The NEW In Defense of the Faith

Saturday, September 23, 2006

James 4:16 - Don't Be Evil!

16 As it is, you boast in your arrogance. All such boasting is evil.

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So, now that we have seen the Gospel alternative to the merchants problems... what else needs to be said? Well, you can give two options for life, but unless you give the ultimate outcome for eah option, others will not know why it is that you are recommending one over the other(s). Therefore, James tells his readers exactly what the problem is with the way these merchants are acting. This is where we start to finally see the importance for why James would address this issue so strongly.

Question: How is it that these merchants are bragging? Answer: I, I, I, me, me, me! I will go into this town and sell MY stuff and I will make a lot of money!

I will go to this college and I will get a good degree and I will find me a good wife and I will have 1.5 children, a house with a white picked fence… and don’t forget… a walk in closet!

We human beings know how to boast and brag all over ourselves. But what does James remind us?... If the Gospel is true… then all that boasting and bragging about ourselves is EVIL. It’s evil!

In fact, this is all over the New Testament letters. Paul says that boasting is excluded because we are justified by God through faith and not by our own works. (Romans 3:27-28) He also says to the Ephesians that we were saved by grace through faith – not by works – so that no one may boast. (Eph. 2:8-9) The only boasting that we are permitted to do is boasting in the Lord and in our weaknesses so that God’s strength might be shown in us through the power of the Holy Spirit within us. (2 Cor. 10:17; 11:30)

So, in all reality, James’ alternative for the merchants is an alternative form of boasting. A form of boasting that isn’t evil!

Any what bosting is it? We are to boast in the Lord… “If it is the Lord’s will, we will live and do this or that.” THIS is Gospel boasting and Gospel thinking. If Jesus really is Lord, then our lives must be centered on His will and His glory and our boasting must only be about us in relation to Him.

“I will live and do this or that, if He has written my story that way.” That is true Gospel boasting that honor Jesus Christ and gives glory to God, our Father.

So, to sum it all up what does James conclude? What have we said he was trying to do?

Our lives show each other the doctrines we believe. Therefore, if our lives are not in accordance with the doctrine of the Gospel of Jesus, then that means our doctrine has to change.

Once again, that doesn’t always mean we need to change our intellectual answer about a specific Biblical teaching. But what that does mean is that if our lives are not in line with the doctrine of the Gospel, then we need to do one of two things…

We need to either… (1) Believe the sound doctrine that we have been taught by our ministers, or (2) we need to be taught some good, sound doctrine that we’ve never learned before and believe it with all that we are. If we will believe the Gospel, then we will be able to see the ways we act and speak begin to change in dramatic and Spirit lead ways.

Now, remember what I said briefly at the beginning. I believe that James was talking to merchants who were primarily members of the Church. That means that they knew the Gospel and they knew that Jesus is Lord.

That’s why James can briefly, but sternly, correctly their bad doctrine by altering how they speak about the work that they do. He meant to not only change what they said, but even more, change the way they thought.

And since they did know the Gospel and they did know that Jesus is Lord, but they weren’t living as though they believed it… what did that mean?

Well, James sums it up for all of us. He pulls all of in together for this final sweeping statement!

See my next post...

In Christ and In Defense of the Faith,

Sunday, September 17, 2006

Germany Imprisons Mom - Dad and Kids Flee to Austria

Link: http://www.brusselsjournal.com/node/1330

This is truly a sad and terrible situation that I did not know went on in Germany. I honestly did not realize Germany had such laws.

Here is a background article from last year:

http://www.brusselsjournal.com/node/139

Thursday, September 14, 2006

This is Hilarious!

Link: http://www.nbc.com/Video/videos/snl_1432_narnia.shtml

"The Chronic (what?) Cles of Narnia" is the name of the rap song. It's from Saturday Night Live. Enjoy!

Update:

http://nbc-snl.resultspage.com/search?p=Q&ts=front&w=narnia
(Since the first link above doesn't work anymore, I was able to click on this link and select "watch" next to the picture and view the video)This was just too good to lose!

Tuesday, September 05, 2006

James 4:15 - The Gospel Solution

15 Instead you ought to say, “If the Lord wills, we will live and do this or that.”

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We said last time that James gives the only good alternative to the merchants bad doctrine... The Gospel.

So, what is the Gospel? Well, in one sentence… Jesus is Lord!

That is what Christ's Church confesses every day His followers gather together… either by song, or sermon, or by prayer or teaching.

So, if Jesus is Lord that means it’s up to Him whether we live or die! If Jesus is Lord, that means it’s up to Him whether or not we move, get a job, go to college, or finish high school. If Jesus is Lord, then that means it’s up to Him whether or not we take our next breath.

What does James say again? “If it is the Lord’s will... we will live and do this or that.” That’s the Gospel! If Jesus is Lord, then that means what He says goes. And that is GOOD NEWS because He is good and righteous and He is King of all the nations!

So, that’s the alternative James gives us, right? But what if we don’t take that alternative? What if we act like the merchants? James clarifies what it means to act like these merchants that plan to succeed in their goals without involving God…

In Christ and In Defense of the Faith,

James 4:14 - Life is Vapor

14 yet you do not know what tomorrow will bring. What is your life? For you are a mist that appears for a little time and then vanishes.

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So, how does James correct this bad doctrine? Where does he start?

This is where he starts... He wants to make sure that his readers know that life without God is nothing but vapor. In essence, apart from Christ, our lives are short and we quickly pass away. James is basically giving them a picture of what every human life is like. The Psalmist writes in Psalm 90:10, “The length of our days is seventy years – or eighty, if we have the strength; yet their span is but trouble and sorrow, for they quickly pass, and we fly away.”

I'm reminded of the song "Dust in the Wind" by Kansas. This song is a perfect document for us to understand what James is saying here in verse 14. One verse says, "Don't hang on, nothing lasts forever but the earth and sky. It slips away, all your money won't another minute buy."

If we are going to act like atheists when we plan for the future and talk about the future, even if it is one day in advance, James wants us to know that our lives are meaningless and short and that all our words and money will not buy us one more second. We have no guarantee of tomorrow!

Why does he do this?... Because he means to humble us when he rhetorically asks, “What is your life?!”

So, if that’s all life is then why do we even try? Well, this is where the Kansas song fell short and where the Gospel comes into play. James doesn’t stop there with his rebuke of these merchants’ doctrine. Instead, James gives them a clear alternative in order to correct their doctrine…The Gospel.

More to come later...

In Christ and In Defense of the Faith,

Monday, September 04, 2006

And He Will Be My Son

Link: AND HE WILL BE MY SON: A BIBLICAL PARADIGM FOR THE COVENANT OF WORKS CONCEPTION

This article was recently written by
Dr. Sam Waldron and Eddie Goodwin from The Midwest Center for Theological Studies.

It offers a very helpful conclusion for those who are interested in studying the recent intramural Christian debates over the doctrine of "The Covenant of Works." Many have felt that this doctrine needs some reworking and this article seeks to do just that.

I believe this article will be very beneficial for all Christians who are interested in the issue. If you have not heard of "The Covenant of Works" or are simply unfamiliar with the doctrinal history, this article might prove to be helpful if you can accept the fact that more research will have to be done on the part of those who are not as up-to-date on the doctrine and the recent debates.

Here are some points that I offer to help clarify some of the issues dealt with in the above article:

1) Adam was created to be a mature judge/king and become higher than the angels. (Hebrews 2:5-8; 1 Cor. 6:2-3; Romans 8:18-25) Hebrews 2 via Psalm 8 is the primary passage for understanding this. We were made for "a little while" lower than the angels. This means that God's intent was always the eschatological glorification of mankind. It is not as though we should think that the subsequent passages, 1 Cor. And Romans 8, etc., are only plans God made for mankind after the fall. To deny that God's purpose for man was a higher state than Adam and Eve in the Garden is to imply that the glorification of humanity and becoming partakers of the divine nature (2 Peter 1:3-4) was an after-thought of God in response to the fact that man fell into sin while living in the state of Eden prior to the fall. The Scripture clearly tells us that the Edenic setup was a "probationary" period. It was the means to maturity, not maturity itself.

2) The prohibition of eating from the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil was only temporary. (Genesis 1:29; ref. 2:15-17) God promised that all the fruit of all the trees would be food for Adam and Eve, therefore including the Tree of Knowledge. But we see that a prohibition to the Tree of Knowledge was made in the Garden as a temporary restriction until Adam and Eve had matured enough to attain to the Knowledge of Good and Evil that God had always intended for them to have. Of course we must be clear that this knowledge is not bad knowledge since God's response to Adam and Eve was, "Behold, the man has become like one of us in knowing good and evil." (Genesis 3:22) God had this knowledge, therefore it was good and holy. Also, the problem was not that God took issue with us becoming like Him, but that we became like Him in an immature state which God would have to rectify by sending His Son, the "second Adam." (Romans 5) And, as noted in my first point, God's intent has always been to make man a partaker of the divine nature and to fulfill his image bearing - which is to be made completely into the image of the "second Adam", God's eternal Son - Jesus Christ.

3) It must then be concluded that the "Covenant of Works Conception" is a valid and important doctrine for all Christians to affirm for the sake of sound eschatology and anthropological clarity.

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Please consider the above referenced article a very timely and needed addition to the debate of this important issue of Covenant Theology. All Christians should study and understand this issue since it is a very important part of our understanding the Gospel of Jesus Christ. This doctrine helps to clarify and expound upon His earthly ministry, in which He accomplished the things that the first Adam failed to do.

In Christ and In Defense of the Faith,