the law is fulfilled and God shows that he is righteous in judgment by punishing the wicked and acquitting the righteous (c.f. Leviticus 19:15; Deuteronomy 1:16).

Both of these judgments are according to the law, one is just the completion of the other. Paul in Romans 1 explains how God has been judging by 'giving over' people to their sinful desires. In Romans 2 he reminds everyone that this is only a partial judgment and there will be a final judgment at which everyone will be fully judged. But the law has shown (in its execution as well as its legislation) that all will be judged unfavourably on that day.

Thankfully though the final judgment has been brought forward and revealed for us in Jesus Christ. The curse of the law has been exhausted and displayed early in the public death of Jesus Christ. The law then has been fulfilled (fully executed) but apart from itself (in that it wasn't executed on who it was meant to be executed). But the judgment on Christ is two-fold: of condemnation in the cross; but also of justification in the resurrection. If we don't accept that condemnation as ours but instead look forward to being judged by ourselves, then we will not receive that justification which is joined to it.

Sorry that is not very polished, but I'm lacking in time. And although it is a conclusion that has been gradually forming in my mind it is still fairly nebulous and I'm aware that I probably need to make some serious changes. But I thought it was time I threw it out there for some comment.

For I am not ashamed of the gospel, for it is the power of God for salvation to everyone who believes, to the Jew first and also to the Greek. For in it the righteousness of God is revealed from faith for faith, as it is written, "The righteous shall live by faith."

For the wrath of God is revealed from heaven against all ungodliness and unrighteousness of men, who by their unrighteousness suppress the truth. [...]

Therefore God gave them up in the lusts of their hearts to impurity [...]

For this reason God gave them up to dishonourable passions [...]

And since they did not see fit to acknowledge God, God gave them up to a debased mind to do what ought not to be done [...]

We know that the judgment of God rightly falls on those who practice such things. Do you suppose, O man—you who judge those who practice such things and yet do them yourself—that you will escape the judgment of God? [...] you are storing up wrath for yourself on the day of wrath when God's righteous judgment will be revealed.

He will render to each one according to his works: to those who by patience in well-doing seek for glory and honor and immortality, he will give eternal life; but for those who are self-seeking and do not obey the truth, but obey unrighteousness, there will be wrath and fury. There will be tribulation and distress for every human being who does evil, the Jew first and also the Greek, but glory and honor and peace for everyone who does good, the Jew first and also the Greek [...]

on that day when, according to my gospel, God judges the secrets of men by Christ Jesus [...]

But now the righteousness of God has been manifested apart from the law, although the Law and the Prophets bear witness to it— the righteousness of God through faith in Jesus Christ for all who believe. For there is no distinction: for all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God, and are justified by his grace as a gift, through the redemption that is in Christ Jesus, whom God put forward as a propitiation by his blood, to be received by faith. This was to show God's righteousness, because in his divine forbearance he had passed over former sins. It was to show his righteousness at the present time, so that he might be just and the justifier of the one who has faith in Jesus.

Animals that could be sacrificed in the OT

Peter Leithart (who is on good form at the moment) observes:

Biblical sacrifices were confined to clean animals, and, more specifically, to domesticated clean animals. No wild animal ever ascended to Yahweh's altar?

What does it say about Israel that it offered only domesticated animals? What does it say that Israel detached the cult from the hunt?

I don't know the answer to that question although I have ideas. These sort of questions are going round my head a lot while reading Leviticus at the moment. Would birds count as domesticated animals though?

One passage that includes all the animals that could be sacrificed in a slightly different context is Genesis 15:8-10 when God makes a covenant with Abram:

But he said, "O Lord God, how am I to know that I shall possess it?" He said to him, "Bring me a heifer three years old, a female goat three years old, a ram three years old, a turtledove, and a young pigeon." And he brought him all these, cut them in half, and laid each half over against the other. But he did not cut the birds in half.

Of course there were non-animal offerings too (e.g. grain and wine) but I think that only cultivated crops were offered. A particularly interesting omission is fish.

Saturday, April 18, 2009

Women in the Old Testament

Bruce Waltke in his lectures on Judges is asked:

  • Please comment on the author's attitude to women in the book of judges.

This is his response.

In a word I would say: very, very favourably. In fact the whole Deuteronomist is very favourable to women.

Who do you know better, Deborah or Lappidoth? Deborah. You don't even know who Lappidoth is. That's her husband [Judges 4:4].

Who killed Sisera? Jael [Judges 4:21].

Who killed the wicked Abimelech? A woman of theives [Judges 9:38].

Whom did I say was smarter, Manoah or his wife? Who had the instruction to raise the boy, Manoah or his wife? His wife [Judges 13].

Who is greater Hannah or Elkanah, in the book of Samuel? Obviously Hannah.

Who is greater Abigail or Nabal? Abigail.

You see what I am driving at? This whole idea that the Old Testament puts women down is rubbish.

And that was just what he was able to rattle off from the top of his head. More could be added.

Monday, April 13, 2009

Luther recommends...

These are books that Luther himself recommends your read:

'by 1537, when he wrote to Wolfgang Capito that along with his catechism the treatment of bound choice was his best work: "none of my works is worth anything except" the catechism and De servo arbitrio [The Bondage of the Will], he said.' (p. 15, Robert Kolb, Bound Choice, Election and Wittenberg Theological Method)

'Luther was extremely critical when it came to judging the value of his own books. The commentary on the Epistle to the Galatians (1531-35), the exposition of the Book of Deuteronomy (1523), and his sermons on four chapters of the Gospel of John (1528-29) he thought worth preserving because they were his only works really to contain theological teachings. He found the rest of his writings interesting solely from a historical point of view' (p. 168, Heiko Oberman, Luther: Man between God and the Devil).

'[Erasmus' arguments] have been refuted already so often by me, and beaten down and completely pulverized in Philip Melanchthon's Commonplaces [Loci Communes] - an unanswerable little book which in my judgment deserves not only to be immortalized but even canonized.' (p.102, Martin Luther, Introduction to The Bondage of the Will in Luther and Erasumus: Free Will and Salvation)

'It is a result of God's providence that the writings of Cato and Aesop have remained in the schools, for both are significant books. Cato contains the most useful sayings and precepts. Aesop contains the most delightful stories and descriptions. Moral teachings, if offered to young people, will contribute much to their edification. In short, next to the Bible, the writings of Cato and Aesop are in my opinion the best' (pp. 210–211, Martin Luther, "Table Talk Recorded by Anthony Lauterbach and Jerome Weller, 1536-1537" in Luther's Works, Volume 54: Table Talk, HT Tony Reinke)

These are books that Joachim Mörlin (1514-1571), the prominent early Lutheran theologian, and former student of Luther, suggested you read:

"Mörlin counseled beginning with the Small Catechism, for its three parts—law, gospel, and the table of responsibilities in the callings of daily life—summarize the entire Word of God. From the Small Catechism the reader should move to the Large Catechism and then to those works of Luther which summarize basic Christian teaching: the Schwabach Articles, the Confession Concerning Christ's Supper (1528), the Smalcald Articles, the Instruction for Visitors (1528), and the Augsburg Confession and its Apology, which Mörlin, like many of his contemporaries, counted among Luther's works as well as Melanchthon's. For learning the proper distinction of law and gospel the reader should turn to the Galatians commentary of 1535. Mörlin commended On the Last Words of David for its treatment of the 2nd article of the Creed, and On the Councils and the Church and Against Hanswurst for their treatment of the 3rd article. The Genesis commentary would summarize and complete the study of Luther's thought...

...The works of the earlier Luther, particularly the great trilogy of 1520—The Freedom of the Christian, The Babylonian Captivity of the Church, and The Open Letter to the German Nobility—were not on the lists, although they do appear on most such lists today."

(pp. 192-193, Robert Kolb, Martin Luther as Prophet, Teacher, and Hero, HT Benjamin Mayes)

My real history

when we repeat the words, "I believe," which introduce the Creed, we affirm our participation in that history and we confess that we are figures drawn into involvement in that history. The history of Jesus Christ, precisely, that is my history! It is closer to me than the various events of my own life.

(p. 83, Karl Barth, The Faith of the Church)

Bruce Waltke had something similar to say as he embarks on a lecture series on Judges:

To a large extent your definition of yourself is your memory ... history is memory. It is our memory. Every sociological community has both a memory and a destiny for its own self-identification. Now there is something more important than your memory, and that is your spiritual commitment.... You and I have made a spiritual commitment to Jesus Christ. This memory of the Old Testament, is his memory. It shaped him. And when we were baptised into Christ we became Abraham's seed, and this whole history is our history. So this is your history you are going to be learning. It is skeletons in the closet for the most part; but it is a tremendous testimony to God's grace. And I am suggesting therefore to you that as a result of this course, and through this gift of memory, you will know yourself better as a Christian

(MP3 lecture, A01, Course Introduction, Light from the Dark Ages: An Exposition on Judges and Ruth)

Karl Barth points us to where we can have hope. If we look at ourselves and our own lives we often see little to be hopeful about. Death appears the end, and a justified end of a short brutish life. But if Jesus' history is ours then his resurrection and justification is ours too.

But even then you may have a nagging doubt. I may identify with Jesus, but if Jesus doesn't identify with me then the union on which all our hope rests breaks down. However, when Jesus makes Israel's history his own, and identifies with the representatives of humanity who again and again went away from him and 'did what was right in [their] own eyes' (Judges 17:6; 21:25), then our hope is a certain one.

Mike Reeves MP3s

Mike Reeves is the Theological Advisor for UCCF. Previously he was an associate minister at All Souls Church, Langham Place, London. He holds a doctorate in systematic theology from King's College, London. He has written The Unquenchable Flame: Introducing the Reformation and The Breeze of the Centuries: Introducing great theologians - From the Apostolic Fathers to Aquinas, On Giants' Shoulders: Introducing great theologians - From Luther to Barth, and contributed to Should Christians Embrace Evolution?.

There are also some duplicates and clips on the Gospel Coalition site as well as the Theology Network site.

Please let me know of any that I've missed and I'll try and keep it up-to-date. I'm sorry that there is little order to the list.

Monday, April 06, 2009

Freedom!

Alister McGrath believes that Atheism as a living idea lived 200 years. He argues it was born in 1789 with the Storming of the Bastille and died in 1989 with the fall of the Berlin Wall. What gave Atheism strength and life was the experience of the church as oppressive, and what killed it was the experience that Atheist institutions were no different.

That the church should be an enemy of freedom should shock us when we read the bible and discover that freedom is a important description of our salvation. In the Exodus we see literal freedom from slavery, and in the New Testament we learn of our freedom from sin and the law.

But when Christians say they are free who are they kidding? To many they seem to have willingly restricted their freedom. When we think of freedom we understand it as freedom-to-do-this-or-that. I have heard Christians sometimes uncritically take over the same understanding and so when they read that we are free from sin, they read that as we are free to sin or not to sin, where as previously we could only sin.

But if that is our understanding of freedom how can we say that another fall is impossible in the New Creation? Even more importantly how can we say God is free, when we say he cannot sin?

I have recently heard/read John Stott and Karl Barth both address freedom. They both define it positively, and both start from God's freedom and work out human freedom from that.

Karl Barth first of all, doing what he does best, starting from God:

God's freedom is not merely unlimited possibility or formal majesty and omnipotence, that is to say empty, naked sovereignty. Nor is this true of the God-given freedom of man. If we so misinterpret human freedom, it irreconcilably clashes with divine freedom and becomes the false freedom of sin, reducing man to a prisoner. God Himself, if conceived of as unconditioned power would be a demon and as such His own prisoner. In the light of His revelation, God is free in word and deed; He is the source and measure of all freedom, insofar as He is the Lord, choosing and determining Himself first of all. In His own freedom, as the source of human freedom, God above all willed and determined Himself to be the Father and the Son in the unity of the Spirit.

(p. 67, The Humanity of God)

From this foundational understanding of freedom as defined by God, Barth is 'bold to say' four things about human freedom:

(1) Human freedom as a gift of God does not allow for any vague choices between various possibilities....

(2) Human freedom is not realised in the solitary detachment of an individual in isolation from men. God is a se (for Himself), but He is pro nobis (for us). For us!...

(3) Human freedom is only secondarily freedom from limitations and threats. Primarily it is freedom for.

(4) Human freedom is not to be understood as freedom to assert, to preserve, to justify and save oneself. God is primarily free for; the Father is free for the Son, the Son for the Father in the unity of the Spirit. The one God is free for man as his Creator, as the Lord of the covenant, as the beginner and perfecter of his history, his Heilsgeschichte. God says "Yes." Only once this "Yes" is said, He also says "No." Thereby he reveals Himself to be free from all that is alien and hostile to His nature.

(italics original, pp.74-75, ibid)

I cannot help wondering whether John Stott had read this when a few years later he gave some addresses on freedom and said:

Christian freedom is fundamentally positive and not negative as a concept. That is to say, it has to be defined in terms of what we are free for, not in terms of what we are free from. True freedom is freedom to be one's true self. God alone, the Creator, enjoys perfect freedom, because he alone is invariably himself; he never denies himself. God's creatures are free only when they fulfil their Creator's purpose for them ....this Christian freedom (freedom for God as his children) presupposes freedom from all those tyrannies which prevent us from being what God made us and meant us to be.

(from MP3 address, "Freedom ... From the opinions of men", 1 Jan 1971)

Stott is particularly good at analysing how all the contemporary calls for freedom are calls for freedom for something, even when they are presented as being freedom from something. Calls for freedom from foreign colonial power was a call for freedom for nationhood. Calls for free press were calls for truth to be published without restriction. He quotes Malcolm X in his autobiography who calls for a free society in which black people would be free to be who they were - human beings:

Human rights! Respect as human beings! That’s what America's black masses want. That's the problem. The black masses want not to be shrunk from as though they are plague-ridden. They want not to be walled up in slums, in the ghettoes, like animals. They want to live in an open, free society where they can walk with their heads up, like men, like women!

Let's pray for the church to be seen as a place of freedom, and celebrate ourselves the freedom that we have to serve one another and worship God (not considering these things as burdens). After all, as Barth summarises it 'freedom is being joyful.'

Sunday, April 05, 2009

Luther and Paul on experience

Luther refers to six things that makes a person a theologian, one of which is experience (p.17, Oswald Bayer, Martin Luther's Theology: A Contemporary Interpretation).

When Luther refers to "experience", he does not refer primarily to an actio but to a passio, not primarily to the experiences that I am in charge of, but in connection with that which I suffer. It is - to take it to the highest level - the experience that is mine in the agonizing struggle [Anfechtung] with the Word of God. This is the real point of Luther's famous statement: "sola experientia facit theologum" [only experience makes a theologian], which is admittedly most generally applied incorrectly, since it is not experience as such that makes one a theologian, but experience with the Holy Scripture.

(italics original, pp.21-22, ibid)

I read that yesterday and today we read Romans 15:4 in church:

whatever was written in former days was written for our instruction, that through endurance and through the encouragement of the Scriptures we might have hope.

Slightly different but connected. It reminds me of this John Newton hymn though.

Friday, April 03, 2009

Should we expect Christians to live differently?

Luther said that "Life is as evil among us as among the papists" (p. 57, Heiko Oberman, Luther: Man between God and the Devil).

Tim Keller who is deeply influenced by Luther's radical doctrine of grace often says the same kind of thing. e.g:

It is often the case that people whose lives have been harder and who are "lower on the character scale" are more likely to recognize their need for God and turn to Christianity. So we should expect that many Christians' lives would not compare well to those of the nonreligious (just as the health of people in the hospital is comparatively worse that people visiting museums).

(p.54, Reason for God)

In a similar vein Alister McGrath says that he sometimes would respond to comments that "Christianity cannot be true because I know X and he is a horrible person" by saying "just imagine how much more horrible X would be if he wasn't a Christian".

I don't quite understand how to hold this together with the teaching of 1 John and the like. I often feel the NT does lead us to expect that Christian's lives should compare well with non-Christians. But maybe my trouble is I'm confusing 'should' with 'will' instead of 'ought to'.

I 'should' read Luther on 1 John, but unfortunately it involves £20 outlay.

What we conquer are the small things

What we conquer are the small things,
and victory itself makes us small.
The Eternal and Un-commmon
does not want to be shaped by us.
This is the Angel who to the wrestlers
of the Old Testament appeared:
when the sinews of his adversaries
in the battle stretch metallically
he feels them under his fingers
like the strings of profound melodies.

Who was overcome by this Angel
who has oft from battle abstained,
he walks justified, upright
and proud out of that hard hand,
which as if molding, gently encloses him.
Victories are not inviting to him.
His gain is to be profoundly vanquished
by ever greater things.

(p. 318, Reiner Maria Rilke, quoted in Hieke A. Oberman, Luther: Man between God and the Devil)

Genesis 32 is a difficult passage for me to understand. I'm not sure that this German poem is correct as an interpretation of the passage, but nevertheless it contains some wonderfully expressed truth.