Sunday, December 31, 2023

Reading Psalms

 

Reading the Psalms

 

Did you know that Psalms is the most quoted Old Testament book in the New Testament? In Psalms we see the Incarnation, the Crucifixion, and the Resurrection. In Psalms we wrestle with how God’s justice is worked out in the world and in our lives, we confront good and evil, joy and sorrow, grief and joy, friends and enemies, ignorance and understanding.

 

In Psalms we can unashamedly confront raw emotion, from the depths of hell to the heights of heaven – there is no religious pretension in Psalms, there is even the abrupt dead end of Psalm 88.  Have you ever faced a dead end in your life?

 

In Psalms, the Holy Spirit invites us to hear the Father speaking to the Son and the Son responding to the Father. In Psalms we see “the Israel of God” (Gal. 6:16) from the Creation to the Body of Christ, from eternity past to eternity future.

 

The Psalms invite us into the cosmic dance of the Trinity, not as observers but as participants. As Peter writes, we “become partakers of the divine nature” (2 Peter 1:4).

 

In Psalms we hear the Voice of the Son, sometimes this is the Voice of the Head of the Body and sometimes it is the Voice of the Body and sometimes, as Augustine points out, we can’t distinguish between the two.  (If this sounds like a mystery, it is.)

 

What I am trying to say is that there is more to Psalms than we think there is – and saints for ages have known this, which is why Psalms has been the Voice of the Church since Moses and Miriam and Aaron sang of God’s deliverance at the Red Sea. (How have we come to lose our Voice?)

And so I want to encourage us to read a psalm each day, beginning with Psalm One and working through the book, and then beginning again at Psalm One, and so forth and so on for the rest of our lives. What we see and hear will expand and develop and grow and assume texture and nuance and fabric and point and counterpoint – and we will see and hear Jesus Christ coming to us, speaking to us, speaking through us – drawing us onward and upward into koinonia with the Trinity and the Communion of Saints.

 

If this sounds like a mystery…it is.

 

Some observations:

 

As you become familiar with Psalms you will see that there are different themes in different sections – this is part of the discovery process.

 

When I read about “enemies” I tend to think of the enemies of my own soul – my selfishness for example. However, let us not be so foolish as to think that there are not evil people and movements in the world, there most certainly are. There is unspeakable evil in the world working in and through people who have given themselves over to darkness – Psalms gives us an outlet for praying about these things, for giving them into the hands of God and trusting Him to resolve all in His time and in His Way. Psalms teaches us to be God’s Light in darkness, His hope in the midst of despair, agents of His deliverance, in Christ, for those in captivity.

 

I encourage us to read Psalms aloud – reading silently is a relatively recent historical practice, when we read aloud we hear and “see” the words – it can be like looking into a View Master…words assume a depth we didn’t perceive.

 

Why am I so excited about Psalms? Because I am excited about Jesus Christ, and He comes to us again and again and again in the Psalms.

 

Jesus says to us, “Come and you will see.” (John 1:39).

 

And as Philip says to Nathanael, I say to you in all love, “Come and see.” (John 1:46).

 

May you have a blessed 2024 in our Lord Jesus Christ.

 

Saturday, December 30, 2023

Reading the Old Testament in 2024

 

Reading the Old Testament

 

Good morning beloved,

 

In my reflection on reading the NT I have two immediate goals, to encourage us to read one NT chapter per day, which will lead us to read the entire NT during the coming year.

 

In today’s reflection I also have two goals, to encourage us to read one OT chapter each day, which will expose us to the entire OT – since there are 929 chapters in the OT, reading one chapter per day will not result in reading the entire OT in a year, but it is a start for those of us who need either a start or who need to renew our relationship with the Word.

 

In a third reflection, which I will hopefully send either later today or tomorrow, I will encourage us to read one Psalm each day throughout the year, indeed, for the rest of our lives.

 

Again, there are many Bible reading schedules online, such as those found at the American Bible Society and you may find a comprehensive one that appeals to you. The only way to know the Bible is to read the Bible, it is not to read about the Bible. Yes, there are resources to help us think about what we are reading, and the quality and type of resources are varied, but if we aren’t going to read the Bible we aren’t going to know the Bible. Also, as a reminder, this isn’t about information or data, it is about a relationship with Jesus Christ and our Father (and with one another) in the Holy Spirit.

 

There are 39 books in what we call the Old Testament, filled with names and places and people who are not only not familiar to most of us, but we also can’t even pronounce many of them. As for pronunciation, do the best you can, the people are all dead and won’t care.

 

When I think about the OT (in our current context), I don’t think about 39 books, I rather think of 5 sections – this is helpful to me because 5 of anything is easier to think about than 39. In terms of a mansion, I don’t think in terms of 39 rooms but rather of 5 wings or sections or corridors. In my own OT reading I want to make sure that I am being refreshed in all 5 wings throughout the year – that is, whether I actually read the entire OT in a given year I want to ensure that I am reading within each genre during the year (and please understand that my own approach to reading has varied over the years – but the key is that it has been consistent, it has been daily – I want to meet Jesus Christ in His Word in the fabric of my life).

 

I am not a proponent of reading the Bible straight through from beginning to end. This means that I am not a proponent of reading the OT from Genesis straight through to Malachi. I am not opposed to such straight through reading, it’s just that I like to mix things up and I think varying the genre we are reading is refreshing. Plus, as a whole, the OT is not written in chronological order – parts of it are and parts of it are not – on the other hand, the OT is very much integrated, it forms a coherent whole – which means that while I am reading Malachi that I am seeing its relationship with Leviticus and 1 Kings. (The more familiar with the Bible we become the more we’ll see that in reading one Biblical book we are reading all the Biblical books – but this is something you need to experience yourself).

 

Here are the 5 wings of the mansion: The Books of Moses, History, Poetry, the Major Prophets, the Minor Prophets (“minor” because their books are not as long as those of the “major” prophets). As I said, thinking about 5 is easier than thinking about 39.

 

The Books of Moses are the first 5 books of the Bible. The books which give us the story of the history of Israel and Judah are Joshua – Esther. The books of poetry (though there is poetry elsewhere in the OT) are Job – Song of Solomon. The Major Prophets are Isaiah – Daniel. The Minor Prophets are Hosea – Malachi.

 

Whatever your Bible reading plan may be, I suggest that it include each of these sections. For reading one OT chapter a day in 2024, here is a suggestion:

 

Genesis: this is foundational on many fronts, plus, there is nothing quite like the story of Joseph – a picture of Jesus in many ways. O yes, if you want to glance through the genealogies rather than deeply ponder each name, I think you will be okay. There are treasures in the genealogies to be sure, but perhaps it’s best to pan for gold another time so as not to get bogged down.

 

1 & 2 Samuel: This gives the foundation of Israel’s monarchy, centered about King David – as with Genesis, there are many foundational elements here that are woven throughout the Bible.

 

Job: I make a point of reading and pondering Job at least once each year. Not only is suffering a mystery which we will never fully understand this side of heaven, but the book of Job is a reminder of how foolish our (or at least mine) thinking can be and of the danger of justifying ourselves.

 

Jeremiah: Here we see our challenges in living for Christ in a hostile cultural and religious environment. We also see challenges in vocational ministry and in other forms of church leadership – will we be faithful to Christ, or will we cave into what the crowd wants? (2 Tim. 4:1 – 5). Will we align ourselves with the Kingdom of God or with nationalism and political agendas? I make certain that I work through Jeremiah every year, as well as his book of Lamentations (which I’ve read multiple times in 2023 – it is so contemporary!).

 

Hosea – Malachi (the Minor Prophets): I’ve included all of the Minor Prophets in my suggested reading. They span a broad spectrum of time and location. Some of these prophets were in the Northern Kingdom of Israel, some in the Southern Kingdom of Judah, and some spoke specifically to other nations (Jonah, Nahum, and Obadiah). Three of these prophets, Haggai, Zechariah, and Malachi, served during the Restoration after the Babylonian Captivity. Some will be easier to read than others, but don’t we want to put more weight on the bar if we are going to grow?

 

It's a shame we don’t live in these prophets because they have much to say to us about Jesus Christ and about our own life situations – as individuals, as families, as congregations, and even as nations. The Bible is more than history, it is God speaking to us and into our world today in and through Jesus Christ.

 

If nothing else, once you’ve read the Minor Prophets you will have done something few others have done…including no doubt many in vocational ministry.

 

When you get to Haggai ask yourself, “Is this a picture of me and my church? Are we looking after ourselves or are we putting the Kingdom of God and His Temple before our own agendas?”

 

Exodus, chapters 1 – 24: Here is the foundational narrative of Moses, the Exodus from Egypt, and the forming of the Hebrews into the entity of Israel – a people called to worship and serve God and serve the peoples of the earth.

 

Proverbs: This book of wisdom has many treasures, and Jesus appears throughout it if we have eyes to see Him…for let’s recall that in Him is all wisdom and knowledge (Col. 2:1 – 3).

 

Judges: This takes us back to the time before the Monarchy – a time of anarchy, and yet in the midst of anarchy we see God revealing Himself to men and women and groups of people. Can we see our own society mirror the lawlessness of the book of Judges, a time when “everyone did what was right in his own eyes”? Will you and I stand with the faithful minority and seek to be faithful witnesses to Jesus Christ, or will we go along to get along and sell our souls?

 

Well, the above are simply some suggestions that will take you through 2024 by reading one chapter a day. Hopefully we will want to “read the rest of the story” – but we need to begin somewhere and somehow.

 

Much love,

 

Bob

 

 

Friday, December 29, 2023

Reading the Bible

 

Good morning beloved,

 

Based on responses I received yesterday, below is a suggested order for reading the New Testament in 2024. If we read one chapter each day we will have read the entire NT by the end of September (if memory serves me well).

There are numerous Bible reading plans available online, such as can be found at the American Bible Society. The important thing is to read the Bible – to get started and to continue with it. After all, if we aren’t practicing the basics we have nothing upon which to build. This is like learning certain steps in dance class, or certain plays in football or basketball, or learning the scales (and practicing them!) in playing music.

The suggested order is meant to give us exposure to different elements of the NT throughout the year, for example you will see that the Gospels are spread out every 2 – 3 months. You might also note that we usually have short books and then longer books, that is by design.

If you are already reading the entire NT throughout the year, wonderful! But if not, I hope you’ll please give this (or something similar) a try.

I will try to send something out about the Old Testament tomorrow or Sunday.

 

Much love,

 

Bob

 

 

New Testament – Suggested Reading Order

Mark

James

Philippians

Romans

Acts

1 Peter

Matthew

1 Thessalonians

2 Thessalonians

1 Corinthians

Titus

1 John

2 John

3 John

2 Corinthians

1 Timothy

John

2 Timothy

Philemon

Galatians

Hebrews

2 Peter

Jude

Revelation

Ephesians

Colossians

Luke

Thursday, December 28, 2023

Reading the Bible in 2024

 


This is my annual reflection on reading the Bible in the coming year. I feel somewhat like Peter when he wrote, “I consider it right, as long as I am in this earthly dwelling, to stir you up by way of reminder…” (2 Pt. 1:13).

 

The nature of the Bible is a mystery to me, a Divine mystery. I cannot explain the dynamics of reading the Bible in the Holy Spirit, but I can describe the dynamics in some measure. This mystery is akin to what Jesus says in John 3:8, “The wind blows where it wishes and you hear the sound of it, but do not know where it comes from and where it is going; so is everyone who is born of the Spirit.”

 

The Scriptures, rightly received, are the breath of life in Jesus Christ. I say, “rightly received” because the Bible is more than data, it is more than information, it is more than “basic instructions before leaving earth,” it is more than an “owner’s manual.” The Bible is so much more than an interpreter of current events – and it is tragic when we view the Bible in any of the foregoing manners.

 

Why is it tragic?

 

Because the Bible, rightly received, reveals Jesus Christ, His Father and our Father, and the blessed Holy Spirit. God reveals Himself through the Scriptures and draws us into the Holy Trinity; He draws us as individuals, as husbands and wives, as families, and as His People. We simply cannot see and understand the Scriptures without the Holy Spirit working within us – see 1 Corinthians 1:17 – 2:16.

 

Just as the scribes and Pharisees knew the Bible of their time (what we term the Old Testament) and yet did not know Jesus, so the professing church today claims to know the Bible but often does not actually know Jesus Christ. Those professing churches that claim to adhere to the Bible would do well to keep what Jesus says in John 5:39 - 40 before them:

 

“You search the Scriptures because you think that in them you have eternal life; it is these that testify about Me; and you are unwilling to come to Me so that you may have life.”

 

I am reminded of the concept of having perceived values and actual values. Perceived values are what we think and say we value; actual values are what we actually do.

 

I have been reading the Bible for almost 60 years now and it is more exciting to me than ever for I am seeing Jesus more clearly than ever – His Light shines brighter and brighter through His Word as His Presence fills me and envelopes me. It breaks my heart that the professing church has so many substitutes for Jesus and the Bible, it just about crushes my soul that we are so easily distracted and entertained with high-gloss cheap Christianity with its therapeutic focus on our wants and needs and desires rather than on Jesus Christ, the Lamb of God.

 

The first line of Bonhoeffer’s Discipleship is, “Cheap grace is the mortal enemy of our church. Our struggle today is for costly grace.” Later in the chapter Bonhoeffer writes:

 

“Cheap grace is preaching forgiveness without repentance; it is baptism without the discipline of community; it is the Lord’s Super without confession of sin; it is absolution without personal confession. Cheap grace is grace without discipleship, grace without the cross, grace without the living, incarnate Jesus Christ.” (Italics mine).

 

And I suppose I should say that reading a verse for each day, or reading a devotional book each day, is not the same as reading the Bible – the Scriptures are written to reveal Jesus Christ and to transform us into His image, the patterns and structure of what we read matters, the connected images matter, reading the Bible as a unity matters.

 

Can we cook food on a grill that only has one piece of charcoal? Can we cook food on a grill that has many charcoal brickettes if those brickettes are not close together, if they are not touching? Is it not foolish to think that the fire of God’s Word will live within us if we only put one piece of charcoal on the altar of our hearts each day? One verse today, maybe a short passage tomorrow, then another verse or two the following day?

 

What has happened to us? How have we come to live in this opium den of enculturated slumber?

 

The world needs us to be the incarnation of the Word, the world needs His Word to live within us and through us – and we, as the Body of Christ, need this from one another.

 

It is nice to celebrate Advent, but if the Incarnation is not to continue within us – as Jesus clearly taught (see John chapters 13 – 17) - then why celebrate Christmas? The Word of God is continuing to be made flesh in those who will receive Jesus Christ coming to them through His Word.

 

Will you live for Jesus today? Will you live in His Word?

 

Mark 8:34 – 38; 12:28 – 34; Psalm 1; Psalm 2; Psalm 19.

Monday, December 18, 2023

The Rock of My Refuge (6)

 

 

“But Yahweh has been my stronghold, and my God the rock of my refuge.” Psalm 94:22.

 

What can we see in the immediate context of our verse?

 

Here are the two verses that precede it:

 

“Can a throne of destruction be allied with You, one which devises mischief by decree? They band themselves together against the life of the righteous and condemn the innocent to death.”

 

Here is the verse that follows our verse, and which concludes Psalm 94:

 

“He has brought back their wickedness upon them and will destroy them in their evil; Yahweh our God will destroy them.”

 

There are three explicit ideas in this passage, and others that we can extrapolate from them – I am sure that there are more than I can see and share, hopefully you can complement them with what you also see…is this not the nature of God’s Word?

 

1.    We ought not to ally ourselves with powers of destruction – no matter how attractive they may be, no matter how pragmatic they may appear.

 

2.    The world is in rebellion against God and is intent on destroying those who belong to Him. Can we see the crucifixion of Jesus Christ in Psalm 94:21?

 

3.    God will destroy the wicked – their own wickedness will consume them.

 

In the midst of the foregoing, those who belong to Christ can say with the Son of God, “But Yahweh has been my stronghold, and my God the rock of my refuge.” (See also Psalm 71:1 – 3, especially the idea that God is our “rock of habitation”.)

 

Our hearts and minds, our souls, can either live in the world or we can live within our Stronghold, our Rock of Refuge. We can either take our ideals and images from the world, or we can participate in the Image of God, Jesus Christ, and convey His image to the world as we are given grace. We can either live as if the world accurately portrays ultimate reality, or we can live with God being our present and enduring Reality.

 

Are we convinced, as Peter was, that Jesus Christ has “the words of eternal life”? (John 6:68).

 

Is Jesus Christ our Rock of Habitation? Are we living within Him?

 

As we conclude our reflections in Psalm 94, I want to encourage us to live in the Psalms, to ponder at least one Psalm each day – for in Psalms we will encounter the depth and length and height and breath of the Divine – human relationship and experience. In Psalms we will see Christ and His Body. In Psalms we will see teaching, such as that on theodicy, that will partner with us through the vicissitudes of life. In Psalms we can learn to see life as it really is, in the light of ultimate reality.

 

In Psalms we can discover the Voice of Christ, the Voice of His Body, and our own voices as we are drawn into the Trinity, and into koinonia with one another – drawn into the communion of the saints.

 

Will you accept your Father’s invitation to live with Him and the Son and the Spirit in Psalms?

Friday, December 15, 2023

The Rock of My Refuge (5)

 

 

“But Yahweh has been my stronghold, and my God the rock of my refuge.” Psalm 94:22.

 

Without a Biblical theodicy, without an understanding of the character of God and His ultimate justice and judgment and of our destiny in Christ – we will go crazy, suffer anxiety and depression, and seek to medicate our distress in any number of ways. We may also attempt to become judge and jury ourselves and descend into hypocritical religion, forgetting the longsuffering and mercy of God, forgetting that it is God who causes nations to rise and fall (militarily, politically, economically, morally). In our feeble attempts to “make things right” we may align ourselves with wickedness, thinking that the end justifies the means – forgetting Psalm 94:20:

 

“Can a throne of destruction be allied with You, one which devises mischief by decree?”

 

Our psalmist writes, “When my anxious thoughts multiply within me, Your consolations delight my soul.” Psalm 94:19.

 

While God consoles and comforts us in many ways, the rock of His comfort is found in His self-revelation in His Word. We can trust what our Father says, and if we can’t trust Him then we have no hope whatsoever and life is meaningless – if we are the products of time plus matter plus chance then nothing logically matters in an ultimate sense and a person is of no more ultimate worth than a fly, for we are all headed for nothingness.

 

Regarding the words of God, “They are more desirable than gold, yes, than much fine gold; sweeter also than honey and the drippings of the honeycomb.” (Psalm 19:10).

 

When our trust is in God and His Word, we don’t deny the reality of evil and wickedness and the suffering of those around us, nor do we deny our own pain and suffering – but we do deny its ultimate victory, for we affirm the victory of Jesus Christ on the Cross, and we proclaim His Resurrection. We also absolutely insist that in Him we are resurrected from the dead today – from spiritual death – and that we are raised to new life in Him above the sin and death of the present age and its wickedness (Ephesians 2:1 – 10).

 

As citizens of heaven (Phil. 3:20), we see the ultimate futility of the leaders and governments and systems of this world (Psalm 2, Daniel 2), and the ultimate glory of the Kingdom of God in Christ (Rev. chapters 21 – 22).

 

And so, with our forebearers, we confess that we are looking for a City and Country not of this present age, we confess that we are strangers and pilgrims on this earth – we do this not as an apology, but as a declaration that we are called to greater and higher things in Jesus Christ…as we call others to join us on this ultimate journey (Hebrews 11:13 – 16; 12:18 – 29).

 

“Your statutes are my songs in the house of my pilgrimage.” (Psalm 119:54).

 

Is the Word of God our song? How are responding to Paul’s admonition in Colossians 3:16?

 

“Let the Word of Christ richly dwell within you, with all wisdom teaching and admonishing one another with psalms and hymns and spiritual songs, singing with thankfulness in your hearts to God.”

 

O dear friends, wherever we go we are to be food trucks with the Bread of Life – feeding those around us with Jesus Christ. When we gather together we are to feed one another, when we scatter we are to feed the people of the world.

 

Who are we feeding today?

Saturday, December 9, 2023

The Rock of My Refuge (4)

 

 

“But Yahweh has been my stronghold, and my God the rock of my refuge.” Psalm 94:22.

 

Where are we seeking refuge?

 

Where are we centering our thoughts? What do we talk about? What do we watch and listen to? What do we read? What impresses us? What or who do we emulate? What do we aspire to?

 

The answers to these questions will tell us where we are seeking refuge, they will tell us where we are living.

 

The Apostle John has some stark words for us today, for we seem to be so impressed with success and glitz and glitter – both inside and outside the professing church:

 

“Do not love the world nor the things in the world. If anyone loves the world, the love of the Father is not in him. For all that is in the world, the lust of the flesh and the lust of the eyes and the boastful pride of life, is not from the Father, but is from the world. The world is passing away, and also its lusts; but the one who does the will of God lives forever.” (1 John 2:15 – 17).

 

“We know that we are of God, and that the whole world lies in the power of the evil one.” (1 John 5:19).

 

We want the world when the world is good to us, we don’t want the world when the world is bad to us. Are we not fools? We want to make the world into our image rather than allow ourselves to be transformed into the image of God in Jesus Christ – we trade the temporal for the eternal – isn’t this foolish? We would rather receive the image of the world rather than the image of God – thereby rejecting our eternal glory in Christ…now tell me…isn’t this a peculiar type of insanity?

 

We can either dine at the Master’s table or we can delusionally eat from the slop bucket of the world…a slop bucket dipped into an outhouse. Let us make no mistake, no matter how good the things of the world look – behind the “look” is ugliness and dung – the fragrance of the world always turns to a stench – air freshener is a mask, it is always a mask.

 

All the more puzzling why so many Christians are impressed with the world, all the more tragic why much of the professing church now looks more like the world than the lowly Man of Galilee, the Servant Lord and Savior; the One who came, not to be served, but to serve and to give His life as a ransom for many.

 

Well now, the psalmist sees that the “Yahweh will not abandon His people” and that a Day will come when God’s judgment will be manifested (verses 14 – 15). Indeed, the psalmist sees that while it appears the wicked are prevailing, that a pit is actually being dug for them (verse 13) – in fact, the wicked are digging their own pit, their own violence is consuming them.

 

Throughout the Scriptures we see the motif of God’s enemies consuming themselves – evil feeds upon itself, evil people consume one another, they eat wickedness and wickedness eats them – demonic birds of prey feast upon fools who reject God and seek to desecrate His image.

 

But you see, we really only know this when God’s Word becomes embedded in our souls, when our hearts and minds are anchored in His Word – when He is our Refuge and Stronghold, our Way of Life. What I write may be helpful – but only if it leads you to His Word, to living in His Word and His Word living in you – is He your Rock of Gibraltar? Are we living within Him?  

 

When the psalmist seeks someone to stand up for him, he recognizes that Yahweh is his help, and that God’s lovingkindess is holding him up (verses 16 – 18). Economics will not help us, politics will not help us, the Constitution is not our sacred text (nor any of its amendments!), cotton candy Christianity is not our support, popular (and usually ill-founded) Christian teaching on prophecy is a distraction, particular worship motifs can be poor substitutes, military might is a weak savior – there is no help for the follower of Jesus Christ other than the Person of Jesus Christ in the koinonia of the Trinity and the People of God. If we are to live in Him in eternity, ought we not to live in Him now? If we are to be joined with one another in eternity, ought we not to be joined with one another in Him now?

 

The psalmist asks, “Can a throne of destruction be allied with You, one which devises mischief by decree?” (v. 20). The answer of many professing Christians and their leaders would seem to be “Yes, it can.”

 

How else can we explain the political – religious alliances we see in our own nation? How else can we explain churches (such as the Russian Orthodox Church) endorsing the invasion of other countries? How else can we understand our rejection of our heavenly citizenship? (Phil. 3:20; Heb. 11:13 – 16).

 

How can we be appalled at the wickedness of the world outside the professing church and not be disgusted with the wickedness within the professing church? I’m not talking about other tribes within the church, I’m talking about our own tribes.

 

Who will be identified with Jesus Christ and Him crucified? Who will be determined to know nothing but Him, to have no other message than Him? (1 Cor. 1:17 – 2:5). Who will proclaim and teach that in Jesus Christ “are hidden all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge”? (Col. 2:3).

 

The longer we dwell in a Psalm, in a passage of Scripture, the more we can see in Christ, the clearer our vision becomes. How do we know we are moving in the right direction in Scripture? When we see Christ, when we are drawn to Christ, when our hearts delight in Jesus Christ.

 

How are you seeing Jesus Christ in Psalm 94? How is He coming to you in this psalm?

Saturday, December 2, 2023

The Rock of My Refuge (3)

 


“But Yahweh has been my stronghold, and my God the rock of my refuge.” Psalm 94:22.

 

How does God become our stronghold and the Rock of our refuge?

 

What do you think about the foregoing question? What do you think about its wording?

 

Is it God who “becomes” or is it we who “become”? Yes, I realize this is a manner of speaking, this question of how God becomes our stronghold and rock, but we nevertheless ought to realize that at the heart of the question must be the realization that God is our stronghold and rock precisely because He does not change, He is the same yesterday, today, and forever (Heb. 13:8). God in Christ changes us so that our vision and understanding and character and heart and mind are transformed into His image as we enter into Him and as He enters into us – we live in Him and He lives in us.

 

An element of our transformation is discipline and chastisement as His Word works within us and upon us (Heb. 4:9 – 16).

 

“Blessed is the man whom You chasten, O Yah, and whom You teach out of Your law; that you may grant him relief from the days of adversity, until a pit is dug for the wicked.” (Psalm 94:12 – 13).

 

Let’s consider the context of these two verses. The psalmist is distressed at wickedness and oppression and is calling out to God for justice - an element of God’s response to his prayer is discipline. That is, while the psalmist is looking at the wickedness of others, God is looking at the psalmist and is disciplining him and teaching him out of the Word of God. While God is indeed looking at the wickedness of others, and while God will indeed judge the wicked, God the Father is also looking at His sons and daughters and is disciplining them so that they may be granted “relief from the days of adversity” (Ps. 94:13). As Hebrews 12:4 – 11 teaches us, the Father disciplines His children so that they may “share His holiness” and yield “the peaceful fruit of righteousness.”

 

The psalmist responds to God’s discipline by saying, “Blessed is the man whom You chasten O Yah, and whom You teach out of Your law…” He (the psalmist) is assured that, “…Yahweh will not abandon His people, nor will He forsake His inheritance.”

 

Our Father disciplines us so that we will not be judged with the wicked, He reminds us that there must be no partnership between righteousness and lawlessness, or fellowship between light and darkness; nor can there be agreement between the temple of God (we are that Temple!) and idols (2 Cor. 6:14 – 7:1).

 

The injustice we see in the world must not be found in us. The wickedness of the present age ought not to be found within the Temple of the Living God. It is the mercy of God which disciplines and convicts and transforms His children – and we are called to rest assured that He corrects us because He loves us, and that He “will not abandon His people.” This is all part of the process by which we come to know God as our stronghold and the Rock of our refuge.

 

Even as we recognize wickedness around us, we are called to pray, “Search me, O God, and know my heart; try me and know my anxious thoughts; and see if there be any hurtful way in me, and lead me in the everlasting Way” (Ps. 139:23 – 24).

 

This is akin to realizing that when we pray, “Thy Kingdom come, Thy will be done, on earth as it is in heaven,” that “on earth” ought to begin within my earth – within my heart and mind and soul and body – God’s will and work must begin within me before I look for it in others. Yes, we want God’s will to be done “out there,” but it must begin “in here, in me,” before it begins out there. Am I willing to be the answer to my prayer for His will to be done on earth? Are you?

 

Wickedness can be seductive. Augustine realized that hideous and bloody gladiatorial games had their seduction about them, and while we may recoil at this thought, the truth of Augustine’s observation is borne out with our fascination with violence in its many forms – from sports to video games to television and movies and song lyrics and political rhetoric to news…sadly even within some “Christian” productions. We ought not to be ashamed at being innocent regarding violence and wickedness any more than we should be ashamed at being sober rather than drunk.

 

And let’s remember, we can’t help others if we are drunk.

 

How is our Father’s discipline transforming you into the image of His Son?

Thursday, November 23, 2023

The Rock of My Refuge (2)

 

 

“But Yahweh has been my stronghold, and my God the rock of my refuge.” Psalm 94:22.

 

When most of us think of the Psalms we likely think of prayer and worship and praise; but do we think of sound doctrine and Biblical teaching? The Psalms demonstrate that prayer and worship and praise can (and ought!) to be permeated with Christ and sound doctrine. Public worship ought to instruct as well as inspire. We can learn to see Jesus Christ on every page of Psalms – are we learning to do so? We can also receive sound instruction about God, the Church, the world, and ourselves throughout the Psalms – are we doing so?

 

And here is where having the Psalms as a daily element of our flight plan yields blessings for a lifetime, for we are drawn to Christ and the sound thinking and perspective of His Kingdom.

 

What do we see when we read Ps. 94:22?

 

“But Yahweh has been my stronghold, and my God the rock of my refuge.”

 

What is the context of this statement? How did the psalmist arrive at this declaration? Can we follow his path?

 

The psalm begins with a plea for Yahweh, the “God of vengeance,” to “Rise up, O judge of the earth, render recompense to the proud.”

 

Then we have the question, “How long shall the wicked, O Yahweh, how long shall the wicked exult?”

 

Then we have a description of what the wicked are doing: “They crush Your people, O Yahweh, and afflict Your heritage. They slay the widow and the stranger and murder the orphans.”

 

Let me suggest that there are many ways in which God’s heritage can be afflicted, that it need not be overt persecution. It can be the introduction and propagation of false doctrine  and practice in the professing church so as to pollute the souls of people and draw them away from fidelity to Jesus Christ. It can be when we make secondary and tertiary things the Main Thing. It can be when we make moral effort a substitute for abiding in the Vine. It can be when we repudiate the working of the Holy Spirit, denying that Jesus Christ is the same, yesterday, today, and forever.

 

There are also many ways in which the widow and stranger and orphan can be slain – for a slow death that lasts many years is nevertheless a death. To deny decent food and shelter and education and medical care and public safety is to consign others to a slow death of mind and heart and soul and body. To turn our hearts and eyes away from strangers knocking on our door and pleading with us for help and sanctuary can be to slay them – would Christ turn His heart and eyes?

 

Yes, there are certainly obvious and egregious manifestations of wickedness throughout the world, but I write the above because if we are not looking close to home, if our attention is primarily focused elsewhere, then we will miss things in our own lives of which we should be aware, and we will miss opportunities around us to share Christ in word and deed.

 

Regarding the wicked, “They have said, Yah does not see, nor does the God of Jacob pay heed.”

 

Then the psalmist speaks to the wicked, beginning with “Pay heed, you senseless among the people; and when will you understand stupid ones? He who planted the ear, does He not hear? He who formed the eye, does He not see? He who chastens the nations, will He not rebuke, even He who teaches man knowledge?”

 

When the psalmist looked at the wicked, he saw them living as if there would be no judgment and reckoning. The wicked thought that they could inflict suffering on others with impunity, and of course the wicked still think this way. How do we think?

 

Do we pick and choose what we identify as wickedness? Do we give oppression and exploitation a “pass” if it benefits us and our tribe? Is selling defective products fine if we own stock in the company? Is purchasing clothing manufactured by slave labor, or by child labor, or by labor paid less than a living wage, okay with us if it means that we pay less for the product?

 

Do we turn our eyes from genocide in an out-of-the-way (in our eyes) place because it does not affect us economically or threaten our national security? Do we tolerate crime in certain areas of our nation that we would never allow in other areas?

 

Do we invite moral and spiritual filth into our homes via media, and offer our children as sacrifices to these hideous images and messages because it is too much trouble for us to go against the grain?

 

“Blessed is the man whom You chasten, O Yah, and whom You teach out of Your law, that You may grant him relief from the days of adversity, until a pit is dug for the wicked.”

 

In verse 10 the instruction of Yahweh through chastisement and discipline is introduced; while we’ll consider this more closely, the Lord willing, in our next reflection in this series, right now I want to point out that if we are going to look at events around us, if we are going to have some understanding of wickedness and suffering and the judgment of God, that we ought to be open to the instruction, discipline, and chastisement of God in our own lives.

 

Are we open to our Father and Lord Jesus working deep within us, to clarify our understanding and purify our souls? Are we willing to be God’s answer to our prayers for others? Are we looking to the ways of “man” for our salvation, or is Jesus Christ becoming our stronghold and Rock of refuge?

 

All followers of Jesus ought to have a theodicy – that’s a word that means an understanding of how God works out His justice and judgment in the world. If God is good and righteous and all powerful, why is there evil and why does it seem as if evil is not held accountable? Why do the righteous and innocent suffer? How do we live in such a world?

 

If we aren’t engaged in God’s Word, if we aren’t seeing Christ in and through the Scriptures, then we will likely look for answers elsewhere – O how we need to see Christ daily in the Bibe. In the psalms we encounter the struggle with theodicy again and again and again – and make no mistake, it is a struggle. If you find someone who gives you a neat and tidy answer to the questions of anguish of suffering and evil and judgement – then you have found someone who understands the infinite and eternal mystery of “My God, My God, why have You forsaken Me?” My advice is to run from such a person – this is a lifelong pilgrimage, we belong at the foot of the Cross in worship, not above the Cross in analysis and in our own understanding.

 

The psalms keep us anchored in Christ and in Biblical thinking, including thinking about theodicy. In the psalms we participate in the sorrows and questions and triumphs and assurances of those who have gone before us, of our brethren in the world today, and of Jesus Christ. This is what I wrote at the beginning of this reflection:

 

When most of us think of the Psalms we likely think of prayer and worship and praise; but do we think of sound doctrine and Biblical teaching? The Psalms demonstrate that prayer and worship and praise can (and ought!) to be permeated with Christ and sound doctrine. Public worship ought to instruct as well as inspire. We can learn to see Jesus Christ on every page of Psalms – are we learning to do so? We can also receive sound instruction about God, the Church, the world, and ourselves throughout the Psalms – are we doing so?

 

I am desperate for the Psalms every day.

 

What about you?

 

Saturday, November 11, 2023

The Rock of My Refuge

 

 

“But Yahweh has been my stronghold, and my God the rock of my refuge.” Psalm 94:22.

 

I am so thankful that the Word of God, the Bible, awaits me every morning. I am so deeply thankful that God speaks to me every morning and every day through the pages of Scripture by the Holy Spirit and in our Lord Jesus Christ. I am also thankful that every morning I know what I am going to read in the Bible as my daily foundation; I may read other passages for sure, I may build on my daily foundation, but I always know where I am to go for my foundational reading and that reading is anchored in the Psalms.

 

As I have written before, while “devotionals” such as Our Daily Bread have their place, there is no substitute for reading the Bible as it is written, that is, there is no substitute for reading the Bible in its context, reading the Bible book by book. For example, right now my daily reading beyond the Psalms includes Jeremiah, Thessalonians, Revelation, and John.

 

As I have also written, I am talking about reading the Bible without any commentary notes – whether those are in a study guide or a commentary or a study Bible – those can all have their place, but I am speaking of spending time with the Trinity, pondering and meditating and listening and communing and speaking with God – as we would with a friend - for He is our Abba, our Father, our Elder Brother.

 

My flight plan is on file before I wake up every morning and it begins with Psalms; I know where I am heading after takeoff (this morning it is Psalm 71 and Psalm 101). I don’t have to think, “Now what am I going to read this morning?” Nor do I need think about whether I am going to watch or read or listen to the news or check my email – my flight plan is about my life in Christ, not about the fast food of the world, food without nutrition.  I am called to worship God and be a blessing to others – that is the way I want to live and that is the way I want to die.

 

I am writing about this because of our temptation and propensity to be distracted by the world and its headlines and to have our equilibrium upset. I am writing because we can buy into the lie that it is more important for us to be “informed” about the world than it is to worship God and share His life with others. I am writing because, sadly, there are those professing Christians who live by headlines and teach via headlines and pull us away from our Lord Jesus using headlines, as they appeal to our curiosity and speculative nature – our desire to know future events rather than know the Person of Christ.

 

Also, our fears and anxieties can drive us into the world and away from devotion to Christ – and fear and anxiety feed upon one another, fear breeds fear breeds fear – and while it makes no logical sense, we keep consuming that which destroys us.

 

If we truly wanted to be informed then we would realize that terrible tragedy and suffering permeate the world every day, not just those days there is a crisis in the Middle East. If we really wanted to be informed then we would realize that children, the elderly, and other innocents are dying and being killed every day in conflicts and genocides outside of the Middle East. Perhaps we don’t really want to be informed, perhaps simply entertained with news from the Middle East – for it does seem to be more intriguing to many of us.

 

And after all, professing teaches of prophecy aren’t going to sell themselves or gather followers by asking us to think about suffering and wars in places that are not mentioned in the Bible.

 

I recently heard that Americans spend more on Halloween costumes for their pets than they do on reaching people with the Gospel who still don’t have the Bible in their native language. As for the professing church, where do we spend our money? On reaching others with the Gospel, on feeding the hungry and sheltering the homeless and serving the sick – or on ourselves…whether “ourselves” means us as individuals or as local congregations?

 

How is that children are going without nutritious food just miles from local congregations who have more than enough to eat? Do we really want to be informed?

 

How is that we send our children to be educated in places – whether in lower or higher education – which attack the image of God? Can it really be true that as long as the basketball and football teams win that we don’t care what our children and teenagers and college students are taught? Do we really want to be informed?

 

Perhaps at the end of the day we only want to be informed if it affects our bank balances and retirement and investment accounts?

 

Having a flight plan helps me to focus on Christ and others, it does not mean that I am not tempted to be self-focused and entertained by headlines, but it does better equip me in Christ to resist these temptations through the Word of God. When I do wander off course, I know how to regain my navigational bearings because I have a flight plan, I’ve learned to fly by God’s instrumentation (the Bible) and not by sight. Isn’t the Word of God how Jesus responded to temptation in the Wilderness (Matthew 4)?

 

We’ll continue, the Lord willing, with Psalm 94:22 in the next reflection.

Friday, November 3, 2023

End Times

 Good morning dear friends,


Below is a link to a sermon my friend  Dr. David Palmer (Ph.D. Hebrew Union) preached last Sunday at his church, Kenwood Baptist in Cincinnati.


David says that this may be the most important message he has ever preached. 


What do you think? 


The sermon begins around 30 minutes into the service, so you can fast forward to there depending on where the link takes you. 


I hope you will share this with others.


Love in Christ,


Bob


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VZ8yH7dmmmc&t=1819s&pp=ygUWa2Vud29vZCBiYXB0aXN0IGNodXJjaA%3D%3D


Thursday, October 26, 2023

Bathing our Minds in Him

 

 

In The Silver Chair, Aslan tells Jill, “Here on the mountain, the air is clear and your mind is clear; as you drop down into Narnia, the air will thicken. Take great care that it does not confuse your mind….and pay no attention to appearances.” (Page 560).

 

As I write this I am reminded of Paul’s statement in 2 Corinthians 4:18 that we do not look at the things that are seen but rather at the unseen, and then of Hebrews 12:25 – 29 in which we are told that God will shake all things, so that those things which cannot be shaken may remain.

 

While there is shaking all around us, the glorious reality for those in Christ is that we are receiving “a kingdom which cannot be shaken” and that because of this we ought to show “gratitude, by which we may offer to God an acceptable service with reverence and awe; for our God is a consuming fire” (Heb. 12:18 – 29).

 

We ought not to be like puppies chasing their tails as we run after purveyors of prophetic entertainment, purporting to interpret the headlines the way ancient religious types interpreted the present and discerned the future by reading the entrails of animals to hold the attention and allegiance and patronage of both the elite and the masses. These things do not wed our hearts to Jesus Christ, they do not call us to lay down our lives for Him and others – they do not stabilize us in Him with His peace and wisdom, they do not ground us in Him and with one another. They do not call us into a mature reading and experience of the Word of God in Christ Jesus. (I write as someone who has been there and done that.)

 

It is bad enough when confusion reigns throughout the world, it is more troubling when it reigns within the professing church. Confusion is disorienting, and just as Jill would be disoriented by the heavy atmosphere of Narnia, so we are easily disoriented by the heavy atmosphere of our present age. Just as Jill would forget the Word that Aslan gave her, we tend to forget the Word that Jesus gives us – and so we must continually bath our minds in Him and His Word, meditating on His Word both day and night (Psalm 1) and presenting ourselves as offerings to God (Rom. 12:1 – 2), not being conformed to the present age, but being transformed into the image and likeness of Jesus Christ. O dear friends, we need the Bible more than we need the headlines and commentators and the latest financial news.

 

A few days ago, as I sensed myself being pulled into the atmosphere of confusion, I went to the clean, clear, and pure air of Ephesians Chapter One. I knew that I needed a trip to the Mountain, I knew I needed to breathe the air of the “eternals” and to bathe my mind in Christ.

 

And so in verse 3 I was reminded that I am blessed with every spiritual blessing in the heavenlies in Christ. In verse 4 I saw that the Father chose us in Him [Christ] before the foundation of the world so that we would be holy and blameless.

 

I was reminded in verses 5 and 6 that we are predestined to be His sons and daughters to His praise and glory.

 

In verses 7 and 8 I saw the greatness of our redemption through His blood, the forgiveness of sins according to the riches of His grace which He lavished upon us.

 

Then in verses 9 – 11 I was encouraged by the vision that life is all about Jesus Christ and about us being in Him, and that we have an eternal destiny which our Father is working out through His Son and in and through us – to His glory.

 

O friends, when we look at the world around us, let us see not the foolishness of political movements and nations and economic engines and entertainment idiocy, let us see our need of a Savior and Redeemer, let us see the suffering around us – the suffering in our communities, in our cities, in our countryside, at our borders, beyond our borders – for make no mistake, we will be held accountable for whether we fed the hungry, clothed the naked, housed the homeless, visited the prisoners (Matthew 25:31 – 46).

 

I cannot do everything, nor can you, but we can all do something.

 

In Ephesians we begin in the heavenlies in Chapter One, so that we may walk the walk on earth in chapters 4- 6. “Therefore I, the prisoner of the Lord, implore you to walk in a manner worthy of the calling with which you have been called” (4:1).

 

Let us bathe our minds in Christ, remembering Paul’s words:

 

“Therefore be careful how you walk, not as unwise men but as wise, making the most of your time, because the days are evil. So then do not be foolish, but understand what the will of the Lord is.” (Eph. 5:15 – 17).

Monday, October 9, 2023

Our Time

 Good morning friends,


Some quotes should need no explanation or comment.


Much love,


Bob


“I wish it need not have happened in my time,” said Frodo.

 

“So do I,” said Gandalf, “and so do all who live to see such times. But it is not for them to decide. All we have to decide is what to do with the time that is given us.” (The Fellowship of the Ring, J. R. R. Tolkien, page 50, Houghton, Mifflin).


“Therefore do not be partakers with them; for you were formerly darkness, but now you are Light in the Lord; walk as children of Light…Do not participate in the unfruitful deeds of darkness; but instead even expose them…Therefore look carefully how you walk, not as unwise men but as wise, redeeming the time, because the days are evil. So then do not be foolish, but understand what the will of the Lord is.” (From Ephesians 5:7 – 17 NASB). 


Wednesday, October 4, 2023

Mutual Assured Destruction

 

Dear Friends,

I wrote this in August 2020. As I read it again there isn’t a word I’d change, and if it was relevant then, it is surely relevant now. We, including the professing church, continue our descent into the abyss of insanity and self-destruction.

When I was a lad in Christ, there was a little saying that still holds true, “Tis only one life, it will soon be past, only what’s done for Christ will last.”

I love Jesus more today than ever, and tomorrow I want to love Him more than I do today. I want our marriage to portray Jesus to the world around us, to our friends and family and community. I want our love for Him to be unambiguous – for our hearts to be wedded to Jesus Christ. I want to be passionate about Him, and to communicate that passion and excitement to others.

Much love,

Bob

Mutual Assured Destruction

Robert L. Withers, August 28, 2020

 

For the past few years, as I’ve been observing the polarization and fragmentation of our society, and the societies of the world, I’ve grappled with words and images to describe what I’m seeing. One of my favorite words since around 2005 has been “tsunami”, for this word conveys sudden and chaotic destruction. Undersea earthquakes hundreds of miles away can visit destruction and death and disorientation on the unsuspecting.

 

There is another phenomenon which I’ve been observing, for which I have not one word but rather a term borrowed from the Cold War, “mutual assured destruction.” This was the Cold War doctrine that if the superpowers each had enough nuclear weapons to destroy our planet many times over that they would not dare initiate nuclear war. What did not happen in the Cold War is happening within our society, and I frankly think the church (a term I use loosely) is an enabler of this insanity.

 

What do I mean?

 

Let me begin with the political climate in the United States. Politics has always been hardball and ugly, a serious student of history knows that for every bright and shining moment in government and politics that there might be ten moments that make one ethically and morally sick. Today we have a situation in Washington, D.C. in which it appears that the avowed goal of both political parties is to destroy the opposition. Not only that, but within each political party there are factions whose agendas seem to be the elimination of their ideological opponents within their own parties.

 

The notion of compromise, of reasoned discussion, of give-and-take, has itself become a target of elimination by both parties.

 

The excesses of the party in power, whether in the White House, the Senate, or the House of Representatives, are surpassed when the party out of power gains the supremacy – then it is payback time. Thus, I find the term “mutual assured destruction” an apt description of the escalation of what payback time looks like. This abdication of moral leadership on the part of both parties, and of the church (which I’ll address below), is propelling us into an abyss from which it is doubtful we will recover. We will likely have the moral equivalent of a nuclear winter.  I am reminded of the title of a book written some years ago by Dr. Richard Swenson, Hurtling Ourselves Into Oblivion – this is what we are culturally doing, politics being the particular rocket that I am focused on in this reflection.

 

Political and social “mutual assured destruction” is not without precedent, it reaches at least as far back as the Roman Republic. In his book, The Storm Before the Storm – The Beginning of the End of the Roman Republic, Mike Duncan makes the following observation and quotes Gaius Sallustius Crispus (86 – 35 B.C.) on the political dynamics that led to the Roman Republic’s demise and the rise of the dictatorial Caesars:

 

“But though there were not formal parties, it is true that there were now two broadly opposing worldviews floating in the political ether waiting to be tapped as needed. As the crisis over the Lex Agraria [land reform legislation] revealed, it was no longer a specific issue that mattered so much as the urgent necessity to triumph over rivals. Reflecting on the recurring civil wars of the late Republic, Sallust said, ‘It is this spirit which has commonly ruined great nations, when one party desires to triumph over another by any and every means and to avenge itself on the vanquished with excessive cruelty.’ Accepting defeat was no longer an option.” [Italics mine].

 

Duncan observes that in the late Roman Republic “it was no longer a specific issue that mattered so much as the urgent necessity to triumph over rivals.” This is what we have come to in the United States. We have abandoned long-term thinking for short-term victories. We have hardened ourselves across the political spectrum against the suffering and needs of others as we look to vanquish our opponents. The term “culture war” is an apt term indeed, but we ought to expand it to, “a culture war of mutual assured destruction.” Many of those leading this war have their economic bomb shelters which they think make them invulnerable, impervious to the spiritual and moral nuclear winter descending on humanity – they are the wolves licking the knife bathed in blood, their insatiable appetites will consume them.

 

Through all of this, the professing church has been an enabler through its identification with political parties, by identifying with competing worldly worldviews, and by the abdication of its Biblical mandate to be “in the world but not of the world”, to be seeking a City whose builder and maker is God. We are called to be witnesses to Jesus Christ, not advocates for a political party or for a worldly worldview – and when we are seduced into adopting a view of life and of the world that is other than a Biblical view – which all sub-Christian views necessarily are, then we exchange the glory of God for the glory of man, God’s vision for man’s vision.

 

In the United States, our syncretistic civil religion, with its blend of pseudo-patriotism and Christianity, is particularly seductive. While there are professing – Christians who lament political correctness and the thought police, many of those same Christians are quick to condemn the notion that we are a deeply sinful nation with an ingrained sinful past, and that Christians are citizens of heaven (Philippians 3:20) before we are citizens of anywhere else. (I will mention that the concept of dual citizenship is not helpful here, for there can be no parity in our thinking or dual allegiance in our hearts, “no one can serve two masters”).

 

The Church is not called to take sides in culture wars, doing so pulls us down into the toxic morass of the present age. We are called to bear witness to Jesus Christ, to be His faithful Bride (not the harlot of an element of the world-system – no matter how attractive it may appear – note what happens to harlots in Revelation 17:16). The Church is called to be separate and distinct from the war of mutual assured destruction swirling around it.

 

The people of the world; our families, friends, neighbors, coworkers; need to hear us speak from heaven, not from earth. The world needs us to wear the white linen of the righteousness of Jesus Christ, not the red and blue garments of political parties.

 

In the war of mutual assured destruction, we are called to be peacemakers (Matthew 5:9), agents of reconciliation (2 Corinthians 5:20), and medics on the battlefield (Matthew 5:43 – 48).

 

Consider these words from John the Baptist (John 3:29 - 30):

 

“He who has the bride is the bridegroom; but the friend of the bridegroom, who stands and hears him, rejoices greatly because of the bridegroom’s voice. So this joy of mine has been made full. He [Jesus] must increase, but I must decrease.”

 

And then of Paul (2 Corinthians 11:2 – 3):

 

“For I am jealous for you with a godly jealousy, for I betrothed you to one husband, so that to Christ I might present you as a pure virgin. But I am afraid that, as the serpent deceived Eve by his craftiness, your minds will be led astray from the simplicity and purity of devotion to Christ.”

 

Let me be straightforward here; pastors, priests, elders, deacons, evangelists, church leaders, are called to wed the Church to Jesus Christ in a monogamous marriage, a pure marriage, a holy marriage. The “Christian” leader who in any way suggests and encourages God’s People to dye the white linen of Jesus Christ with the colors of this world, including blue or red, is not acting as a friend of the Bridegroom. (There are many other colors we could include here, including green – the color of money - one of the gods of our pantheon).

 

Dear friends, the people of the world need us to bear witness to Jesus Christ, not political or economic or social agendas. They need the Church to demonstrate the Gospel and what it is to love one another as Christ loves us, they need to see us actually living in community across ethnic, racial, socio-economic, political, and educational barriers…yes, even nationalistic barriers.

 

There are two women portrayed throughout the Bible; the harlot, and the Bride of Christ (Proverbs Chapter 9, Revelation Chapter 17; 19:7 – 10; Chapter 21).

 

Which one are we?

Saturday, September 30, 2023

Proverbs – In Conclusion (For Now)

 

I’ve not posted for a while because I’ve been pondering whether to continue in Proverbs or to explore other facets of Christ – in the past few months we’ve considered witnessing, discipline and discipleship, and leadership, in Christ in Proverbs. There are many other passages in Proverbs, beyond what we’ve covered, that speak to us in Christ, and of Christ, regarding these things. I think that we will leave Proverbs for now, but before we go let me remind us that Proverbs is about Jesus Christ, it is not a self-help book, and that when we read and ponder Proverbs we ought to be looking for Jesus and asking the Holy Spirit to reveal Jesus to us.

 

With all our chatter about Messianic prophecy in what we call the Old Testament, the reality is that most of the professing church has lost the ability to see Christ in the Old Testament. As I said in a previous reflection, what good does it do us, or what glory does it give to God, to believe in Noah’s Flood and the Ark, or to go see a reproduction of the Ark, if we do not see that Jesus Christ is the Ark and that we are to live in Him and to call others to live in Him? What good does it do us if we do not see that we, His People, His Church, His Temple, are (in Him) the Ark? (He is the Head and we are His Body).

 

In the same fashion, if all we see in Proverbs are principles to live by, then we are missing the purpose and trajectory of this divinely – inspired book, for its purpose is to reveal Christ and its trajectory is Christ – to lead us deeper and deeper into Jesus Christ. And while I don’t mean to offend anyone, in the same way if we look at the Bible as “Basic Instructions Before Leaving Earth,” then as pithy as that may sound, we are missing the glory of Jesus Christ and the purpose of the Bible – which is to reveal Jesus Christ, the Father, and the Holy Spirit, and to draw us into relationship with the holy Trinity and with one another (1 John 1:3).

 

When we ponder discipline in Proverbs, do we see that Jesus, “Although He was a Son, He learned obedience from the things which He suffered. And having been made perfect, He became to all those who obey Him the source of eternal salvation”? (Heb. 5:8 – 9).

 

Do we see that the Father is conforming us into “the image of His son, so that He would be the firstborn among many brethren”? (Rom. 8:28 – 30).

 

When we consider witnessing in Proverbs, do we see that just as Jesus has come to declare and manifest the Father, so He has sent us to manifest the Father and Son? (John 17:18; 20:21). Do we see that the Incarnation continues in us, His People?

 

Along this same line of thought, when we read about kings and others in authority in Proverbs, the root and genesis of what we read is the King of kings and Lord of lords – godly leadership flows from being under the authority of Jesus Christ – we are to be the His Incarnation, and therefore our leadership is to be His leadership expressing itself through us. (John 15:1 – 11).

 

We are to have no life but the life of Christ; in Proverbs we see Christ manifesting Himself through many images and teachings, and we see what our lives ought to look like as we live in Him and He lives in and through us.

 

Why, is not even the wise woman of Proverbs 31 an image of the Bride of Christ?

 

A Proverbs 31 Church is always looking for her Husband, in Proverbs and in all Scripture.

 

“I must arise now and go about the city; in the streets and in the squares I must seek him whom my soul loves…” (SS. 3:2 a, b).

 

Let us learn to seek our Lord Jesus in Proverbs.