Blog

When the Psalms sound mean…

Have you ever been reading in the Psalms, and been caught off guard by a bit of poetry that sounded vindictive, violent, and unforgiving? Chances are you ran into one of the “imprecatory” Psalms, which are so named because they call down retribution on the enemies of the psalmist or God’s people (or both). For instance, grab your bible and read Psalm 109.

See what I mean? What are we to do with these Psalms? Didn’t Jesus tell us to love our enemies? Is this just something from the Old Testament?

Alec Motyer, in his excellent devotional Psalms by the Day, gives us some needed help in this area. First, he puts this long footnote at the beginning of his translation of the Psalm:

Psalm 109 is possibly the most outspoken and ‘violent’ of the imprecatory psalms, and for that reason is condemned by commentators as not only lacking but contradicting the spirit of Christ and the Gospel. This an unthinking reaction. David professes love for his opponents, and his attitude towards them is one of prayer (4). Furthermore, as in all the imprecatory psalms, the response to unmerited (1-3) malignity (16-17) on grand scale, is to take it to the LORD and leave it there (Romans 12:19). No personal counter attack is envisaged–and we are not at liberty even to imagine David harboring vengeful thoughts, for such would be incompatible with the profession of live and the practice of prayer. The nearest we have as a ground for complaint is the vigor with which David words his requests (e.g. verses 9-13). Compared with today’s instruments of revenge–and the spirit in which they are used–this would have to be considered a minor fault (even were it true as stated)! But, in fact, what we find unacceptable is such realism in prayer. Consult Deuteronomy 19:16-19. The LORD required that the false accuser receive what he intended to fall on the one he falsely accused. This is the way divine justice works. David was realistic enough to ask explicitly for it rather than, as we would have done, pray blandly, “Please, LORD, will you deal with this situation.” Some suggest that in verse 6-19 David is quoting what his opponents have said. Verse 20 suggests otherwise, but, in any case, I would suggest the ‘quotation’ theory rests on a misunderstanding of the whole nature if the imprecatory psalms–and it flies in the face of Acts 1:20. (p.310)

Then, in his “Pause for Thought” section for this days reading, he gives more insight and application:

Do you feel more than a bit battered after reading Psalm 109? Of course you do! But let it be for the right reason. It is not (as some commenters on the Psalms would suggest) that every reader is probably horrified at finding such unsatisfied human rage and spite inside the covers of the Bible. No, it is because in Psalm 109 we are listening to the Holy God stating the consequences of sin and pronouncing the terms of his confrontation and judgment. And if we like to imagine that his eyes are full of tears as he does so we are correct. The voice of David and the voice of the Holy Spirit are one voice, just as Acts 4:25 (ESV, correctly) says about Psalm 2. This is the biblical realism of David’s praying. He asks (without rancor, in a truly sinless anger) for what the Word of God affirms is inevitable in the situation of hatred, opposition, false accusation and malignity he was facing. Sin brings us under the domination of the wicked one (6), ruins everything about us (7), extends its infection to those linked with us (9-10), pauperizes (11), leaves us friendless (12), simply because it brings on us fruits of our own choices, attitudes and actions (16-10). And (as you readily see) such a survey does no more than scratch the surface of this terrifying psalm. It is a place into which so many streams of biblical revelation and warning flow–the cardinal seriousness of sins of speech, for example, and (a thing that hits and hurts at the family level), if it is true (as Proverbs 20:7 teaches) that the children of the righteous are blessed, it is equally true that the iniquity of fathers passes through the channels of genetic solidarity to those who we love most dearly – a moral and spiritual entail that is part of the rice of being human. if we recoil on reading the central section of Psalm 109, let us dwell at length and with all our hearts on the great cry to God with which the psalm ends. (p.313)

Helpful, right? Seriously. Go read this book.

What if God wasn’t like this?

Go ahead and just read this, and then, if you want to, read on below…

The Active and Passive Sides of God’s Love

From a lecture by Gordon Fee, recounting the morning that he sat in his study to work on 1 Corinthians 13:4 for his commentary:

I remember the morning when I came to this passage: “Love is patient, love is kind.”

It’s actually a verb: “Love does patience.” Or better yet, the KJV: “love suffers long.”

Patience is what you show when your computer doesn’t work.

Long-suffering is what you show when people don’t work, and you’ve been around them a long, long time. That’s what it means to suffer long.

And I looked at those words and then realized that Paul was here describing God’s character. Those are exactly the words he uses of God back in Romans 2 [v. 4].

Then it dawned on me:
the first (long-suffering) is the passive side of His love;
the other (kindness) is the active side of His love.

And then I started to cry for a long time. It took me a long time to return to my computer. What if God was not like this toward us?

I was with a group of High School seniors over the weekend, and we talked a lot about God’s Plan For Our Lives. In the middle of one of our meetings, I read that quote for them–which has blessed me since the day I read it, years ago, on Justin Taylor’s blog. It’s by Gordon Fee, the New Testament Scholar, the same Gordon Fee who I’ve been quoting in the last couple posts.  I don’t know… I just think it’s awesome. Saturday night it was ministering to me all over again, God speaking to me about his love, like it did when I first read it.

“What if God was not like this toward us?”

Let that sit in your thoughts for a while, and do things in you.

 

P.S…
Don’t have any notes to post for last night’s study. It was one of those done without them! If you weren’t there, we looked at Deuteronomy 6 to get encouragement to be reading and meditating on God’s word in 2017.

If we’re spiritual, do our bodies matter?

More from Gordon Fee’s book, God’s Empowering Presence. This passage gets at a problem that can sometimes plague our thinking–the temptation to misunderstand the scriptures’ teaching about the soul and the body, and to begin to think that because Jesus saves our souls, our body doesn’t matter. Fee tackles this head on, first by thinking about what the word “sanctification” (the idea that God is making those who’ve trusted in Jesus Christ holy) really means in the bible.

Sanctification includes the body, which through Christ’s resurrection has been made his own possession and is thereby destined for resurrection. To be Spirit-ual, therefore, does not mean to deny the physical side of our human life; neither, of course, does it mean to indulge it.

The presence of the spirit means that God himself, who created us with bodies in the first place, has taken keen interest in our whole life, including the life of the body. The creation of the body was pronounced good in the beginning; it has now been purchased by Christ and is sanctified by the presence of God himself through his Holy Spirit. We must therefore “sanctify” it as well (“therefore glorify God in your bodies”), by living the life of the Spirit, a life of holiness.

The message of this text needs to be sounded repeatedly in the face of every encroachment of Hellenistic dualism that would negate the body in favor of the soul. God made us whole people: and in Christ he has redeemed us wholly. According to the Christian view there is no dichotomy between body and spirit that either indulges the body because it is irrelevant or punishes it so as to purify the spirit. This pagan view of physical existence creeps into Christian theology in any number of subtle ways, including the penchant on the part of some to “save souls” while caring little for people’s material needs. Not the immortality of the soul but the resurrection of the body, is the Christian creed, based on NT revelation. That creed does not lead to crass materialism; rather it affirms a holistic view of redemption, which is predicated in part on the doctrine of creation–both the physical and spiritual orders are good because God created them–and in part on the doctrine of redemption, including the consummation–the whole fallen order including  the body, has been redeemed in Christ and awaits its final redemption.

The unmistakable evidence of this [now] is the presence of the Spirit [in our churches and in our personal lives], which does not move us toward false, Hellenistic “spirituality,” but toward the biblical view noted here. (pg. 137)

So…does being spiritual mean we don’t care about physical things, like our bodies–that they don’t matter? Not at all. And it’s the fact that the Holy Spirit comes and dwells within us–within our bodies–that starts to help us see why.

The Trinity, God’s Sovereignty, Prayer, and You

Last night we tried to gather encouragement for praying in 2017 by looking at what the scriptures say about God and prayer. Here are the notes:

Question for 2017: How will we see God’s plan accomplished in our lives, in the lives of those around us, and in the world? What action will we take? Challenge: Let’s rely on prayer for all three of those things.

Part 1:

A common problem Christians have:

  1. We say that God knows the future. The Bible teaches this.
  2. We also know from the bible that God is sovereign, in other words he can do, and does do, whatever he wants to do. (Nothing can stop him against his will, or make him do something he doesn’t want to do. He can’t be frustrated or coerced.)
  3. We’re also commanded to pray—to ask God to do things.
  4. But…why would we ask God to do things when…He already know what’s going to happen, and he does whatever he wants to so?

A common answer to this problem: “Prayer isn’t really about getting God to do things. He already knows what he’s going to do regardless of whether we ask him or not. Prayer is really about US. It helps us get our heads in the right place, and it makes sure we’re depending on God. Plus he just likes to hear from us. So PRAY!”

The problem with the common answer to the problem: The bible doesn’t speak about prayer this way. It doesn’t say that God will do whatever he wants regardless of whether we pray. And it doesn’t say that prayer is just for us. In fact…the bible seems to assume, and even teach explicitly, that our prayers matter, and that God acts in response to our prayers to do things, and that if we don’t pray, we won’t see answers to our prayers. See: James 4:1-3, James 5:16-18. Matt 7:7-11, Luke 18:1-8, 2 Kings 13:14-19.

The problem with other solutions: We can’t say that God doesn’t know the future (the bible’s clear he does); and we can’t say that God can’t or doesn’t work without our prayers (the bible clearly shows he can and does), so what can we say?

Part 2: One possible solution may be found in the Bible’s teaching about who God is, and the way he chooses to run the universe.

How does God run the universe? Is he solitary in heaven making decisions with no discussion?

 Answer: When Jesus came, and the Holy Spirit was sent down, we learned new things about who God is and the way He is God. We learned that within the life of the one true God there are three persons—Father, Son and Spirit. When letting us know this truth about himself, God opened up all kinds of new possibilities for us to understand who He is and how we relate to him.

John 11:41-42, 12:27-29; 17:1 – Jesus’ prayer shows us that in God there is relation in God. There’s a constant running dialogue between Father and Son

Luke 22:31-32 – Jesus’ prayer shows us that in God there is relating, there is relationship. There’s a pattern we can see here: The Son asks and the Father grants. (see also Psalm 2, John 12:27-28)

Luke 11:1-2 – We’re invited into the conversation. And, we’re invited to take up the Son’s place in the conversation. We’re invited into the Sonship of Jesus.

Summing Up: God the son has always been talking with God the Father. As the human, the man Jesus, He became the link between our human asking and His own asking as the Son. So prayer works because God has always been talking. There has always been conversation between Father Son and Spirit. And maybe we see in the life of Jesus that there has always been requests from the Son to the Father. Maybe we can say that prayer is in the very being of God. When we pray, we enter the praying of God the Son. (As Fred Sanders says: “Christians are people who talk to God like they’re Jesus.”)

3. …All this explains why we pray the way we do.

In the Name of Jesus: Ephesians 5:20, John 15:16; Praying in the Spirit: Ephesians 6:18

The Trinity and Prayer: John 14:13-14, 16:23-24

…So, we pray in the Spirit, in the Name of the Son, to the Father.

Three Takeaways from all this:

  1. The solution to what looks like a theological problem with prayer seems to be something like this: It is true that God knows what is going to happen for all time, because he has planned what he will do in the world before time began. It’s also true that part of the plan of God is that the Son asks the Father for things, and the Father grants his request. What that means is that God does not do his “planning” apart from this asking and receiving. You could say that the Son asking the Father, and the Father granting the request, is the way God decided to carry out his plan. The plan is that everything that has to happen in the world would be asked for and then received by the Son. In other words, God’s plan for the world is contained in the love relationship between the Father Son and Spirit. Now, because God is so big-hearted, he decided to create beings who could become part of that conversation, and do their own asking and receiving (or maybe a better way to say it is, they could join in the asking of the son, and their asking would be part of his asking). This was always part of God’s plan. And even more than that, he decided that the asking of these human beings would be an essential part of shaping they way God carries out his plan—especially, the way each individual human being participates in God’s plan, and experiences life in God’s world. So when we pray, we are not working against God’s sovereignty, and it is not working against us. God sovereignly planned to include whatever asking we did in his plan—provided of course, that the asking was in the Name of the Son, that it was by faith in the Jesus’ status as the Son of God, and that it made sense in light of God’s big plan for the world and for our lives individually—in other words, we must pray in the name of Jesus, by faith in Jesus, and according to the will of God.
  2. We shouldn’t let perceived theological problems keep us from believing and obeying the commands of God. If a clear command of God seems to contradict something we think we know theologically (something we think we know about God), it can’t be the command of God that’s wrong—it must be our theology. So we should practice keeping the commands of God, and working on our theology until it makes sense with the commands of God. Because the Bible seems to be clear on this—there are times when, if we don’t ask, we don’t get the things we could have asked for. In that sense, while God will carry out his big plan for the world regardless of us, there are all kinds of smaller pieces to that plan which we may or may not see happen based on whether we pray or not. So…yes, Jesus is coming back, whether or not we personally pray for it, but what things may or may not happen in our lives and in the world based on whether we ask for them or not?
  3. So…let’s spend 2017 learning to pray like never before. Whether this means more time spent in prayer, or a new faithfulness to pray regularly and consistently for things we know we need to pray for, or learning new ways to pray or to help ourselves be faithful in prayer, let’s let the commands of Jesus, and the truth of who God is move us to pray. Jesus seemed excited to invite us in to the running conversation, and to give us access to his own requesting…let’s get excited about joining in to that conversation.

This study, along with the other like it, was originally inspired by my reading of Fred Sanders’ book, The Deep things of God: How the Trinity Changes Everything, and this quote from Andrew Murray. That quote rocked me, and sent me looking for the scriptures to back up what Murray said. And I found them. I had never really heard theses things put together like this before, and I felt that it solved some issues some people had with theology and prayer. Hope the scriptures and the thoughts do the same for you!

God’s Alternative to Philadelphia

On Monday we looked at God’s solution to the world’s problems, as it spreads from, and then affects, one person at a time. This is, of course, the Spirit empowered sharing of the message of Jesus to broken people who need it.

Here’s a passage from Gordon Fee’s book God’s Empowering Presence (on page 116!) which takes us further in the same direction, but also brings in the truth of the Church (that is, the believers in any given area meeting together and living life together) as an essential part of God’s solution. He’s reflecting on Paul’s first letter to the Corinthian church, chapter 3, verses 16 and 17. Check it out…

As God’s temple in Corinth, they are intended to be his alternative to Corinth, to both its religious and vices.

In contrast to the “gods many and lords many” of pagan religion with their multiplied temples and shrines, there was now a temple of the living God in Corinth—and they did not so much as have a building; they were the building.

And in contrast to the sexual immorality, greed, enmity, and broken relationships that marked Corinthian society, they were the people of the living God, where God by his Spirit had effected purity, compassion, forgiveness, and love.

What made them God’s alternative, his temple in Corinth, was his own presence in and among them. By his Spirit the living God had made his abode in Corinth itself!

We may hit these ideas in a study Monday night study soon. But think about it! Not only do Christians bear in themselves (so to speak) the presence of God, the Spirit who Himself preaches His message through us and gives it power to impact those we speak with, but He dwells in our church family as well. And that reality (and only that) is what makes church different from every other organization, however well-meaning it may be.  And that is what God offers as an alternative to our society. Our relationships. Our families. Our common purpose, effort, vision, and love. We are the alternative.

Tall order, right? But then, the whole point is that it’s God’s presence, in the person of the Holy Spirit, God Himself (!), who comes and makes it a possibility…and a reality. Shouldn’t we learn about this, pray about this, press into this, and live it out, more and more?

…and God said, “My Presence will go with you, and I will give you rest.” Then Moses said to Him, “If Your Presence does not go with us, do not bring us up from here.”

God’s Solution and Us

Last night we began the new year by looking at Isaiah 61:1-4 and some related passages. Here are the notes:

One of the most important parts of the prophet Isaiah’s message is that God’s ultimate solution to the world’s problems is one Man, anointed by the Spirit, who comes with the love and wisdom and power necessary to do this for every broken person, and to rule the world so that every broken down thing (that should be restored) will be restored.

Now, if you’re familiar with the Bible you know that pone of the most surprising things Jesus did was that, early in his public life, he claimed to be this person. [See Luke 4:14-21.] Once you see this, I think it becomes obvious why people who follow Jesus would be all about telling people about Jesus, especially people who are on this list of exactly the kind of people Jesus came to help.

The quick answer to the world’s problems is simple—Jesus.

But after he was risen from the dead, and he was teaching his followers about the role they were going to play now that he was going to return to his father, he sort of flipped the script a little… See…

  • Luke 24:46-49 (Jesus promises a similar experience for us—“the Spirit upon us.”)
  • Matt 28:18-20 (“Teach them to observe what I’ve commanded you.”)
  • Acts 1:7-8 (We become witnesses to the Anointed One…and…we become like him…in that we get the same source of power he had and begin to do the same work he did.)

So as Jesus was leaving for a time, he told his followers that the only way we’re really going to be able to point people to him is by relying on the enabling of the Holy Spirit, who is of course the same Spirit Isaiah says anointed Jesus, and the Spirit of God will enable his followers to go spread the message about him…and then we can be able to enter into the work he did.

In that sense, we can read Isaiah 61, and we can begin to see how it applies to us.

God anoints us, that is, he sets us apart for a special service by filling us with His Spirit, so that we’re able to:

  • Bring good news to people who lack resources to fix their life
  • Help broken hearted people heal
  • Proclaim new liberty to people who are caught in or imprisoned by something
  • Comfort people who are mourning

In fact, if you look at 61:3, God’s solution in individual’s lives is so effective that these people who before were without resources, inwardly broken, lacking freedom, debilitated by loss, they become “oaks of righteousness”—

This biblical idea of “righteousness” is when justice is done and everyone is taken care of. It’s when God, who is the source of all righteousness, is known and worshipped by everyone, so everywhere you go is full of his life-giving, personal presence, so no one oppresses anyone, everyone has everything they need, children are raised to flourish and everyone is nurtured to health and strength and no one ever conquers or oppresses or invades or steals and everyone is safe and everywhere is safe. When Jesus reigns this will happen globally. It will be a world of righteousness. We don’t expect it on any large scale until then. …But, we do expect it in people’s personal lives, in families, and even in communities of people who give their lives to following Jesus. We experience it in our own personal lives.

And this is exactly what you get in verse 4—the people who used to be messed up themselves become the kind of people who rebuild things that have been ruined for a long time.

In other words, the way God deals with ruined things is to find and heal ruined people, to heal them, and then work through them to heal and restore what’s wrong with the world.

Which means, as we look out at the world, and think about all the broken things there are out there—or, maybe just thinking about the people in our lives, and the people we run into and move past all day long in public places—what should we think be thinking about?

It’s super easy to get discouraged, or feel like the problems in the world are too big. Or even the just the problems one friend has—that can be overwhelming. And that can make us want to retreat—you know just get through my day and worry about myself and my own stuff. “There’s nothing we can do for people.” Jesus said that the fact that the world is so messed up would make people’s love (their agape) grown cold (Matthew 24:12).

But a Christian is someone who is learning to think other thoughts—like we’re learning to think things like—Jesus can do this. They just need to get to know Jesus. Jesus can heal this. Jesus can fix this. No matter how broken someone is, give God time to work in their life and they can become an oak of righteousness.

So how do we “get our friends to Jesus”? It’s right here: The empowering of God’s Holy Spirit to send us to people that are sad and broken and bound and communicate to them about the only one who can help them.

And then it’s the Spirit who speaks right into people’s hearts and brings Jesus to them. And Jesus is the only one who can set them free and heal them and lift their spirits.

So, in 2017, let’s not let the state of the world make us retreat from the world. Let’s seek the Lord for the empowering of the Holy Spirit, and then let’s step out in faith to tell the hurting, broken and bound up people in our lives and all around us about the One who can free them.  [We finished the night by reading Isaiah 59:1-60:9 & 60:17-22.]

Why doesn’t our faith move mountains?

Happy New Year! Here’s a great post from New Testament scholar Tom Schreiner:

Why Doesn’t Our Faith Move Mountains?

Peter tells us Paul wrote some things that are hard to understand (2 Pet. 3:16).

Jesus said some difficult things, too. 

Twice the Lord told his disciples that if they had faith like a mustard seed they could do jaw-dropping things. In Matthew, mustard seed faith is tied to expelling a demon, and Jesus says those who have such faith can move mountains (Matt. 17:20). In Luke, those with mustard seed faith will be able to forgive those who sin against them since such faith can pluck up mulberry trees and cast them into the sea (Luke 17:6). All kinds of questions enter our minds.

What is faith like a mustard seed?

Why doesn’t our faith move mountains?

Are we failing to see great things from God because of our lack of faith?

Faith that Encourages

In the stories recounted in both Matthew and Luke, the disciples long for more faith. Then they could do great things for God. Then they could cast out demons and forgive a brother or sister who’s especially annoying. Jesus tells them they don’t need great faith; they need just a little faith. He clearly speaks of a small amount of faith since the mustard seed was the smallest seed known in his day. Jesus also informs his disciples that the kingdom of heaven is as small as a mustard seed (Matt. 13:31).

We’re prone to think if we just had more faith, then God could do amazing things through us. But Jesus tells us something quite astonishing. The issue isn’t whether we are full of faith but whether we have any faith. If we have the smallest amount of faith, God works on our behalf. Jesus stops his disciples short and asks them: Do you believe in me at all? Do you trust God at all?

Why is Jesus’s answer encouraging? Because we don’t get caught in the morass of thinking about whether we have enough faith. When facing a given situation, we call out to God to give us faith—no matter how small. A small amount of faith is sufficient because the focus is not on our faith but its object.

The issue isn’t whether we are full of faith but whether we have any faith. . . . A small amount of faith is sufficient because the focus is not on our faith but its object.

Why is it true that mustard seed faith can move mountains and uproot mulberry trees? Jesus plainly tells us. It isn’t because of the quantity of our faith but the object of our faith. If our faith is in the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, then it has a great effect. Our faith makes a difference not because it is so great but because God is so great, because he is the sovereign one who rules over all things. Our faith doesn’t thrive when we think about how much faith we have; it springs up when we behold our God—when we see Jesus as the One crucified and risen for us.

Faith that Stands on Promises

Still, we have questions about this verse. Does our mustard seed faith move mountains and uproot mulberry trees? Do we see this happen today? Are prosperity preachers right in saying that if we had more faith, we wouldn’t get sick and would enjoy the riches of this world?

First, it’s critical to note Jesus is using an illustration. He’s not literally talking about moving mountains and uprooting trees. There’s no example in Scripture of mountains disappearing because someone had faith. Jesus is teaching that stunning things happen if we have faith. The question is, what kind of stunning things should we expect?

Here we must take into account the entire Bible. The old saying is correct: a verse without a context is a pretext. And the context is the whole Bible, which includes reading it in its covenantal and redemptive-historical timeline. We can’t just pluck any verse in the Bible and apply to our lives without considering how it relates to the sweep of Scripture as a whole.

Faith isn’t abstract; we put our faith in the promises of God, in the truth he has revealed. Scripture never promises believers they will be healthy or wealthy. Paul’s thorn in the flesh (2 Cor. 12:7–10) was probably a physical disease, and though he prayed three times for deliverance, God said “no.” Similarly, it wasn’t God’s will to heal Paul’s ministry partner Trophimus (2 Tim. 4:20), and it wasn’t because Paul lacked mustard seed faith! Additionally, Timothy wasn’t healed miraculously and instantaneously of stomach ailments, but was told to take wine to settle his indigestion (1 Tim. 5:23). Certainly Paul believed God could heal Timothy, but God had determined he would not be healed. Moreover, Romans 8:35–39 clearly teaches some believers are persecuted, and some suffer from lack of food and clothing. God never promised us a comfortable life.

Faith isn’t abstract; we put our faith in the promises of God, in the truth he’s revealed. Scripture never promises believers they will be healthy or wealthy.

Mountain-moving faith, then, must be based on God’s promises—on what is revealed in his Word—not on what we wish will happen or even fervently believe will happen.

Misguided faith can lead to disaster. In the 1520s, Thomas Muntzer believed he was led by the Holy Spirit to bring in the golden age, and warred alongside the peasants to overturn political power. But Muntzer was inspired by fantasies and died in the revolt he led. He trusted in “spiritual revelations” rather than the written words of Scripture.

We must ask first, then, whether one’s faith is truly based on the Word of God. Otherwise, it rests on the vain imaginations of man.

Faith that Sanctifies

The question remains: What is mountain-moving faith? Notice what Jesus says in Luke: Those who have faith like a mustard seed do great things. They have the faith to forgive brothers and sisters who sin against them repeatedly.

The illustration Jesus provides, then, is enormously helpful. We know it’s God’s will that we forgive those who sin against us. Yet when we’re faced with actually forgiving them, we often struggle because the pain is so severe.

Mustard seed faith, then, is faith that kills works of the flesh (Gal. 5:19–21) and produces the fruit of the Spirit (Gal. 5:22–23). Love, joy, peace, and patience are mountains that can only be climbed by faith; faith, after all, expresses itself in love (Gal. 5:6). Mustard seed faith believes the gospel will go the ends of the earth and triumph over the gates of hell. And the clearest evidence of mustard seed faith is whether you love God and your neighbor.

Our greatest enemies are not outside of us but within. Our greatest foe is the hate and rebellion that overtakes us, and mustard seed faith—because it is placed in Jesus Christ—gives us the victory over our sin.

Yet we are freed from the sin that enslaves when we rely on Christ and not our own strength and works. Mustard seed faith is enormously powerful—not because of our faith, but because it unites us to the God who raised Jesus Christ from the dead.

Young Adults Winter Break

Hey friends, just a reminder that we (the young adults fellowship) won’t be meeting tonight (12/26) or next Monday night (1/2). We’ll see you all on Monday 1/9, in the new year! Peace!

A Hymn for Tuesday Night

by Josiah Conder:

The Lord is King! lift up thy voice,
O earth; and all ye heavens, rejoice!
From world to world the joy shall ring,
The Lord omnipotent is King.

The Lord is King! who then shall dare
resist his will, distrust his care,
or murmur at his wise decrees,
or doubt his royal promises?

Alike pervaded by his eye
all parts of his dominion lie:
this world of ours and worlds unseen,
and thin the boundary between!

One Lord one empire all secures;
he reigns, and life and death are yours;
through earth and heaven one song shall ring,
‘The Lord omnipotent is King!’

The Lord is King! Child of the dust,
the Judge of the all the earth is just;
holy and true are all his ways;
let every creature speak his praise.

He reigns! ye saints, exalt your strains;
your God is King, your Father reigns;
and he is at the Father’s side,
the Man of love, the Crucified.

Come, make your wants, your burdens known;
he will present them at the throne;
and angel bands are waiting there
his messages of love to bear.

The Lord is King! lift up thy voice,
O earth; and all ye heavens, rejoice!
From world to world the joy shall ring,
The Lord omnipotent is King.

Learning to hear God’s instructions.

Last night we continued our study of Paul’s letter to the Colossian church, looking specifically at the small section of verses from 3:18 to 4:1. Below are the notes..

When we read Colossians 3:18-4:1, We can acknowledge, right off the bat, that some people will have some problems with this passage.

Two Things to help us understand the passage:

  1. Establish the kind of thought world these commands exist in.
  2. See the context of the letter—what kind of people and what kind of community got these commands?

1: First: Basic Ideas to understand the passage in our current climate:

  1. God created us, God tells us how to live.
  2. God’s instructions only make sense in God’s universe. (God exists (1:16-18); Jesus has come, died, and is risen (1:14, 20); Eternity is real (1:12-14); You have a whole new power (2:13, 3:1-17); You become a person of love and strength (1:9-12, 3:12-17).These commands are part of this whole. They make sense in no other way.
  3. The people who can enact these commands are the people of 3:12-17.
  4. You serve the Lord Christ (3:23-23). You will receive a reward.

Key: If you don’t live in this thought world, if you don’t breathe this air, there’s a good chance that you might get scared or angry or confused by these commands. So we don’t just pick these verses up, and drop them on people like random laws. The bible doesn’t do that. And you can’t even really begin to understand these verses if that’s how you encounter them.

2: What Paul’s saying: The Details of each instruction in 3:9-4:1.

9  Do not lie to one another, since you have put off the old man with his deeds, 10 and have put on the new man who is renewed in knowledge according to the image of Him who created him, 11 where there is neither Greek nor Jew, circumcised nor uncircumcised, barbarian, Scythian, slave nor free, but Christ is all and in all.

First things first…do we even have any sense for how big this all is? We’re talking about a world, in verse 10 and eleven, where Jesus is everything… now, one thing that means, right off the bat, is that the old ethnic barriers, and socio-economic barriers, are torn down. And that’s exactly what you saw happen in the first generation of Christianity, you had these little communities of Christians springing up, and the people involved were crossing those old societal lines. Oh, and like it says in verse nine, you could trust everyone, because they were learning to stop lying. So let’s ask this before we even really get started: can you trust people out there? Is the world, with all of its diversity speak, getting more or less divided? These are valid questions.

We’re going to see that the kind of community Paul describes, (and that he spent his life building), starts to look better and better, the more we understand the Bible’s teaching, and the more we get realistic about the world everyone else is creating.

12 Therefore, as the elect of God, holy and beloved, put on tender mercies, kindness, humility, meekness, longsuffering; 13 bearing with one another, and forgiving one another, if anyone has a complaint against another; even as Christ forgave you, so you also must do. 14 But above all these things put on love, which is the bond of perfection. 15 And let the peace of God rule in your hearts, to which also you were called in one body; and be thankful.

This is the kind of people God was calling the Christians to be. People who were “clothed with love”—and they were bound by love. It’s that kind of strong community where the commands we’re studying tonight are supposed to be lived out. And it’s a community ruled by kindness, humility, peace, thankfulness.

Imagine going to visit someone, and realizing that he or she lives in this group of friends and family where people are bound together by love, they’re all ruled by peace, and they’re each individually thankful for their lives. What would that community be like? What would it be like to be with them? To work with them? To celebrate things with them? I mean, think about it. And it just gets better the more you read…

 16 Let the word of Christ dwell in you richly in all wisdom, teaching and admonishing one another in psalms and hymns and spiritual songs, singing with grace in your hearts to the Lord.

So, the community of Christians is called to have the message about Jesus and the things he taught… as its beating heart. Right at the center, holding everything together and being the source of life for everything they were doing, is the gospel—this message that God loved the world and sent his son, that Jesus was God himself living with us, and that by dying and rising again he paid the penalty for our sin and made it possible for us to turn back to God—that was there center. And they had the things he actually spoke—his teachings—they had those too. So think about what that that kind of commitment to the message of Jesus does to this central area of life—our speech. Paul says that the christians’ conversation is shaped by these things—so hearing these people talk to each other and sing their songs is like hearing Jesus talk and teach and sing—their conversations are all flavored with the scriptures. God’s word is their currency. And so there’s this constant, mutual upbuilding…where each person’s weakness is compensated for by someone else’s strength, and each person’s area of stupidity is corrected by someone else’s wisdom. They can even afford to confront each other when someone’s off, and their relationships can survive that, because their relationships are flexible with the health of real love. Their relationships are resilient because of their commitment to each other and affection for each other.

And this bleeds into every area of life. And that’s why we get verse 17…

17 And whatever you do in word or deed, do all in the name of the Lord Jesus, giving thanks to God the Father through Him.

Finally, every aspect of life, down to the smallest detail, takes on new significance. A community of people like this has come to the place where they see that that this constant drum beat of our culture—that life is pointless, stupid and meaningless—is a total lie. Worse than that—it’s a depressing, oppressing, murderous lie. This idea that nothing matters is ripping people off, it’s killing people, and it’s not even true. No, in the community of believers, there’s this new understanding, that all of life matters.

Everything we do is significant—Because everything is done to the honor of our Lord, and to his glory, and in his name, the name of the greatest person who ever lived, who also happens to be alive, and who we happen to know. So whether we’re sitting down to a meal or throwing a protein bar down on the run—we eat in the name of Jesus and thank him for it. Whether we’re working, or studying, or playing—whatever, it all matters, and we do it in his name. We’re pointing up to him the whole time. He’s looking at us. He’s with us. We got this thing going on with him…and we’re all about the world knowing about it, because you always rep what you love. Right?

And if we can’t do it in his name (the logic goes)… we don’t do it. And that saves us a lot of pain, and it saves us causing a lot of pain. Because Jesus doesn’t direct us to hurt others or waste our time.

Now…It’s into that world, this kind of community, that Paul writes these directions. They’re working here as like case studies—how do these general directions we just looked at in v.12-16 actually look in practice, when they’re lived out in regular daily life?

So Paul goes to the most basic, normal, and important place where these directions need to be practiced—he goes to the home. He gives his instructions in three pairs: Wives-Husbands, Children-Fathers, Servants (or Slaves)-Masters. These kinds of lists were used regularly in the culture. It was a common way of passing on cultural norms and teaching people what was expected in society.

 18  Wives,  submit to your own husbands, as is fitting in the Lord.

The NT calls people to voluntarily “order” themselves “under” others. But the reverse isn’t true…so it never directs or allows some people to dominate others. So, we read, wives…submit, but husbands…never dominate. In other words, God has established an order in creation, including human relationships, and everyone is now invited to voluntarily join that order. So…“Wives, choose to embrace a certain place in God’s order, and allow your husbands to be the head” (that’s how Paul phrases it in Ephesians 5 and 1 Cor 11). But husbands aren’t ever directed or even permitted to “demand” this or “enforce” it. Instead, husbands are consistently directed to do one thing, as it says in verse 19…

19 Husbands, love your wives and do not be bitter toward them.

Husbands are called to love their wives. Paul uses the greek word “agape” here. What’s interesting about that is that even though these kinds of lists were common in Paul’s day, we don’t have any record anywhere else of this idea being used in directing husbands how to treat their wives. One scholar I read said that requiring wives to submit to their husbands matches the typical teaching of the day, but requiring husbands to love their wives does not. It just wasn’t part of how the culture thought about marriage. So this is really a distinctly Christian thing here—and Paul spells it out in Ephesians 5, where he makes Jesus’ love for the church the standard the husband’s love is judged by.

You should really go read the end of Ephesians 5 on your own if you’re not familiar with it—it will give you a fuller picture of what the God is showing us here. The whole point in that letter is that marriage is this totally unique thing, where the story of God’s love for humanity in the sending of Jesus for the church—that story, and that reality, it what marriage is all about. Marriage is supposed to be a living, daily picture of the love and order between Christ and the church. So I almost always say something like this at weddings:

“When people see you, Groom, pursue and win your bride’s heart, marry her, and then daily lay down your life in love for her, they see the thing they most need to see—they see a flesh and blood reminder that Jesus Christ came to rescue humanity and take us to himself forever. They get to watch the quality of his love for people. It’s a message that can’t be denied. And, Bride, when people watch you submit to Groom’s headship—they get to see the joy and freedom the Christian church feels, all of us, when we bow to Jesus as our Lord—we find life when he’s our king, and the world will see that by how alive you are under Groom’s covering.”

And Paul tags on one other direction for husbands here—he says don’t be bitter against your wives. Your bible might says here, “don’t be harsh.” And it seems like the word Paul uses covers both ideas. Peter O’Brien just says—“Christian husbands are not to become angry or incensed against their wives either in thought or in word or in deed.” And when you’re first falling in love, I think a note like this can seem really unnecessary. But God knows better than us, and if it’s in here, you can bet it’s because we men need to hear it. Just to get personal for a second, after 13 years of marriage, the times when I’ve hurt my wife the most have been when I’ve failed in exactly this area. I wouldn’t have thought it would have been an issue for me, but there I am, in what seem like to me random, odd moments, there I am being harsh and speaking out of what, really, if I’m honest, could be called bitterness. And the word of God confronts me here, it confronts us men and says—nothing about being a husband gives you the right to have a bitter heart or harsh words for your wife.

And there’s similar types of things going on as Paul moves to speak to fathers and children.

20 Children, obey your parents in all things, for this is well pleasing to the Lord. 21 Fathers, do not provoke your children, lest they become discouraged.

 The direction to children in the bible is very simple. Children have one job—learn to obey your parents. I think the point of this is that we humans need to learn to listen to the voice of the Spirit of God, who we can’t see and who isn’t typically audible, and the best way to do that is by learning to obey a seen, heard person who, when we’re small, can pick us up and put us in our crib if we can’t figure things out. So, yeah, children—one job. Obey. But here again, Paul says, this doesn’t give fathers some kind of dictatorship in the home. No—God is the only king in the house. And he directs fathers to not to “provoke” their children.

This is a pretty interesting word Paul uses here, my lexicon gave me this definition it: “to cause someone to act in a way that suggests acceptance of a challenge.” Usually in a bad sense, like “irritate,” or “make resentful,” or “embitter.” So we have this check put on fathers’ authority—know your kids, and know what will make them bitter and discouraged, or feel like you’re challenging them to tear them down, or feel resentful, and don’t do those things. Pretty profound.

And so this brings us to the last few verses of this section.

22 Bondservants, obey in all things your masters according to the flesh, not with eyeservice, as men-pleasers, but in sincerity of heart, fearing God. 23 And whatever you do, do it heartily, as to the Lord and not to men, 24 knowing that from the Lord you will receive the reward of the inheritance; for you serve the Lord Christ. 25 But he who does wrong will be repaid for what he has done, and there is no partiality. 4:1 Masters, give your bondservants what is just and fair, knowing that you also have a Master in heaven.

Now if we thought verse 18 might rub people the wrong way… you know, it’s clearly even more dicey here, right? But again…Christians, there’s nothing to be ashamed of…all we have to do is remember the world these people were living in, and the community Paul was working to create, and kind of people these Christians were supposed to be.

First, the world they were living in was not pre-Civil War America. It was the First Century Roman Empire. Slavery there wasn’t race-based, it was economic and military. You became a slave to escape economic disaster, or as a consequence of war. Also, they weren’t living under a democracy, they were living under what was essentially a military dictatorship, and a lot of the empire was really just people under military occupation. There were no avenues for social change—certainly nothing like what we have in our modern western democracies. So Paul wasn’t writing to address the issue of how Christians think things should be, or even what God thinks about it, for that matter—no it’s more like, “given that this is the situation, what now?”

And that leads us to the second point. The social arrangement in these verses of servants or slaves and masters, is never mandated in the Bible, and never even commended. So that sets this last pair of commands apart from the first two—marriage and family explicitly are part of God’s good design for humanity in the Bible, and so those family relationships express God’s intention for people. But this economic arrangement of slavery is never spoken of as part of God’s good plan. Quite the opposite—from the freeing of Israel out of Egypt on forward in the bible, God expresses a heart to see people be free of being owned by other people.

Maybe we’ll do a full bible study about this sometime soon, but what you have in passages like this in the New Testament, is that the early church leaders were simply acknowledging that lots of people from the lower classes were becoming followers of Jesus, and those new Christians were trying to figure out how to live their lives as believers even when they were stuck in an oppressive system they couldn’t change. And what God said to them through the first leaders of the church who were writing the New Testament was that they didn’t need to think that their circumstances eliminated their ability to live lives that pleased God. In 1 Corinthians 7:21, Paul tells slaves who are now followers of Jesus that if they can find a way to get free, they should, but if they can’t—they don’t need to worry—they can still please God and they’ll be rewarded like everyone else. I think that’s the significance of verse 23—notice how much like it sounds like verse 17. It’s the Holy Spirit’s way of reaching down to people in what could be very difficult situations and saying to them—”Your lives count, too. Even though it seems like you’re spending all your energy for someone else, your life matters—how you go about your day matters just as much as anyone else. Even if you’re stuck in a horrible situation, don’t get tricked into believing the lie of meaninglessness. God sees you. And you’ll be rewarded for the life you lead just like all the other followers of Jesus.” Because remember—in Christ, the old economic divisions have been done away with. Not in our temporary societies…but in the eternal kingdom of God.

And like the other sets of commands, Paul ends with a word to those in Authority—he reminds them that they will give account to their own Master in heaven, as to whether they were fair and just or not. In total opposition to the way the Roman culture thought about slavery, Paul says that they need to remember they do not have any kind of absolute authority over another human being. Only God has that. And God cares about those human beings who are in compromising situations.

What we see through history, of course, is that the more cultures practiced consistent Christianity in these areas, the more people began to view this economic arrangement as unacceptable, and slavery was done away with.

3: Some Application…

What world do you want to live in? v.5-9? Or v. 10-17? Maybe a word like “submission” cuts directly against all the rebellion and empowerment our culture preaches. But what have they achieved with all their talk of empowerment? For decades now they’ve had the money, the legislation, the media, and the educational system from preschool to post-doctoral studies, and what have they produced? And then, when their system fails, they blame Christians, of all people, for not getting on board.

We’re all familiar, all over the world, with the different attempts to order human life while ignoring Jesus. Communist China. Various Dictatorships. The Islamic state or other Islamic theocracies. The socialist democracies of Europe. And of course, our own American experiment. But especially here, where we act like we’ve found the formula for paradise, what we really see are just the results of living in ignorance of Christ’s commands. And it looks exactly like 3:5 and 3:7. What do we see all around us? Total obsession with exploitative, aberrant and filthy sexuality—and sex is worshiped as if it’s the pinnacle of human existence; we see violent anger, disregard for human life while we always talk about respecting each other, and a torrent of words filled with the worst kind of pride, selfishness, and hatred; we can’t trust each other because of the epidemic of lying and cheating. And for that mind of culture, we’re supposed to pay them money, listen to their media, and dance to their beat? We’re supposed to think they have wisdom about how to live? Look at the fruit of their culture!

Are women really better off when the powerful people laugh at the bible and say we should ignore it? Are they safer on the street, or more respected in relationships, or more honored in the home? Are families better off when we mock what gets called “the traditional family”? Are children better off for all the empowerment talk we give them? Are men better off? What’s the state of the western male? Stronger? More honorable? More able to help build healthy families and communities and nations? And just turn and look—who’s a more noble kind of human—the male the west holds up as a model, or the man of God who’s ruled by the word of Christ and led by the Spirit of Christ?

And so honestly, when we’re told the Bible’s commands are evil or outdated, or when we ourselves get tempted to get squeamish about the bible’s clear instructions, because we know they might offend or confuse some people, we remember that people who reject Christ haven’t offered up anything better. And so we stop…we take a deep breath, we adopt the posture of a learner, and we look into God’s word, to see—if we stop, listen, think, and pray—will God give us insight? If we admit that, while people have failed us consistently, God has never given us a reason not to trust him, and so we’ll trust him this time, that he knows what is best for us—if that’s the ground we stand on, will we learn new things about life? Will we discover a better way to be human?

God knows how to bless humans. He knows what makes us happy and fulfilled. The Spirit of God is calling the followers of Christ to listen to his voice, learn his ways, and discover the joy and strength and freedom that comes from living according to our design. That’s what it means to have Jesus as your lord. And that’s what it means to be in, and on your way to, the kingdom of God.

It’s not a revolution of marches and banners and guns. It’s a revolution of changed hearts and healed relationships. And when you see all this, it makes simply reading these commands even more powerful.

Get In Touch

Got Questions or anything else? It’d be great to hear from you!
Feel free to contact us and get in touch.
Hope to hear from you soon!

12 + 13 =