It seems the Israelites of old were always complaining about one thing or another. One time, God responded by sending vipers into the camp. “They bit the people, so that many people of Israel died. And the people came to Moses and said, ‘We have sinned, for we have spoken against the LORD and against you. Pray to the LORD, that he take away the serpents from us.’ So Moses prayed for the people. And the LORD said to Moses, ‘Make a fiery serpent and set it on a pole, and everyone who is bitten, when he looks at it, shall live.’” (Numbers 21:6-8)
The first thing to notice is what happens when someone gets bit. We don’t know what kind of snakes these were, but their bite was incurable. Everyone who was bitten died. It was just a matter of time. That’s why the people came to Moses for help. There was nowhere else to go.
In the New Testament, Jesus uses this as a picture of our problem with sin. We have already been bit. The poison is already working death in us. It’s not that Jesus comes to condemn us for this or that sinful act. Rather, like people who have been bitten by a deadly snake, we are “condemned already” (John 3:18). Sinful acts are symptoms that the poison is already at work.
Unless the antivenin is administered, the venom will run its course and leave us dead. That’s the reality of deadly snakes, and that’s the hard reality of sin. You don’t do anyone a favor by denying reality. If your child was but by a deadly snake, you would stop at nothing to give them the antivenin. The same is true for anyone we love.
Living in denial never saved anybody from anything. A doctor who knows you have cancer does you no favor by denying it. In fact, he would be prosecuted for malpractice and should lose his license! The first step in getting help is in admitting the problem.
Of course, it is bad news! Nobody likes to hear bad news. But your friends will tell it to you anyway. Not because they hate you, but precisely because they love you. Only those who don’t care about you will withhold life-saving information just because they don’t want to deal with your static. That’s not friendly. That’s just mean.
It’s the same with sin. It would be uncaring and hateful for those who know about the snake bite to keep the diagnosis and the cure a secret. That’s why Christians talk about sin--in order to talk about Jesus! Anything less is selfish in the extreme!
God’s cure for the bites was to, “make a fiery serpent and put it on a pole, and everyone who is bitten, when he looks at it, shall live.” Fifteen hundred years later, Jesus compares Himself to that snake.
“Just as Moses lifted up the Serpent in the wilderness, so must the Son of Man be lifted up, that whoever believes may have eternal life in him” (John 3:14-15). The venom is already at work and all the denial in the world will not make it go away. But there is one thing that will.
When Jesus, the Son of Man, is crucified He is taking away the sins of the world. He comes to be the antivenin for the bite of sin that would kill us otherwise. “God did not send His Son into the world to condemn the world, but in order that the world might be saved through Him” (John 3:17). Look to Him and be saved.
Tuesday, April 17, 2018
Thursday, March 22, 2018
Beginnings and Endings
A Sermon preached at Kramer Chapel
Dr. William C. Weinrich
When in the beginning God spoke, He said, "Let there be light," and there was light. The Word brings light, and to hear the word is to be enlightened.
Word, light, faith -- that is how it was in the beginning, for that is how God does what he does when he wills to be God for another. But who then is this "other" for whom God wills to be God? Well, listen to the voice of the prophet: "When in the beginning God spoke, He said, 'Let us make man in our image and likeness.'"
But how then did God make man and endow him with the divine image? Well, here we enter into the workshop of the divine Potter/[Pater]. God, bending low, stretched out his two hands and took dust from the earth. Dust from dust, Adam from Adam [Adam from atom?], and, as it were, holding the dust into His two hands, God breathed out His breath. He blew his spirit -- not so much at the dust, or even on the dust, but into the dust. In and through that breathing, the dust became man, a living being.
Well, think of that, O Man! From the beginning, at the beginning, God lifted up man high, exalting him above all creatures. What an exaltation that was! From dust, man had become the temple of God's own breath. By the humble bending low of the Divine Majesty, out of love and mercy, the dust had become the very partaker of God's own Spirit. Dust, now called by the personal name of Adam, was the image of God's own eternity, destined to live life with God as his own birthright, endowed with those virtues by which God himself lives and exists: charity, humility, longsuffering, patience, faithfulness, truthfulness, and goodness.
And God gave to Adam an intellect and a mind. Why? So that Adam might think the thoughts of God and, thinking such thoughts, might know the goodness of God and the goodwill of his maker
And God gave to Adam a will. Why? So that Adam might will the will of God, and will rightly, and might delight in the will of God and desire to walk in his ways.
And God gave to Adam a body. Why? So that Adam, rightly thinking and rightly willing, might in fact live according to God's will and reveal himself to be the image of God through works of love and humble service to his neighbor. Through the body, that "robe of glory," as the fathers like to call it, Adam could speak, and he could do what he thought and what he willed -- with hands able to work the good, with ears able to hear the sounds of blessing, with eyes able to see righteousness, and with a tongue able to speak peace, with feet able to walk in the statutes of the living God. Adam could thereby be the image of God, not merely in thought and will but in reality and truth. The robe of glory was, as it were, the lamp of God's own light, set in the world for others to see and to hear.
And so in the beginning, God placed man into the world as his own image to be a light, a beacon, recalling and reflecting the light of the Creator. And as it were, God gave to man a single and primal commandment: "Let your light so shine before men that they may see your good works and give glory to your Father in heaven." What a mystery man was! And here is the mystery: Man himself was that commandment. Were man to be in truth man, the light would shine and the Father would be known.
Consider, then, O Man, what exaltation had been given to the mere dust. What had dust become? It had become the image of the Divine Love, the light shining as the sun of Righteousness. Dust was now the patience of humility -- that is, dust had become man. Dust had become the image of the immortal God.
Well, that was at the beginning when God, bending low, lifted dust up and set it on high as his own image. It was as though God had said, "Hear, my man! When you speak, it is as though it is I that will be speaking. And when I do good things, it will be you who act. When I love, it will be through you that I do so." And Adam, at the beginning, said, "Yes!" And then Adam added, "I am the servant of the Lord, for he has made me thus. And I will delight in his will and walk in His ways to the glory of His holy name." That is how it was in the beginning, when God made man and exalted him to be as God among man and beast.
But that beginning was not yet the end, for into this beginning there slithered an alien thought, a strange and contrary will, tempting man towards unholy deeds. Now how the tempter came to be, I do not know, for he too was a creature of God. But the holy writers tell us that the tempter had fallen away from God's presence out of pride and out of envy -- out of pride, because he was not the equal of God, and out of envy, because he was jealous of man's status.
And so the tempter contrived a new calculus, one might say a false creation: "Let us exalt man, and so bring him down." And so into the thought of man there came a strange and tragic thought: "I could become not merely like God but my own god." And so into the will of man there came a strange and tragic will: "I might by my own will make my own commandments, and determine what is good for me and walk in my ways."
And into the heart of man there came a strange disobedience. Strange, I say, for in such thoughts and such a will and such a heart, man turned against himself. Man became the corrupter of his own nature. Man chose to be against himself in the strange and tragic deception that he was the Lord of his own life.
And so as it were, man made himself to be his own tower of Babel, reaching up into the heavens so as to grab as his own possession the things of God. But according to the terrible physics of sin, the higher man reached, the lower and more degraded he became.
Infused with the pride of the tempter, man's own thoughts became prideful, and the result was envy, lust, rapaciousness, arrogance, and unseemly bloatedness from one's own self-importance. Infused now with the waywardness of the tempter, man's will also became wayward and unstable. The result was unfaithfulness, idleness, weakness towards the good, and a constant tendence toward the cowardly and the apostasy.
Man's body, too, that robe of glory, now the instrument of sin and death, became besmirched with the filth of a fallen mind and the desires of a wayward heart. Oh, what those eyes, now cast down, did not desire to look at! And what those ears, closed now to the voice of God, did not want to hear! And that tongue, now silent to the hymns of praise, what it did not dare to speak! And oh, what did those hands not desire to touch, to what places of ill repute did those feet not hasten to go? Can we name such things?
Out of a certain shame, let us let the wise Solomon speak of it: "Of the envy of the devil, death entered into the world." The apostle, too, describes this chosen madness of man: "Although man claimed to be wise, he became a fool, and exchanged the glory of the immortal God for images. Man exchanged the truth of God for a lie and worshiped and served created things." The Christian writer also has pondered this strange state of affairs: "When man exalted himself and became abased."
Listen, then, to the sad account of the holy preacher who surveys the realities of prideful man. Having stretched out his hand to take hold of an apple, promising a false divinity, man himself was dissolved and sank into the earth, no longer dust to man but man to dust -- no longer the temple of God's spirit, but the empty vessel filled with the stench of sin. No longer the light of truth in the world, but the sad shade of a hollow life.
And man, the exalted sinner, bequeathed to his children the terrible inheritance of his own death: promiscuity, slavery, tyranny, hate, jealousy, destruction. And the destruction of man upon the earth became indeed strange and terrible, for man, thinking himself great, became the slave of sin, was led as a slave into the land of bondage and was drowned in the swamp of insatiable desires. Avarice, wantonness, murder, robbery, father against son, son against father, mother against her own children, sexual unions devoid of creative power, trading the natural powers of mutual love for the strange neutrality of sterility.
And so all man became upon the earth either manslayers, parasites, infanticites, or fratricites. And in all these things sin rejoiced, who as the coworker with death always rushes ahead into the souls of men and prepares there as food for death the bodies of the already dead. And what had been taken from the earth was to earth dissolved. What had been given from God had, by a terrible choice, been assigned to the realm of Hades. And man exalted himself, thinking the things of God to be for the taking, and, going up, had cast himself down into captivity, dragged off now as a prisoner under the shadow of death. And so in the dust lay desolate God's image.
Well, that was at the beginning, which as yet was not the end. That beginning is nonetheless, for you and me, our present. For we are all at that beginning, sharing with Adam the dust of his own sin.
But there is another beginning, which according to its own strangeness is also the end. And this end is a new beginning. Let us remember, then, O Sinners, what the Evangelist tells us: "God is love, and for us and for our salvation, He did love us by giving over his Son through the exaltation of the Son of Man upon the tree." What a marvel that is -- the cross as exaltation, and the exaltation of the Son of Man as the humble obedience of the cross.
How are we to understand that? How are we to will this to be our own way, and how are we to live this as the truth of our own new being?
Well, it was no insult to the heavenly Architect to dwell in the temple which he had built, nor did the dust of the dust soil the hands of the Potter [Pater] when he made man. And so it was not alien to our heavenly Father when, once again, as at that first beginning, He bent Himself low and revealed Himself anew to be humility when He formed man anew from the wondrous dust of the virgin's womb.
There was, of course, this difference: now the humility which is God had to bend himself even lower than at the first beginning, for man had so far sunk down that the Divine Charity had, so to speak, to reveal himself even more. Yet to repeat a point, as His hands were not soiled at that first Creation, so now He was not stained when He took sinful flesh from the virgin Mary and brought forth the Lamb of God, immaculate and without the stain of sin. The humility of the most High God was not defiled when His hands formed his Son into the image of sinful man so that, through that Man, made the sinner by a strange grace, He may redeem and sanctify those who are in truth sinners.
By His stripes we are healed, proclaims the prophet. In his abasement, we are exalted. How so? Well, let the Christian poet sing praises of this as he attempts, as best faith can, to capture the wondrous greatness of Divinity in its own proper lowliness. All these things did the merciful God do, stripping off glory and putting on a body. For He had devised a way to reclothe Adam in that glory which he had stripped off. He was wrapped in swaddling clothes corresponding to the leaves of shame with which Adam had clothed himself. He put on clothes in place of Adam's sin. He was baptized in place of Adam's sin. He was embalmed for Adam's death. He rose and raised Adam up in his own glory. Blessed is He who has descended, put on Adam, and ascended.
The bending low of God was not alien to His deity, as though He could bend low only by divesting Himself of His humility. Oh no, no! Love, humility, grace, and mercy are the properties of God most proclaimed by prophet and apostle. In bending low for sinful man, God was God for man! And, in bending low in such a manner that God the Son, according to the will of the Father, assumed to himself the ragged clothes of Adam, gave to those clothes a shining newness.
How shall we speak of this new newness? The Divine Son clothed Himself with man and gave to man to participate in His own nature. Bending low to that place to which man had exalted himself in abasement, Jesus (that is His name) gave to sinful man a portion of His own humility, and man made new in humility and love was exalted once again. Exalted, I say! Yes, but with this difference -- that now man was raised in Jesus to the very throne of God to share with God in His own rule.
Here is how the ancient poet spoke of it: The Most High God knew that Adam wanted to be a god, and so He sent His Son to put Adam on in order to grant to Adam his wish. Divinity flew down and descended in order to raise and draw up humanity. The Son has made beautiful the servant's deformity, and he has become a god just as he desired. Here are the words of a more modern hymn writer: "He has raised our human nature on the clouds of God's right hand; there we sit in heavenly places, there with him in glory stand. Jesus reigns adored by angels, man with God is on the throne; by our mighty Lord's ascension, we by faith behold our own."
Man, now clothed with the new robe of glory through the sanctification of the flesh, is now, maybe now, the image of our Heavenly Father! Does this new man will to reach beyond the gifts of God given to him? By no means! This new man prays from the heart, from the mind, and from his will, "Thy will be done as earth, that is by me, even as it is in heaven."
What then, O Saints, might we say in conclusion? What final prayer might we say that speaks in truth about the truth we have now been given to be? Perhaps this: "Your cords of love, my Savior, bind me to you forever. I am no longer mine. To you I gladly tender all that my life can render, and all I have to you resign."
Amen.
Dr. William C. Weinrich
When in the beginning God spoke, He said, "Let there be light," and there was light. The Word brings light, and to hear the word is to be enlightened.
Word, light, faith -- that is how it was in the beginning, for that is how God does what he does when he wills to be God for another. But who then is this "other" for whom God wills to be God? Well, listen to the voice of the prophet: "When in the beginning God spoke, He said, 'Let us make man in our image and likeness.'"
But how then did God make man and endow him with the divine image? Well, here we enter into the workshop of the divine Potter/[Pater]. God, bending low, stretched out his two hands and took dust from the earth. Dust from dust, Adam from Adam [Adam from atom?], and, as it were, holding the dust into His two hands, God breathed out His breath. He blew his spirit -- not so much at the dust, or even on the dust, but into the dust. In and through that breathing, the dust became man, a living being.
Well, think of that, O Man! From the beginning, at the beginning, God lifted up man high, exalting him above all creatures. What an exaltation that was! From dust, man had become the temple of God's own breath. By the humble bending low of the Divine Majesty, out of love and mercy, the dust had become the very partaker of God's own Spirit. Dust, now called by the personal name of Adam, was the image of God's own eternity, destined to live life with God as his own birthright, endowed with those virtues by which God himself lives and exists: charity, humility, longsuffering, patience, faithfulness, truthfulness, and goodness.
And God gave to Adam an intellect and a mind. Why? So that Adam might think the thoughts of God and, thinking such thoughts, might know the goodness of God and the goodwill of his maker
And God gave to Adam a will. Why? So that Adam might will the will of God, and will rightly, and might delight in the will of God and desire to walk in his ways.
And God gave to Adam a body. Why? So that Adam, rightly thinking and rightly willing, might in fact live according to God's will and reveal himself to be the image of God through works of love and humble service to his neighbor. Through the body, that "robe of glory," as the fathers like to call it, Adam could speak, and he could do what he thought and what he willed -- with hands able to work the good, with ears able to hear the sounds of blessing, with eyes able to see righteousness, and with a tongue able to speak peace, with feet able to walk in the statutes of the living God. Adam could thereby be the image of God, not merely in thought and will but in reality and truth. The robe of glory was, as it were, the lamp of God's own light, set in the world for others to see and to hear.
And so in the beginning, God placed man into the world as his own image to be a light, a beacon, recalling and reflecting the light of the Creator. And as it were, God gave to man a single and primal commandment: "Let your light so shine before men that they may see your good works and give glory to your Father in heaven." What a mystery man was! And here is the mystery: Man himself was that commandment. Were man to be in truth man, the light would shine and the Father would be known.
Consider, then, O Man, what exaltation had been given to the mere dust. What had dust become? It had become the image of the Divine Love, the light shining as the sun of Righteousness. Dust was now the patience of humility -- that is, dust had become man. Dust had become the image of the immortal God.
Well, that was at the beginning when God, bending low, lifted dust up and set it on high as his own image. It was as though God had said, "Hear, my man! When you speak, it is as though it is I that will be speaking. And when I do good things, it will be you who act. When I love, it will be through you that I do so." And Adam, at the beginning, said, "Yes!" And then Adam added, "I am the servant of the Lord, for he has made me thus. And I will delight in his will and walk in His ways to the glory of His holy name." That is how it was in the beginning, when God made man and exalted him to be as God among man and beast.
But that beginning was not yet the end, for into this beginning there slithered an alien thought, a strange and contrary will, tempting man towards unholy deeds. Now how the tempter came to be, I do not know, for he too was a creature of God. But the holy writers tell us that the tempter had fallen away from God's presence out of pride and out of envy -- out of pride, because he was not the equal of God, and out of envy, because he was jealous of man's status.
And so the tempter contrived a new calculus, one might say a false creation: "Let us exalt man, and so bring him down." And so into the thought of man there came a strange and tragic thought: "I could become not merely like God but my own god." And so into the will of man there came a strange and tragic will: "I might by my own will make my own commandments, and determine what is good for me and walk in my ways."
And into the heart of man there came a strange disobedience. Strange, I say, for in such thoughts and such a will and such a heart, man turned against himself. Man became the corrupter of his own nature. Man chose to be against himself in the strange and tragic deception that he was the Lord of his own life.
And so as it were, man made himself to be his own tower of Babel, reaching up into the heavens so as to grab as his own possession the things of God. But according to the terrible physics of sin, the higher man reached, the lower and more degraded he became.
Infused with the pride of the tempter, man's own thoughts became prideful, and the result was envy, lust, rapaciousness, arrogance, and unseemly bloatedness from one's own self-importance. Infused now with the waywardness of the tempter, man's will also became wayward and unstable. The result was unfaithfulness, idleness, weakness towards the good, and a constant tendence toward the cowardly and the apostasy.
Man's body, too, that robe of glory, now the instrument of sin and death, became besmirched with the filth of a fallen mind and the desires of a wayward heart. Oh, what those eyes, now cast down, did not desire to look at! And what those ears, closed now to the voice of God, did not want to hear! And that tongue, now silent to the hymns of praise, what it did not dare to speak! And oh, what did those hands not desire to touch, to what places of ill repute did those feet not hasten to go? Can we name such things?
Out of a certain shame, let us let the wise Solomon speak of it: "Of the envy of the devil, death entered into the world." The apostle, too, describes this chosen madness of man: "Although man claimed to be wise, he became a fool, and exchanged the glory of the immortal God for images. Man exchanged the truth of God for a lie and worshiped and served created things." The Christian writer also has pondered this strange state of affairs: "When man exalted himself and became abased."
Listen, then, to the sad account of the holy preacher who surveys the realities of prideful man. Having stretched out his hand to take hold of an apple, promising a false divinity, man himself was dissolved and sank into the earth, no longer dust to man but man to dust -- no longer the temple of God's spirit, but the empty vessel filled with the stench of sin. No longer the light of truth in the world, but the sad shade of a hollow life.
And man, the exalted sinner, bequeathed to his children the terrible inheritance of his own death: promiscuity, slavery, tyranny, hate, jealousy, destruction. And the destruction of man upon the earth became indeed strange and terrible, for man, thinking himself great, became the slave of sin, was led as a slave into the land of bondage and was drowned in the swamp of insatiable desires. Avarice, wantonness, murder, robbery, father against son, son against father, mother against her own children, sexual unions devoid of creative power, trading the natural powers of mutual love for the strange neutrality of sterility.
And so all man became upon the earth either manslayers, parasites, infanticites, or fratricites. And in all these things sin rejoiced, who as the coworker with death always rushes ahead into the souls of men and prepares there as food for death the bodies of the already dead. And what had been taken from the earth was to earth dissolved. What had been given from God had, by a terrible choice, been assigned to the realm of Hades. And man exalted himself, thinking the things of God to be for the taking, and, going up, had cast himself down into captivity, dragged off now as a prisoner under the shadow of death. And so in the dust lay desolate God's image.
Well, that was at the beginning, which as yet was not the end. That beginning is nonetheless, for you and me, our present. For we are all at that beginning, sharing with Adam the dust of his own sin.
But there is another beginning, which according to its own strangeness is also the end. And this end is a new beginning. Let us remember, then, O Sinners, what the Evangelist tells us: "God is love, and for us and for our salvation, He did love us by giving over his Son through the exaltation of the Son of Man upon the tree." What a marvel that is -- the cross as exaltation, and the exaltation of the Son of Man as the humble obedience of the cross.
How are we to understand that? How are we to will this to be our own way, and how are we to live this as the truth of our own new being?
Well, it was no insult to the heavenly Architect to dwell in the temple which he had built, nor did the dust of the dust soil the hands of the Potter [Pater] when he made man. And so it was not alien to our heavenly Father when, once again, as at that first beginning, He bent Himself low and revealed Himself anew to be humility when He formed man anew from the wondrous dust of the virgin's womb.
There was, of course, this difference: now the humility which is God had to bend himself even lower than at the first beginning, for man had so far sunk down that the Divine Charity had, so to speak, to reveal himself even more. Yet to repeat a point, as His hands were not soiled at that first Creation, so now He was not stained when He took sinful flesh from the virgin Mary and brought forth the Lamb of God, immaculate and without the stain of sin. The humility of the most High God was not defiled when His hands formed his Son into the image of sinful man so that, through that Man, made the sinner by a strange grace, He may redeem and sanctify those who are in truth sinners.
By His stripes we are healed, proclaims the prophet. In his abasement, we are exalted. How so? Well, let the Christian poet sing praises of this as he attempts, as best faith can, to capture the wondrous greatness of Divinity in its own proper lowliness. All these things did the merciful God do, stripping off glory and putting on a body. For He had devised a way to reclothe Adam in that glory which he had stripped off. He was wrapped in swaddling clothes corresponding to the leaves of shame with which Adam had clothed himself. He put on clothes in place of Adam's sin. He was baptized in place of Adam's sin. He was embalmed for Adam's death. He rose and raised Adam up in his own glory. Blessed is He who has descended, put on Adam, and ascended.
The bending low of God was not alien to His deity, as though He could bend low only by divesting Himself of His humility. Oh no, no! Love, humility, grace, and mercy are the properties of God most proclaimed by prophet and apostle. In bending low for sinful man, God was God for man! And, in bending low in such a manner that God the Son, according to the will of the Father, assumed to himself the ragged clothes of Adam, gave to those clothes a shining newness.
How shall we speak of this new newness? The Divine Son clothed Himself with man and gave to man to participate in His own nature. Bending low to that place to which man had exalted himself in abasement, Jesus (that is His name) gave to sinful man a portion of His own humility, and man made new in humility and love was exalted once again. Exalted, I say! Yes, but with this difference -- that now man was raised in Jesus to the very throne of God to share with God in His own rule.
Here is how the ancient poet spoke of it: The Most High God knew that Adam wanted to be a god, and so He sent His Son to put Adam on in order to grant to Adam his wish. Divinity flew down and descended in order to raise and draw up humanity. The Son has made beautiful the servant's deformity, and he has become a god just as he desired. Here are the words of a more modern hymn writer: "He has raised our human nature on the clouds of God's right hand; there we sit in heavenly places, there with him in glory stand. Jesus reigns adored by angels, man with God is on the throne; by our mighty Lord's ascension, we by faith behold our own."
Man, now clothed with the new robe of glory through the sanctification of the flesh, is now, maybe now, the image of our Heavenly Father! Does this new man will to reach beyond the gifts of God given to him? By no means! This new man prays from the heart, from the mind, and from his will, "Thy will be done as earth, that is by me, even as it is in heaven."
What then, O Saints, might we say in conclusion? What final prayer might we say that speaks in truth about the truth we have now been given to be? Perhaps this: "Your cords of love, my Savior, bind me to you forever. I am no longer mine. To you I gladly tender all that my life can render, and all I have to you resign."
Amen.
Monday, February 26, 2018
CrossTalk: Abraham's Mercy, and God's
In Genesis 18, we read that after God promised Abraham and Sarah that Isaac would be born the next year, He forewarned of the disaster about to come on the city of his nephew, Lot, “because the outcry against Sodom and Gomorrah is great, and their sin is very grave” (Gen. 18:20).
What follows is one of the most famous intercessory prayers in history. Abraham said, “Will you indeed sweep away the righteous with the wicked? Suppose there are fifty righteous within the city. Will you then sweep away the place and not spare it for the fifty righteous who are in it?”
God’s reply was filled with comfort and mercy: “If I find at Sodom fifty righteous in the city, I will spare the whole place for their sake.” It is comforting because the faithful are assured that they will not be harmed on account of the wickedness surrounding them. It is merciful because even a small congregation of 50 believers is enough to spare an entire city.
But the congregation wasn’t that large.
So, Abraham asks again and again, dropping the numbers each time. What about 45? What about 40? What if there are only 30, 20, or even 10?
God’s answers are always merciful. He will not sweep away the righteous with the wicked. There is no collateral damage with God’s judgment. More than that, the unbelievers in the cities of Sodom and Gomorrah would have had their lives spared even if there were only ten believers living in their midst.
When Jesus says in Matthew 5:13, “You are the salt of the earth,” that’s what He meant. Even a miniscule number of believers, scattered throughout the world, are a powerful preservative in a society rotted by sin.
Sadly, for Sodom and Gomorrah, there weren’t even 10. Abraham, who cared deeply for Lot had pushed God as far as he dared. After whittling down the numbers from 50 to 10, rather than ask about five, or four, or three, he turned and sadly walked away. Abraham could not imagine that the LORD would be so merciful as to save only three.
But even merciful Abraham severely underestimated the mercy of God. He thought he had done everything possible for his nephew. But God wasn’t done, yet. He sent two angels to the city to seek out the faithful family.
Lot had a wife and two daughters in his tiny congregation of believers. Four people in one house could not spare both cities, but neither would they be caught up in the destruction. The Psalmist writes, “A thousand may fall at your side, ten thousand at your right hand, but it shall not come near you” (Psalm 91:7).
But there’s more! The angels didn’t only come to save the faithful. The two men betrothed to Lot’s daughters were given one final chance at life even thought they were unbelievers and just as wicked as the city surrounding them.
God knew their hearts. But he offered them escape anyway. He said to them, “Up! Get out of this place, for the LORD is about to destroy the city.” But they thought the angels were joking. No amount of warning or pleading could persuade them to go.
Finally, as the day of destruction dawned, God’s messengers of mercy had enough of talk. They grabbed Lot’s daughters by the hand and physically dragged them to safety. They did absolutely everything that could be done to save people from the terrible destruction too come.
At the beginning of the story, it seemed like Abraham was kindly and merciful, while God is stern and severe. By the end of the story, we know that Abraham’s mercy doesn’t even hold a candle to the mercy of God.
“The Lord is not slow to fulfill his promise as some count slowness, but is patient towards you, not wishing that any should perish, but that all should reach repentance” (2 Peter 3:9).
What follows is one of the most famous intercessory prayers in history. Abraham said, “Will you indeed sweep away the righteous with the wicked? Suppose there are fifty righteous within the city. Will you then sweep away the place and not spare it for the fifty righteous who are in it?”
God’s reply was filled with comfort and mercy: “If I find at Sodom fifty righteous in the city, I will spare the whole place for their sake.” It is comforting because the faithful are assured that they will not be harmed on account of the wickedness surrounding them. It is merciful because even a small congregation of 50 believers is enough to spare an entire city.
But the congregation wasn’t that large.
So, Abraham asks again and again, dropping the numbers each time. What about 45? What about 40? What if there are only 30, 20, or even 10?
God’s answers are always merciful. He will not sweep away the righteous with the wicked. There is no collateral damage with God’s judgment. More than that, the unbelievers in the cities of Sodom and Gomorrah would have had their lives spared even if there were only ten believers living in their midst.
When Jesus says in Matthew 5:13, “You are the salt of the earth,” that’s what He meant. Even a miniscule number of believers, scattered throughout the world, are a powerful preservative in a society rotted by sin.
Sadly, for Sodom and Gomorrah, there weren’t even 10. Abraham, who cared deeply for Lot had pushed God as far as he dared. After whittling down the numbers from 50 to 10, rather than ask about five, or four, or three, he turned and sadly walked away. Abraham could not imagine that the LORD would be so merciful as to save only three.
But even merciful Abraham severely underestimated the mercy of God. He thought he had done everything possible for his nephew. But God wasn’t done, yet. He sent two angels to the city to seek out the faithful family.
Lot had a wife and two daughters in his tiny congregation of believers. Four people in one house could not spare both cities, but neither would they be caught up in the destruction. The Psalmist writes, “A thousand may fall at your side, ten thousand at your right hand, but it shall not come near you” (Psalm 91:7).
But there’s more! The angels didn’t only come to save the faithful. The two men betrothed to Lot’s daughters were given one final chance at life even thought they were unbelievers and just as wicked as the city surrounding them.
God knew their hearts. But he offered them escape anyway. He said to them, “Up! Get out of this place, for the LORD is about to destroy the city.” But they thought the angels were joking. No amount of warning or pleading could persuade them to go.
Finally, as the day of destruction dawned, God’s messengers of mercy had enough of talk. They grabbed Lot’s daughters by the hand and physically dragged them to safety. They did absolutely everything that could be done to save people from the terrible destruction too come.
At the beginning of the story, it seemed like Abraham was kindly and merciful, while God is stern and severe. By the end of the story, we know that Abraham’s mercy doesn’t even hold a candle to the mercy of God.
“The Lord is not slow to fulfill his promise as some count slowness, but is patient towards you, not wishing that any should perish, but that all should reach repentance” (2 Peter 3:9).
Sunday, February 18, 2018
Tortured for Christ - Movie
Thursday, March 8, at 7:00pm
Evanston Alliance Church
235 Overthrust Road / Evanston, WY
Buy your tickets online at: https://new.tugg.com/events/tortured-for-christ-movie-f-a0
Each ticket buyer receives admission to the show, and a free copy of the book, Tortured for Christ. Proceeds from the movie will go to persecuted Christians throughout the world.
Synopsis: The dramatic testimony of Pastor Richard Wurmbrand as told in the international bestseller Tortured for Christ. In 1945, Communists seized power and a million Russian troops poured into his beloved Romania. Pastor Wurmbrand was captured by the secret police and held as "Prisoner Number 1." 14 years of unthinkable torture in Communist prison could not break his faith. 90 runtime (Parental Guidance strongly recommended)
Read article from the Uinta County Herald
Trailer #1
Trailer #2
Read the book, "Tortured for Christ," here.
Wednesday, February 14, 2018
Monday, January 8, 2018
CrossTalk: Calculating Christ's Birthday
I am writing this devotion on the 12th and last day of Christmas. These 12 days of Christmas mark the time between Christmas Day, December 25, and the Festival of the Epiphany on January 6. But how did these two dates become important in connection to Christmas?
Even though Christmas wasn’t really celebrated until the middle of the fourth century, people were still interested in knowing the date of Jesus’ birth. In fact, around the year 200 AD, two different parts of the Church calculated two different dates 12 days apart. Tertullian, a Latin Christian in northern Africa, came up with December 25, while an unknown Greek Christian in the near-East thought it was January 6.
Rather than resolving these two dates, it simply became the custom that eastern, Greek-speaking Christians observed January 6, while western, Latin-speaking Christians celebrated Christmas on December 25. We in the west also developed the custom of celebrating the Greek Christmas (January 6) as the “Christmas for the gentiles,” the day when the first non-Jews saw the baby Jesus.
Besides these two dates, there have been both ancient and modern scholars who calculated still other dates for Jesus’ birth. The Bible itself does not record the date. Neither am I aware of any tradition handed down from Mary or Jesus’ brothers. So we really shouldn’t argue too vigorously about it.
Still, it is worth understanding why the days between December 25 and January 6 have been observed by all Christians for 1,800 years. The popular internet rumor that we simply borrowed December 25 from the pagan Romans doesn’t hold water. Besides, it cannot account for the January date at all.
In fact, the earliest datings of Jesus’ birth aren’t concerned with Jesus’ birth so much as they are concerned with Jesus’ conception! Tertullian and others set out to calculate the day of Jesus’ conception. Once they reckoned that, they simply assumed that the birthday would be nine months later.
Around the year 200 AD, Tertullian concluded that Jesus was conceived by the Holy Ghost on March 25. That would make His birthday on December 25. In the same way, the Greek scholar in the east came up with April 6th as the day of Jesus’ conception, and so January 6 would be the natural time for his birth.
But what in the world would make these people think that could know the date of Jesus’ conception? Truth be told, it was a purely theological idea. Both men were operating under the widely-shared notion that great men, which Jesus surely was, always died on the very same day that they were conceived.
Tertullian and his counterpart in the east both set out to calculate the day of Jesus’ crucifixion. They each came to different dates, but everything else flowed from that. Our December 25 date assumes that Jesus was crucified on March 25. The Greek Orthodox date of January 6 assumes that Jesus was crucified on April 6.
Regardless of whether you are an eastern Christian or a western Christian, Christmas has always been connected to Good Friday.
What a beautiful thought! Jesus was born to be our Savior from sin, death and hell. He was born to give His body for the life of the world. He was born to be King of the Jews. All of this happened on the cross. There He “destroyed the works of the devil” (John 3:8). On that day He said, “This is My Body given for you” (Luke 22:-19). There He wore the crown and hung under the title, “Jesus of Nazareth, King of the Jews” (John 19:19).
Maybe this is what the hymnist William Dix was thinking when he wrote “What Child Is This?” In the second verse of this Christmas classic we sing, “Nails, spear shall pierce Him though, The cross be borne for me, for you. Hail, hail the Word made flesh, the Babe, the Son of Mary.”
Even though Christmas wasn’t really celebrated until the middle of the fourth century, people were still interested in knowing the date of Jesus’ birth. In fact, around the year 200 AD, two different parts of the Church calculated two different dates 12 days apart. Tertullian, a Latin Christian in northern Africa, came up with December 25, while an unknown Greek Christian in the near-East thought it was January 6.
Rather than resolving these two dates, it simply became the custom that eastern, Greek-speaking Christians observed January 6, while western, Latin-speaking Christians celebrated Christmas on December 25. We in the west also developed the custom of celebrating the Greek Christmas (January 6) as the “Christmas for the gentiles,” the day when the first non-Jews saw the baby Jesus.
Besides these two dates, there have been both ancient and modern scholars who calculated still other dates for Jesus’ birth. The Bible itself does not record the date. Neither am I aware of any tradition handed down from Mary or Jesus’ brothers. So we really shouldn’t argue too vigorously about it.
Still, it is worth understanding why the days between December 25 and January 6 have been observed by all Christians for 1,800 years. The popular internet rumor that we simply borrowed December 25 from the pagan Romans doesn’t hold water. Besides, it cannot account for the January date at all.
In fact, the earliest datings of Jesus’ birth aren’t concerned with Jesus’ birth so much as they are concerned with Jesus’ conception! Tertullian and others set out to calculate the day of Jesus’ conception. Once they reckoned that, they simply assumed that the birthday would be nine months later.
Around the year 200 AD, Tertullian concluded that Jesus was conceived by the Holy Ghost on March 25. That would make His birthday on December 25. In the same way, the Greek scholar in the east came up with April 6th as the day of Jesus’ conception, and so January 6 would be the natural time for his birth.
But what in the world would make these people think that could know the date of Jesus’ conception? Truth be told, it was a purely theological idea. Both men were operating under the widely-shared notion that great men, which Jesus surely was, always died on the very same day that they were conceived.
Tertullian and his counterpart in the east both set out to calculate the day of Jesus’ crucifixion. They each came to different dates, but everything else flowed from that. Our December 25 date assumes that Jesus was crucified on March 25. The Greek Orthodox date of January 6 assumes that Jesus was crucified on April 6.
Regardless of whether you are an eastern Christian or a western Christian, Christmas has always been connected to Good Friday.
What a beautiful thought! Jesus was born to be our Savior from sin, death and hell. He was born to give His body for the life of the world. He was born to be King of the Jews. All of this happened on the cross. There He “destroyed the works of the devil” (John 3:8). On that day He said, “This is My Body given for you” (Luke 22:-19). There He wore the crown and hung under the title, “Jesus of Nazareth, King of the Jews” (John 19:19).
Maybe this is what the hymnist William Dix was thinking when he wrote “What Child Is This?” In the second verse of this Christmas classic we sing, “Nails, spear shall pierce Him though, The cross be borne for me, for you. Hail, hail the Word made flesh, the Babe, the Son of Mary.”
Tuesday, November 21, 2017
CrossTalk: Thank God by Receiving His Benefits
Thanksgiving Day is about giving thanks. That’s a no-brainer. The question is: to whom, why and how?
Giving can only be done toward somebody else. We can give gifts to friends and taxes to Caesar, but to whom do we give our thanks? We can certainly start with our parents. They, after all, gave us life, protection, nourishment, upbringing and, most of all, love. Giving thanks to parents, brothers and sisters for the love that they have given us makes Thanksgiving Day a holiday about family.
Still, when we gather as a family to share a meal, to whom does the family give thanks? Who gave your parents life, protection, nourishment, upbringing and love? Nobody answers with endless genealogical lines. We know instinctively that it is about God, “the Father from whom every family in heaven and earth is named” (Ephesians 3:14-15).
So, Thanksgiving Day is about giving thanks to God, our Creator. We give thanks to Him because life is good, and I mean that in the most basic sense possible. Despite the evil in the world and all the pain that we have experienced, despite of the inevitability of our own death, we know unshakably that to be alive is better than to not be alive.
And the living existence that we have came from God. In his love He considered whether to give you life or not, and He chose the better thing for you. He didn’t have to do it. You hadn’t done anything to earn life. How could you? You didn’t even exist! He gave you your life and existence as a gift, by grace.
In the very first interaction you ever had with God, you were on the receiving end of the greatest gift ever. We give thanks to Him because He first gave life to us, and He continues to give it and everything you need to support, protect, and save it from death.
His initial gift of life is matched by His continual giving of rain and sunshine, harvest and springtime and absolutely everything that is needed to support your body and life. And since, due to evil and sin, your life is inevitably marching towards death, He even gives you the free gift of His Son, Jesus Christ, to rescue you from sin, death and the devil and to keep you alive forever.
It’s for all of this that we give thanks. Our thanks doesn’t pay Him back. We can’t. It simply acknowledges these two things: Life is good, and God gives it to you.
But how can you give thanks? Is it simply a matter of setting aside one day a year? Of course not. It is not even covered by saying the words “thank you” a thousand times a day. The only real way to give thanks is to appreciatively receive what you are given.
When you’re at Grandma’s house on Thanksgiving Day and you want to thank her for the meal, you won’t simply send her a nice card and head out to McDonald’s. You will skip the card and sit down at the table. It makes Grandma happy to see you enjoying what she gives you.
The same is true of God. He who loves your life so much that He decided from all eternity to give it to you also wants you to enjoy it for all eternity. He is pleased to see you appreciate the value of your life. He is delighted when receive the suffering and death of His only-begotten Son who preserves your life forever.
The best way to thank God this Thursday, and every day, is to ask and receive from Him every good and gracious gift that He desires to give you.
Giving can only be done toward somebody else. We can give gifts to friends and taxes to Caesar, but to whom do we give our thanks? We can certainly start with our parents. They, after all, gave us life, protection, nourishment, upbringing and, most of all, love. Giving thanks to parents, brothers and sisters for the love that they have given us makes Thanksgiving Day a holiday about family.
Still, when we gather as a family to share a meal, to whom does the family give thanks? Who gave your parents life, protection, nourishment, upbringing and love? Nobody answers with endless genealogical lines. We know instinctively that it is about God, “the Father from whom every family in heaven and earth is named” (Ephesians 3:14-15).
So, Thanksgiving Day is about giving thanks to God, our Creator. We give thanks to Him because life is good, and I mean that in the most basic sense possible. Despite the evil in the world and all the pain that we have experienced, despite of the inevitability of our own death, we know unshakably that to be alive is better than to not be alive.
And the living existence that we have came from God. In his love He considered whether to give you life or not, and He chose the better thing for you. He didn’t have to do it. You hadn’t done anything to earn life. How could you? You didn’t even exist! He gave you your life and existence as a gift, by grace.
In the very first interaction you ever had with God, you were on the receiving end of the greatest gift ever. We give thanks to Him because He first gave life to us, and He continues to give it and everything you need to support, protect, and save it from death.
His initial gift of life is matched by His continual giving of rain and sunshine, harvest and springtime and absolutely everything that is needed to support your body and life. And since, due to evil and sin, your life is inevitably marching towards death, He even gives you the free gift of His Son, Jesus Christ, to rescue you from sin, death and the devil and to keep you alive forever.
It’s for all of this that we give thanks. Our thanks doesn’t pay Him back. We can’t. It simply acknowledges these two things: Life is good, and God gives it to you.
But how can you give thanks? Is it simply a matter of setting aside one day a year? Of course not. It is not even covered by saying the words “thank you” a thousand times a day. The only real way to give thanks is to appreciatively receive what you are given.
When you’re at Grandma’s house on Thanksgiving Day and you want to thank her for the meal, you won’t simply send her a nice card and head out to McDonald’s. You will skip the card and sit down at the table. It makes Grandma happy to see you enjoying what she gives you.
The same is true of God. He who loves your life so much that He decided from all eternity to give it to you also wants you to enjoy it for all eternity. He is pleased to see you appreciate the value of your life. He is delighted when receive the suffering and death of His only-begotten Son who preserves your life forever.
The best way to thank God this Thursday, and every day, is to ask and receive from Him every good and gracious gift that He desires to give you.
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