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Just a Little More Time

Several years ago on a Sunday afternoon, after the worship service was over at the United Methodist church I served, I walked across the road to the African Methodist Episcopal Zion church. The two churches shared a long history going back to colonial days in America. The church I served had been founded as a congregation of the Church of England in 1762. During the height of the Revolutionary War, the congregation broke from the Church of England and joined with the fledgling Methodist movement. In 1784 it was one of the original churches in the newly formed denomination called the Methodist Episcopal Church. Here whites and blacks would gather weekly for worship, although the African American slaves would not be allowed to come inside; they would have to listen in on the service from outside. From what I understand, after the Civil War, land was granted for the newly freed slaves to build their own church, which became part of the AMEZ denomination.

I walked over there that day to meet their new pastor. Most of the congregation knew me already because I had preached there, and their previous pastor had preached at our church. That was the first time one of their pastors had preached in the church that some of their ancestors were not even allowed to enter for worship. We had also worshiped and fellowshiped together during holy week before.

When I walked in around 20 after noon, I was greeted and welcomed by one of their faithful attendants. Their new pastor was in the midst of prayer. After he finished praying, someone told him who I was, the pastor of the UM church across the road. Later in the service, now about 1:00 o’clock, he sent word via one of the attendants to ask me if I would like to speak to the congregation. Initially I said: “No, that’s okay. I know you all have been here a long time already.” The gracious attendant said, “Pastor, that really doesn’t matter, ’cause we don’t put a time limit on the Lord here.”

United Methodist Bishop Will Willimon had a similar experience when he preached at an African American church. After the service, he asked the pastor why they take so long to worship. The pastor said they need a good two hours each week to counteract the lies of the world that tells his people they are nothing all week with the message that they are royalty as God’s very own people, bought with the precious redemption price of God’s very own Son. He said it takes that long “get their heads straight” (book Pastor: The Theology and Practice of Ordained Ministry, p. 73). In light of the demise of Christendom in America, and the fact that the church can no longer rely on the culture, if it ever could or should have, to help inculcate a Christian ethos, Willimon says he suspects “that more of us pastors will need more time to get our congregations’ heads straight.”

Indeed, one has to wonder how an hour on Sunday, sometimes  only once every four to six weeks for an increasing number of attendees, can counteract the effects of secular bombardment through popular culture, media, entertainment, and public education, which is often subtly if not openly hostile to Christianity. We really need to give God more time to work with us, to transform our hearts, and renew our minds.

Romans 12:1-2 says:

“Therefore I urge you, brethren, by the mercies of God, to present your bodies a living and holy sacrifice, acceptable to God, which is your spiritual service of worship. And do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind, so that you may prove what the will of God is, that which is good and acceptable and perfect.”

In worship we are called to present ourselves as a living sacrifice. We offer ourselves to God placing our lives in God’s hands to be transformed into a masterpiece of divine workmanship. To give God more of ourselves, we must also give him more of our time, to work with us. When we offer God more of ourselves, we receive more and more of him as we are conformed more and more into the image of his Son (Romans 8:29).

If we are going to be filled with all the fullness of God (Ephesians 3:19) we can’t allow our schedules to be so full that we have very little time left to offer ourselves fully to God. The one who gives us eternal life through Jesus Christ, asks for a little more of our time, for our good and his glory. To quote Chairman of the Board, perhaps God is saying to his bride, the church, “give me just a little more time, and our love will surely grow.”

 

The Making of a Pharisee

Once while having a conversation with a perspective new church member about the gospel and what it means to be a Christian in general and a Methodist Christian in particular, the person shared with me her understanding of what Christianity was all about. She had been in an out of different churches of different denominations off and on her whole life. She had been out of church for a while before the Lord led her to mine, as she stated it. She wanted to recommit her life and join our church. She summarized her understanding of Christianity and the Bible this way: God realized that he had been wrong and had made a mistake by giving the law so He sent Jesus to straighten it all out by showing us that life is really all about love. In other words, “all you need is love; love is all you need.” That may be the gospel of the Beatles, but that’s not the gospel of Jesus Christ.

Unfortunately her misunderstanding of the gospel is not all that uncommon. In reality it really wasn’t all her fault because over the years in different denominations this was the synthesized succinct summary of what she had been taught. That is that the law was a bad idea that Jesus came to correct. Countless are the times I have heard ministers, Methodist and otherwise, espouse similar sentiments in one form or another, by pitting love against the law. I’ve had church members who believed that because Jesus came “to fulfill the law” and was “the end of the law” (Romans 10:4) that we should not pay any attention to the Old Testament contra 2 Timothy 3:16-17. The understanding I myself had at one time and one that I’ve heard expressed by many others is that we today under grace have it so much better than those who were under the law because we don’t have to be concerned about keeping the law. Some are even leery of the Ten Commandments. I was once cornered by someone who very suspiciously asked, “where does it say in the New Testament that we should keep the Ten Commandments?” And some ministers in my own denomination accuse me and those like me who talk about the importance of keeping the commandments with regards to sexual holiness of being legalists and even call us Pharisees.

Now of course I don’t believe or teach that one must obey the commandments perfectly to be saved. What I do believe and teach is that people must be saved by accepting Christ as Lord and Savior through faith so they can be forgiven for the ways they have broken God’s law and empowered by God’s Spirit to begin to live a life of ever increasing obedience to God’s law from a renewed heart. This, by the way, was the promise of the New Covenant, which I have written about before (See HERE) (also Jeremiah 31:31-34; Ezekiel 36:26-27). Yet the fact that I teach we shouldn’t neglect and certainly never reject the commandments, especially those pesky unpopular ones, brings charges of legalism and Phariseeism.

The truth is Jesus never indicated that he had come to nullify the law with love, rather he came to activate the law by love. It wasn’t the law and law-keeping itself that he had problems with. Rather it was misinterpretations, superstitious misapplications, and man-made traditions that were set up as unnecessary additions and even substitutions that he had a problem with.

When the Pharisees criticized his disciples for not keeping the tradition of the elders he tissot-the-pharisees-question-jesusresponded, “And why do you break the commandment of God for the sake of your tradition?” (Matthew 15:3 ESV). He goes on to reveal how they had developed a tradition that allowed them to give pretense to keeping the commandment to honor father and mother with financial support in old age  while in reality they were not keeping it at all. The way it is put in Mark, Jesus said, “You have a fine way of rejecting the commandment of God in order to establish your tradition!” (7:9), “thus making void the word of God by your tradition” (v. 13). So, again, it wasn’t the commandments of Scripture, which he clearly believed to be the word of God, that Jesus had a problem with; it was the traditions and commandments of men that allowed people to honor God with their lips but not in their hearts (see Isaiah 29:13; also see context of Matthew 15 and Mark 7).

Wrongheaded interpretations had led to competing traditions that actually kept people from seeing the truth of Scripture, and thus unable to recognize the one right in front of them who was fulfilling Scripture right before their eyes. Indeed he was the embodiment in the flesh of the spirit and essence of what it was all about.

The same is true today. People are leaving, breaking, and even rejecting the commandments of God for human traditions that have been exalted above God’s word. These traditions have a way of inoculating people in a bad way against what is actually the cure for the curse, the gospel of Jesus Christ. These traditions protect the virus of sin, while rejecting the antibody of the blood of Jesus Christ and the healing balm of the Holy Spirit. Now, regarding the state of Christianity in America today, Dr. Timothy Tennent said:

“it is way too simplistic to reduce the church’s current problems to a ‘progressive’ vs. ‘conservative’ struggle. That struggle is there and shouldn’t be ignored, but that is not the point of this article. My point is that all Christian movements in the West have struggled with the transition to post-Christendom. We have reacted in different ways: The mainline churches have said, ‘let’s accommodate the church’s doctrine to the latest cultural social demands and maybe they will like us again.’ The evangelicals have said, ‘Let’s preach part of the gospel, downplay the negative, costly side, and keep our services lively and entertaining, without a lot of demands.’ But neither ‘solution’ is sustainable. We need robust Christian identity, transformed lives, a kingdom vision for society, all linked with a deep commitment to catechesis. The ‘bar’ must be raised, not lowered.”  (http://timothytennent.com/2016/06/10/post-christendom-and-global-christianity-part-i/)

Mainline and evangelical denominations have both developed traditions in different ways in an attempt to make Christianity more appealing to the world and the worldly. In the Mainline denominations a social gospel/social justice tradition of “doing good” generically without regard to the particularities of the gospel as laid out in Scripture became the main thing at the expense of the Main One. It is in this stream of tradition that one might find resistance to the notion that people need to be saved from sin personally or to place faith in God the Father through Christ particularly. In some evangelical streams of tradition one might find resistance to the notion that people’s lives should be personally transformed as forgiveness through an easy decision is emphasized at the expense of new birth and becoming a new creation in Christ who lives differently. Any mention of the importance and significance of good works might be met with strong objections that emphasize salvation by grace without regard for the fact that we are saved BY grace, THROUGH faith, FOR good works (Ephesians 2:8-10).

In both traditions above love may be pitted against law in some way, even though Jesus indicated that as lawlessness increases love will decrease (Matthew 24:12). Still there are other traditions that have turned the gospel into the most effective way to be able to live the “good life” in terms of material prosperity and blessing. In this case the emphasis is on the very things that Jesus himself said don’t worry about, what you’re going to eat and what you’re going to drink and what you’re going to wear, and laying up for oneself treasure on earth (Matthew 6:19-34).

In Mainline circles and, more and more, even in evangelical circles a tradition of interpretation has developed to allow some to feel that they can reimagine the longstanding teaching of the church regarding sexual ethics. Some still insist that Scripture never really meant what the Church had claimed that it meant with regards to homosexuality. More and more others are admitting that we really have NOT just misunderstood Scripture, but that they are in fact simply rejecting the commands of Scripture as antiquated and wrong. William Loader who has written over 4,000 pages on ancient Jewish and Christian beliefs about sex admits that the Bible does not condone any sexual activity outside of heterosexual marriage. Loader simply believes the Bible, including Jesus as recorded therein, was just wrong. He believes contraception makes sex outside of marriage acceptable in the modern world. Apparently, lost on him is that contraception must be used consistently by fallible and oft sexually irrational human-beings (see Loader’s small book that summarizes much of his work, “Making Sense of Sex”). As I have also shown before, Luke Timothy Johnson, a Bible Scholar at Emory University, also admits that the Bible is clear with regards to homosexual behavior of any kind being against the commands of Scripture. Yet somehow he believes that he and others can “reject the straightforward commands of Scripture” “in the name of the gospel” (his words) rather than in spite of it. In reality this can only be a tradition acting as a substitute for the gospel.

Again, Jesus said:

“Do not think that I have come to abolish the Law or the Prophets; I have not come to abolish them but to fulfill them. 18 For truly, I say to you, until heaven and earth pass away, not an iota, not a dot, will pass from the Law until all is accomplished. 19 Therefore whoever relaxes one of the least of these commandments and teaches others to do the same will be called least in the kingdom of heaven, but whoever does them and teaches them will be called great in the kingdom of heaven. 20 For I tell you, unless your righteousness exceeds that of the scribes and Pharisees, you will never enter the kingdom of heaven.” Matthew 5:17-21 ESV

Here Jesus echoes something that the law itself says in Deuteronomy 4, which is repeated in chapter 12, “You shall not add to the word that I command you, not take from it, that you may keep the commandments of the Lord your God that I command you” (Deuteronomy 4:2). This truth is also echoed in the dire warning at the end of the book of Revelation, which says:

“I warn everyone who hears the words of the prophecy of this book: if anyone adds to them, God will add to him the plagues described in this book, and if anyone takes away from the words of the book of this prophecy, God will take away his share in the tree of life and in the holy city, which are described in this book.” Revelation 22:18-19

Without the whole thing we just won’t have the real thing. Don’t settle for any cheap imitation or any saccharine substitute. Competing traditions only make the word of God void in your life.

Jesus did not come to abolish, but to fulfill the law. Nevertheless in an attempt to justify another tradition someone once said, but that was only until Jesus died on the cross, then the law was abolished. NO! That is NOT what Jesus said. He did not say not one jot or tittle would pass away until he died on the cross, he said until heaven and earth pass away!

So I know this brings up a lot of questions, especially when it comes to the commandments that we obviously no longer keep literally, like circumcision and the dietary restrictions, and the sacrifices. And I know that there are some things that the apostle Paul said that are hard to understand that some will “twist to their own destruction, as they do the other Scriptures” (2 Peter 3:15-18). Nonetheless, there are answers to these questions. The short answer is the spirit of all of the law is kept through faith in Christ even though not all of the letter of the law is. In other words, for example, the spirit of the sacrificial laws are kept through faith in the atoning sacrifice of Christ who was the fulfillment of all those laws. The spirit of circumcision is kept when we are set apart as a special people by the circumcision of our hearts by the Spirit through faith in Christ. The symbolic laws, what the Church has described as ceremonial laws, are kept in spirit through faith in Christ. With the moral laws you cannot keep their spirit without keeping the letter (i.e. you can’t keep the law against murder without actually refraining from murdering or as Jesus said even harboring anger in your heart, which goes deeper than the letter), but with the ceremonial and more symbolic laws the spirit of them can be kept in Christ even though the letter of them is not. You see this in Paul’s argument in Romans 2:25-29 with regards to circumcision. It also seems to be what Paul is getting at when he says paradoxically that “neither circumcision counts for anything nor uncircumcision, but keeping the commandments of God” (1 Corinthians 7:19), even though circumcision was a commandment of God.

Nevertheless, I know there will be many questions that still arise with these things that are indeed hard to understand. These things can only be understood in the context of the story of the Bible as a whole. The bottom line is this, Jesus did not come to replace the law with love, he came to activate the law by love, by his loving sacrifice and by the outpouring of the Spirit who pours God’s love into our hearts (Romans 5:5). And “this is the love of God, that we keep his commandments” (1 John 5:3).

Neither did Jesus give us the two great commandments to love God and neighbor as a substitute for the rest of the moral law, which is summed up in the Ten Commandments; Love is the fulfilling of the rest of the law. For it is on the two great commandments that the law and the prophets hang, not are hung up and put out of commission.

Pharisees, such as the ones who confronted Jesus, are not those who take the commandments of God too seriously, but those who don’t take them seriously enough. A Pharisee in this sense would be one who replaces God’s law with their own traditions. There are many ways to do that, and there is nothing new under the sun. Today there are many man-made traditions masquerading as “the faith once for all delivered to the saints” (Jude 3). People still “have a fine way of rejecting the commandment of God” in favor of their own tradition (Mark 7:9) through addition, subtraction, or substitution. Do not be deceived. If you don’t have the whole thing, you won’t have the real thing. And there is nothing better than the real thing.

Minding What Matters

Two weeks ago today, my family and I moved into a new parsonage in a new community. Moving a family of seven and Grandma (my mother), who will be staying with us for a few weeks until her nearby independent living senior apartment is ready, not to mention our dog and two cats, was no easy feat. It took many weeks to get prepared logistically, mentally, emotionally, and spiritually to move; it will take a few months or more to get settled into a new place as well. We have had very good help and support all along the way though, for which I am very grateful.

I can’t say that the past two weeks have been completely smooth and uneventful, but they have been blessed with the presence of God manifested in God’s people. As I am writing this right now, I am waiting for a phone call from a mother who just lost her 65 year old son, who passed away at a Hospice facility yesterday, to plan a funeral for Thursday morning. This will be my second funeral since we moved here two weeks ago.

The first was of a beloved 95 year old woman who fell in her carport after a trip to the grocery store. She crushed her hip in the fall and was not able to call for help. She laid there in the carport using a roll of toilet paper for a pillow for too many hours for her frail body and weak heart to recover. I went to the hospital to pray for her on Wednesday, the day after we moved in. But before I could pray for her, she expressed a prayer for me. After I introduced myself, she said, with joy on her face in spite of the pain and discomfort pulsating through her body, “I pray that you have a fruitful ministry at Clarksbury church.” She went on to be with the Lord the next day. I led her funeral service last Tuesday, a week ago today, which was a few days before my first Sunday in the pulpit at Clarksbury Church. Indeed, may God answer her prayer in abundance.

Last Thursday I drove my 15 year old daughter, Grace, back to the area we had moved from, so she could attend the birthday party of a close friend from her old high school, a young African American kid, in Gastonia. It was well over an hour drive. Many of the same kids in attendance were at Grace’s birthday and end of school party at our house a few weeks before. Her circle of close friends also included a girl from a Buddhist Chinese family, two brown skinned young men, one of them Filipino, the other Mexican American, a beautiful young lady from Puerto Rico, her white girl friends, two Southern Baptists, the other Pentecostal, and a white boy, nicknamed Pinto. 13646678_1387636964584961_211382524_o

When I dropped Grace off for the party at her friend Aramis’ house, I pulled in behind Dave, a conservative white Southern Baptist police officer who was dropping his daughter off for the party as well. Dave and I went in to speak with Keisha, Aramis’ mother, about when would be back to pick up the kids.

After that I dropped my son, Ian, off a few miles up the road at Raj and Abhi’s, his two dark skinned Hindu friends from his old middle school. They all enjoy playing basketball and video games together. My son knows that he can respect their beliefs without denying his own, and that they can still be friends.

After I dropped Ian off, I went to run a few errands and stopped by a book store for a cup of coffee and to go over my first sermon for Clarksbury church before picking Grace and Ian up a few hours later.

Later that evening when I got home I was winding down for the evening but happened to catch the sniper attack on police officers in Dallas, TX on the news as I was exercising my thumb. I’ve been quite busy over the past few weeks, but I had seen a few reports of a black man who  was killed by police in Louisiana. I had also heard something about an incident in Minneapolis, but not enough to know exactly what had happened. I had seen a few posts on social media suggesting, if not explicitly declaring, that police had “murdered” black men “senselessly” because of racism. Many of the posts were coming from liberal clergy colleagues. It was all very similar to what had happened immediately after the incident in Ferguson, Missouri. Lots of quick condemnation and accusations before anyone really knew all of the facts. In that case a long investigation proved that many of the early accusations were simply false, yet even then it did not stop some from continuing with the narrative that it was a case in point of black men being “senselessly murdered” and just “mowed down” in the streets by police.

When I saw what happened to the police officers who were working the protests in Dallas, with my smart phone in my hand, I posted the following on Facebook:

“We are living on a powder keg. Yes, black lives matter. Police lives matter too. Lord, have mercy. The devil is stoking the fire to turn people against each other more than they already are. Don’t take the bait. Pray against the enemy of all people for whom Christ died. Lord, deliver us from evil, in the name of Jesus.”

For that I was lambasted by some of my progressive friends for not saying anything when the black men were killed by police earlier in the week. I was accused of being racist and not really caring about black lives.

The reason I didn’t say anything about the other incidents is because I refuse to jump to the conclusions that the political left wants us to jump to when it comes to white police officers’ engagement with black men. I think police officers, white people in general, and “the system”, the American culture and system of governance and jurisprudence those on the left are so quick to condemn, need to be given  the same courtesy that the political left rightly insists must be given to the Muslim community and Islam when a Muslim man commits acts of terrorism. I think American police officers, no matter their color or ethnicity, should be given the same courtesy I saw some of my liberal/progressive friends and the director of Homeland Security and the President ask for the Black Lives Matter movement after Micah Johnson murdered 5 Dallas police officers. Everyone involved in that movement should not be condemned based on the actions of one man. Neither should police officers and the entire American “system” be condemned based on individual incidents, especially not when they involve police responding to a call from a citizen who says he was threatened by the suspect with a gun, who when confronted resisted arrest and wrestled with police officers who thought he was reaching for his gun.

It is not racist to not jump immediately on the bandwagon and lend support to irresponsible, rhetoric, and hasty condemnations when all of the facts are not known, and certainly when the facts that are known don’t support the narrative of white police officers simply “mowing down” or even “murdering” black men for purely racist reasons. While some condemned the actions of the Dallas sniper, others also sympathized with him saying they understood why he did it. Disturbingly, someone even said, “Two wrongs don’t make a right, but it does make it even!” I heard a progressive black activist, Richard Fowler, say last night that someone overseas told him blacks were being advised not to come to America because police are “mowing down” black men in the streets. Fowler seemed to be trying to proffer this as “proof” for how bad things really are, rather than how the media/social media has falsely portrayed things to be.

The immediate and larger contextual facts don’t support such a narrative. The New York Times reported a study yesterday done by a black Harvard professor, who found, to his surprise, that whites were more likely to be killed by police than blacks, even after controlling for the much larger general white population. He did find that blacks were more likely to be treated roughly by police. Racism to some extent may indeed play a role in that, but there are certainly a whole host of factors that need to be considered before jumping to the conclusion that racism is the sole or even main factor. If it is found that a police officer of any color has indeed killed someone recklessly or maliciously, they should be prosecuted and punished as was the police officer in SC who shot a suspect several times in the back who was running away.

I do agree with the sentiment that black lives matter, although I do not support the official movement by that name because too many seem intent to perpetuate a certain narrative regardless of the facts of individual incidents. This does not mean that I don’t believe blacks lives matter, which Van Jones, a black progressive activist, says should have had the word “too” added to the end for clarity. It also does not mean that I don’t believe that racism is still a problem; It is. Our society has obviously made great strides, but racism still lives in the hearts and minds of many. Yet it is also evident to me that some are intentionally stoking the fires of racial division and looking for and finding racism whether it is there or not. In the second term of America’s first black President, who won both times fairly easily, America should be seeing the fulfillment of Martin Luther King’s dream; instead it looks like we may be more on the verge of fulfilling the “Helter Skelter” nightmare of Charles Manson.

While I do not support the political organization “Black Lives Matter,” black lives do indeed matter to me. The life of my daughter’s friend mattered to me and her enough to drive a very long way for her to celebrate his birthday with him. The life of his mother, Keisha, who has a painting of a black mother cradling her child, in her living room, matters to me enough to get to know her and have Christian fellowship with her as a sister in Christ, knowing and sympathizing with the fact that she may have concerns for her son’s safety that my wife doesn’t have for our sons. The life of my African American roommate and very close friend from many years ago mattered enough to me, as did my life to him, that he was a groomsman in my wedding, and I in his when he married a Mexican American woman, to the chagrin of some in his family and hers. Our lives mattered enough to each other that he invited me and my wife to be there when his new wife gave birth to their first child together for moral and spiritual support. His and his wife’s life mattered enough to me that we treated each others children as our own.

The lives of all black people have mattered to me enough to preach and teach against the evils of racism as being contrary to God’s design in creation and our common redemption in Christ, the gospel which is the fulfillment of the promise to Abraham that in him all the nations of the earth would be blessed by being brought back together in the family of God, to be one people under one God (Genesis 12; Revelation 7). Every black life matters to me enough to teach my children and my churches that interreligious marriage is a problem condemned in Scripture, NOT interracial marriage, as the Bible actually provides positive examples of the later, but not the former.

When someone in a Bible study warily asked me if I would be okay with my daughter marrying a black man, I without hesitation said yes, as long as he was a good man and a devout believer. And when my oldest daughter, Grace, was asked by a woman, the mother of another student in band, who was driving her to a football game last fall, what I as a minister thought about interracial marriage, Grace, without hesitation, said that I have no problem with it and explained in detail why. Black lives matter to me enough to explain to my children the evils of racism and have long discussions with them about our sordid history in America and the Western world.

Black lives also mattered to me enough to confront racism boldly but as gently and as lovingly as possible any time it has come up in conversation and in the church. They mattered enough to me that I helped an all white church welcome an interracial couple and receive it’s very first black member. I think it is a travesty that we don’t have more churches where blacks and whites and people of other ethnicities worship and minister together, although there are many churches that are like that.  Black lives matter to me enough to take criticism and risk the disapproval of some for preaching and teaching the truth of the multi-colored kingdom of God.

The black lives of the ladies who worked at the group home less than a mile down the road from the church mattered to me enough to visit with them and pray with them and help them and bless them any way I could. When one of their residents, a highly functioning, but very obsessive autistic white woman from their group home joined our church, many of them came with her to worship. One continued to come after she stopped working there, and they were grateful for my ministry and preaching, and they, themselves, could tell you of times when I preached against racism and explained how it is contrary to the very heart of the gospel of the New Covenant, as could any who have been in my churches and who really know me. My life also meant Elizabeth Group Home at Puettenough to them that several of them came together for my last Sunday at that church and blessed me with a gift and a note of appreciation for what I meant to them. They said they were going to drive over an hour to my new church every once in a while because of their appreciation for me. I love them and they love me. We all genuinely matter to each other.

Black lives also mattered to me enough to spend the last two days helping a sister in Christ in Kenya who is in ministry with her husband and trying to care for orphans the best they can get connected with a United Methodist District Superintendent in Kenya to see how they might be able to partner together in ministry with each other and with me. Black lives also matter enough to me to begin praying and planning with my United Methodist brother and fellow clergy and district superintendent in Kenya to help them in their efforts to train more pastors there, both with teaching and fundraising. With God’s help, I will do what I can. Why? Because black lives do matter to me too.

Truth also matters to me. I will support black lives and the lives of all people for whom Christ died any way I can, but I will not lend support to falsehood to further a certain political agenda. I will not support a movement that uses irresponsible rhetoric and pushes a very specific narrative regardless of the facts. I will not support a movement that condemns and convicts police officers before the gun cools down after an incident where someone is resisting arrest. If certain government officials don’t want to jump to conclusions about the motives of the sniper in Dallas, even though he stated clearly what his motives were, they should extend that same courtesy to the police officers engaged in a struggle with someone resisting arrest. As Dallas police chief, David Brown said, “words matter.” May we all use them responsibly and truthfully. I’m praying with him that we do.

Police Chief David Brown gettyimages-545531520
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Can Martin Luther Help Methodists Find Unity?

We United Methodists find ourselves deeply divided, on the surface, over issues of sexuality. However, as I argued in my last post I believe the division runs much wider and deeper, as many others have long argued as well. Ceaseless, however, are the calls for unity, especially from many of our top leaders. Vague, though, are those calls when it actually comes to how we may find ourselves united specifically.

From the stage of General Conference relentless were the calls to love, the implication that this is where we should find unity. Nonetheless, that would require agreement on how Christian love should actually be defined, and it was obvious that most of the calls to love were from progressives who believe that means fully accepting same-sex attraction and sexual relationships as good. Conservatives would obviously see this as affirmation without the gospel call to repentance for transformation for holy living.

Then there are those who seem to think that we can find unity in the mission of making disciples for Jesus, but this too is defined quite differently. What makes a disciple? What does a disciple of Jesus believe and how should they live? Conservatives and progressives would obviously answer these questions very differently.

Still others seem to believe that we can be united in doing all the good we can for as many as we can, such as helping the poor. I think we can work together in this regard, but only in terms of alleviating the symptoms by addressing immediate needs, because conservatives and progressives would probably find themselves deeply divided with regards to what they believe to be the root causes of those symptoms. We could work together to do good, but still work against each other when it comes to what we believe to be the underlying causes of the bad. For instance, does promoting gay marriage promote the good? What about abortion? Is it a blessing from God as some believe, or is it murder, as others of us believe? Does abortion promote societal good or is it an evil that leads to more societal ill? On another note, working together to do good in terms of providing immediate relief to those who suffer, such as providing mosquito nets to protect children in the third world from malaria laced mosquito bites, is a wonderful thing, but it doesn’t really require religious unity at all, as believers from various religions and non-believers alike can and do work together for such good things.

So where can we really find Christian unity in the bond of a deep and abiding peace and harmony withing the same household, so to speak? We can’t manufacture it through human ingenuity or cleverness; we can’t legislate it and magically make those who disagree agree. We must receive it as a gift, a gift of God, a gift of grace, by the Spirit of God, through faith. In other words, we can ultimately only find true unity in a common salvation.

Ephesians 2:8-10 says in a nutshell that we are saved BY grace, THROUGH faith, FOR good works. As hard as it has proven to be to not overemphasize one aspect of salvation at the expense of the others, we must hold these three aspects together. If we emphasize grace at the expense of faith and good works we may end up with a licentious universalism. If we thus overemphasize faith we may end up with what John Wesley called the faith of devils, a mere acknowledgment of God’s existence without obedience to his will. And an emphasis on works at the expense of grace and faith leads to self-righteous legalism and practical atheism. Salvation is first and foremost by God’s initiative and action in Christ and the Holy Spirit. Faith is the human response, itself a gift of God, which receives God’s grace, which in turn forgives our sins and transforms our hearts; and genuine faith manifests itself in good works, the byproduct or fruit of real faith.

In a sermon that turned into a small book, Martin Luther, in his “Treatise on Good Martin LutherWorks”, wrote about the importance of good works to correct those who took his teaching on justification by faith to mean that all good works were of no account or to be avoided. He also wrote to clarify just what the good works we are saved FOR are so as not to be confused with certain rituals of penance promoted by the medieval Catholic Church. In short, Luther taught that the good works FOR which we are saved BY grace, THROUGH faith are to be discerned in the Ten Commandments.

For Luther, faith exercised by grace, fulfills the first commandment, to worship no other gods other than God the Creator, revealed to Israel as Yahweh, the One who is Who He is. Obedience to the first commandment is the fruit of genuine faith in Christ and as such the first good work from which all other good works flow in obedience to the rest of the commandments. In fact, without genuine faith there is no genuine good works at all, because without faith doing what is in itself good is still sin, according to Luther. So doing good for our own glory rather than God’s, for instance, would be something along the lines of what he had in mind.

Now Luther obviously understood the Ten Commandments to be summary statements of the much broader moral law revealed elsewhere in Scripture. For example, he taught that the commandment to honor father and mother included obedience to all God-ordained authorities, such as church and government authorities. For a child to obey a teacher at school, for example, would be to keep that commandment as obeying mom and dad at home would be. Likewise he considered the commandment against adultery to include all sexual immorality as it was delineated in the rest of the Old Testament and recapitulated and more stringently specified in the New Testament in terms of God’s original intent in creation. So the commandment against adultery isn’t just about adultery, but all “unchastity”, as Luther expressed it.

Now the book of James, which Luther had to warm up to a bit after he discovered justification by faith, shows that the law, what we would call the moral law particularly, comes as a unified whole, to break one law is to break the law as a whole (James 2:8-13). In Jame’s case he is talking about showing partiality to the rich, which he says is a violation of the law to love your neighbor as yourself, which is itself a summary of what has been called the second table of the Ten Commandments dealing with relationships between people (The First table are the commandments that deal with our relationship with God). James goes on to show the unity of the law with the example of two of the Ten Commandments, name those against adultery and murder. The unity of the law comes from the fact that the same God gave each commandment as a reflection of his very own character, not as arbitrary rules that have no correspondence with reality, the reality of the Creator and the creation. To break one command is to break the law as whole, and to break the heart of the One whose heart it is a reflection of.

Likewise to reject one commandment is to reject the law as a whole, and to reject the law of God is to reject the God who gave the law. In other words, to reject the seventh commandment (the sixth according to Luther’s reckoning as he worked from a tradition that saw the prohibition against idolatry to be part of the first commandment), would be to also reject the first. We are not saved BY the law, but we are saved FOR the law, to live by it, in order to be holy as the One who saves us is holy. As Wesley reminded those so prone to antinomianism (lawlessness, about which the New Testament has nothing good to say, See Sermon 35), the apostle Paul taught that faith should not be construed in any way to make the law void, but that true faith establishes the law (Rom 3:31). Here is where we must find unity.

Last week I was discussing the state of the denomination and the results of the General Conference with some other United Methodist pastors. They all seemed to think that we could somehow still find unity even though we disagree over sexual ethics. When I probed a bit further, I asked whether we could really be “of the same mind, having the same love, being of full accord and of one mind” (Philp 2:2), as we are called to be, when some among us believe things like the Wiccan goddess is Jesus’ aunt. This is a belief expressed by ELCA pastor, Nadia Bolz-Weber, who is wildly popular among many of our younger clergy, but also among progressives in general, young or old. My colleague, who clearly views himself as a moderate, and clearly sees me as being on the extreme conservative side of things, said, without hesitation, yes we should be able to be unified with people like that.

I probed further, “so you think we can worship together and be in unified mission together as Christians with some who believe something like that and that we are all just worshiping the same God?” Again, my colleague who considers himself clearly within the moderate camp said, without hesitation, yes. He alluded to Paul’s preaching of the “unknown God” in Acts 17 as justification, which is really not even close to being a justification as Paul’s point was for the Athenians to stop practicing idolatry and trust in the Creator of all who will judge the world by Jesus, whom he raised from the dead.

Nonetheless, if the Wiccan goddess is Jesus’ aunt, then what does this say about the Trinity, and how can such faith be a fulfillment of the first commandment? Are all gods really the same God and are all gods worthy of worship? Was Elijah misguided to demand the Israelites choose between God and Baal, after all? Is this where we are to find unity? If so then we have to “reimagine” the first commandment to mean  something it obviously does not and cannot mean, or we must reject it altogether, which would really be what the former reimagining does anyway.

Obviously we are not united on the particulars of the seventh commandment; but when it comes right down to it, it doesn’t look like we are really even united on the particulars of the FIRST COMMANDMENT!

Luther said, one good work that fulfills the commandment to not take the name of the Lord in vain is “to oppose all false, seductive, and heretical teachings and any abuse of the clerical office and its power,” to stand against teachings that “use God’s name to contend with the holy name of God” (p.55). A syncretistic faith open to the worship of other gods along with Yahweh, is not “the faith that was once for all delivered to the saints” (Jude 1:3 ESV). For the Lord is God alone, and there is none other beside Him! (Isaiah 45:5)  He says, “Turn to me and be saved all the ends of the earth! For I am God, and there is no other” (Isaiah 45:22). Here, and here alone, is where we can find genuine Christian unity born of the Spirit of the Living God in the bond of peace!

Some talk as if we are like a married couple, one of whom just can’t stand a night light (or a sleep mask), and the other who just can’t sleep without it, the night light that is. What if we really are more like a married couple, one of whom absolutely insists on an open marriage (Open Hearts, Open Minds, Open Doors??), while the other insists on an absolutely exclusive relationship, forsaking all others, till death do them part? The former can stay married in the same house, even if they do have to sleep in separate rooms; the latter will need more than separate rooms, don’t you think? Unless one party converts to the other’s way of thinking.

The God revealed to and through Israel, and most fully in the person of His Son, Jesus Christ, demands that we have no other gods before Him to bow down and serve them. Why? Because He is a jealous God, Who wants us for an exclusive relationship in worship of Him and Him alone, forsaking all others, and clinging only to Him through faith forever, and ever, and ever! Amen. From this faith will flow obedience to all of God’s good law and righteous requirements for a holy people. This is the obedience of faith to which we are called, and in which we will find unity.

“For although there may be so-called gods in heaven or on earth—as indeed there are many ‘gods’ and many ‘lords’— yet for us there is one God, the Father, from whom are all things and for whom we exist, and one Lord, Jesus Christ, through whom are all things and through whom we exist” (I Cor 8:5-6).

 

How Wide the Divide? #UMCGC2016

The United Methodist Council of Bishops proposed more discussion at a later date to try to resolve differences over human sexuality. But what if the controversy over sexuality really is just a presenting symptom of a much wider divide? Maybe this is and has been such a big deal for so long because it really is a much bigger deal than some want to admit.

Of course there are those who are genuinely unsure about these issues that we could honestly identify as in the middle. If confusion and uncertainty about what to believe is really the issue, then why would we be so rash to haphazardly abandon the existing and longstanding, universally accepted until the sexual revolution of the 1960’s, teaching of the Church, which is still the teaching of the vast majority of the Church universal.

But as for those on the left, including those who call themselves centrists but are obviously and clearly progressives in alliance with progressives, and for those of us on the right the issue is not really confusion and uncertainty. By certainty I’m not talking about an absolute epistemological certainty that God alone has; I’m talking about clarity of convictions, an assurance of faith. We believe what we believe firmly, even though, as Alister McGrath has argued, as Protestants we may intuitively hold our beliefs provisionally. And our differing beliefs run much wider and deeper than what we think about sex.

When I went before the Board of Ordained Ministry (BOM) in my conference a few years ago for provisional membership, based on a conversation that I had with one person along the way, I was deemed to not be quite “theologically diverse” enough, although I was passed for provisional membership on the Elder track anyway. I was passed but not without extra requirements. One was a reading assignment. The conference approved psychologist I had to meet with before I could go before the BOM recommended to them that I read a book, “Six Ways of Being Religious”.

This was because when the psychologist asked me to tell him how I would handle conflict in the church, I gave the example of when I led a Bible study and discussion around the controversies concerning marriage and sexuality in response to questions from both liberals and conservatives in the church I was pastoring at the time. I told him we had people in the middle who were confused by it all, and some on the right and some on the left. I told him that I had come through a lot of confusion myself after reading and listening to people on all sides of the issue along with much prayer and Bible study. I had come to a traditional viewpoint and did not hide that fact from the group or my church. We had a great, even if sometimes intense, discussion during that group study. I did my best to accurately present viewpoints from both sides, and people within the group on both sides felt and were free to share theirs. No one left the group and we all remained friends, even though I clearly shared my view, which includes the belief that this is not an indifferent matter. Everyone was thankful and appreciative for the discussion.

For sharing this the psychologist deemed me not to be “theologically diverse” enough and after explaining that he believed himself that all religions really point to the same ultimate reality, he recommended the book I mentioned above, although that is not what that book actually argues. In addition to that reading assignment the BOM also recommended – in writing – that I read Harvey Cox’s book “The Future of Faith, wherein he argues that orthodox confessional faith was actually a corruption of the original more “diverse” form  of Christianity, which he seems to believe is captured in the Gospel of Thomas and apparently Gnosticism. He considers confessional (i.e. the development of creeds) orthodoxy to be a corruption of the original faith, which he believes was more “diverse” and “open”, conveniently, kind of like progressive Christians like him. He even seems to throw John Wesley into the mix of what he believes to be the problem. I wonder what Wesley would think of a Methodist BOM recommending such reading?

I didn’t have a problem reading the book, I have learned the hard way of the importance of considering other views, but when I complained to some colleagues that it seemed quite suspect that the BOM would require me to read such a book that bashes orthodoxy, including Wesleyan orthodoxy, some said the BOM probably just wanted me to consider other views. Okay. Well my experience through provisional membership (I have self-delayed interviewing for full-ordination for the past couple of years) has proven otherwise.

The BOM also required me, for other reasons, to take another Christian education class on teaching Bible study after I had already completed the MDiv. So I took a class, which had undergraduate and graduate students in it. The professor overtly bashed evangelical conservatives and explicitly deemed evangelical Bible study curriculum to be “theologically problematic” but gushed over the theology of John Dominic Crossan and Marcus Borg, pantheists, who deny the bodily resurrection of Jesus . She also had students look up Bible verses where Jesus seems to speak negatively about family to argue that Jesus didn’t really care about family values like ‘some’ Christians do today. Another time she had us look up verses in the epistles that mention the “gospel” (singular) to argue that those verses were telling us that the four “Gospels” were more important, I suppose to try to neutralize some of the unpopular messages of Paul in the epistles. At any rate, those verses in the epistles are obviously talking about the general content of the Gospel message not the four Gospels specifically. Both were shameless, egregious exercises in proof-texting and eisegesis, which I challenged to little avail.

I also participated in a special RIOM (official provisional clergy mentor group) that made it available for us to go to special meetings and conferences, including a trip to the Holy Land. In all cases, with the exception of one meeting at a conservative UMC that I wasn’t able to attend, the progressive bias was incredible, outrageous really. I was subjected to meetings where conservatives like me were called “Pharisees” or worse, one where it was openly questioned, after what was basically a reconciling church promotion, whether an African American candidate for Bishop should be seriously considered because she is theologically conservative. How bout that for a commitment to ‘theological diversity’?

The conference that was almost the last straw for me was when our RIOM group and a couple of others were taken to see the future of the church, at least according to the theories of the ultra-progressive Episcopal theologian, Phyllis Tickle, whose view are similar to those of Harvey Cox. It was a conference featuring Tickle, who ended up not being able to attend for personal reasons, and the Lutheran (ELCA) “Pastrix” (title of one of her bestselling books), Nadia Bolz-Weber, the main speaker.

I read most of her book, “Pastrix”, on the way to the conference. In it she talks about how she believes the Wiccan goddess is Jesus’ aunt as she promotes syncretism, and how she used the baptismal covenant to bless and rename a transitioning transgender, an experience she compared to the conversion of the apostle Paul and Martin Luther. At the conference she bragged about how she used the baptismal font as a chocolate fountain for a party after a worship service as an example of her many intentional acts of “holy irreverence.” She also made fun of the Methodist notion of “going on to perfection” and said in terms of the means of grace, she doesn’t do sh&#. Talking about a prominent conservative figure, she called him “bat sh%# crazy”. She does believe in the bodily resurrection though! Whatever that may really mean to her.

I seemed to be the only one who didn’t think she was the greatest thing since sliced bread in the auditorium of the Methodist retreat, Epworth by the Sea, in St. Simons Island, Georgia. On the way home though, one of our leaders did, however, question whether the Pastrix cussing every other breath was really in keeping with a holy life! Of course that was the least of my concerns.

How wide is the divide? Much wider and deeper than many want to admit. This crisis issue of human sexuality is such a big deal, because it is a much bigger deal than some will admit.

When it comes right down to it, we not only have competing visions of Christian sexual ethics; we have competing visions of the Christian faith, really two different religions as has been argued since the first half of the 20th century. Although some at the 2016 UMC General Conference voted down making the Nicene Creed a doctrinal standard because they may have thought it unnecessary in light of our Articles of Religion and Confession of faith which explicate further many of the same truths, I wonder how many voted it down because they have the faith of Harvey Cox who sees the creed as a corruption of a supposed more original faith.

We are of two minds because we are, in the main, of two different spirits. When it comes down to it, one vision of the faith seems to be an open-ended syncretism where it is Jesus by addition, thrown into the pantheon, if you will. The other is a monotheistic Trinitarianism where it is Jesus by submission, surrendering to the One true God who has revealed himself most fully in the person of Christ by the illuminating and empowering presence of the Holy Spirit. It’s not enough that we consent to the same terminology when we have diametrically opposed meanings and beliefs. The so-called commitment to theological diversity is really just a commitment to theological progressive-liberalism, which is apparently open to all things, except those who aren’t.

The bias should be obvious, and the marginalization and demoralization of conservative evangelicals in the American context is real. It is true that were it not for our African brothers and sisters this discussion would have been settled in favor of the progressive view long ago. And as the church seems to be moving in a more conservative global direction despite what looks like a progressive full-court press at this year’s GC, now they want to prolong the debate even further. Does anyone really believe that if things were going in the other direction, in favor of the left, that calls for delay and further discussion, would be taken seriously? When the committee for General Conference who put together the “Handbook for Delegates” assumed the new theories of gender neutrality to be settled reality and advised all delegates to “.. not assume anyone’s gender identity, even if you have met them in the past” and to ask everyone what pronouns they prefer, he, she, or something else (p. 39), I wouldn’t count on it.

bridge-across-chasmHow wide is the divide? We are of two minds because we are of two spirits. There is a mighty gulf between us that God did span at Calvary, but we can’t pretend like we can live together on both sides as one church. We have to choose one side or the other. I know this is stark, and for some, harsh language, but it is true. Why don’t we admit it and take action accordingly to allow for an amicable separation? This is much more gracious and generous than anything we’ve seen in the other mainline denominations, which have gone in favor of the progressive view. It would just be an official acknowledgement of what is a present reality made more evident by progressives defiance. The divide is great and it is real. Let’s get real and do something real about it.

 

Have United Methodists Lost It?

My prayer for this year’s General Conference of the United Methodist Church has been that Methodists will rediscover something that I believe has been lost, at least in the American and some other contexts. While some are admirably encouraging the United Methodist Church to explicitly and officially acknowledge the doctrinal authority of the Nicene Creed, I believe we also need to recover and reclaim an authority even more basic than that, namely the New Covenant.

Like the book of the covenant given to Israel was lost under a mound of Idolatry and forgotten, only to be ‘accidentally’ rediscovered and reclaimed in the days of king Josiah (1 Kings 22-23), I believe United Methodism, again, at least in some quarters, has lost and forgotten the New Covenant. Far too many just simply don’t understand what it is; others simply refuse to accept it.

This becomes painfully obvious when love is pitted against law, and when grace is redefined as forgiveness and/or acceptance without transformation. Then you have those who believe the two great laws to love God and your neighbor as yourself set aside the remainder of the law rather than fulfill it, negate it rather than activate it. It’s obvious that they just don’t understand the New Covenant, which I didn’t either for many, many years, and I realize I still have much to learn. It’s also sadly obvious when ceremonial and civil laws that only pertained to the ancient near eastern nation of Israel is used to negate the ongoing sexual prohibitions, which are clearly restated in the New Testament. When warnings about the dangers of sin to unrepentant sinners and calls to repentance and self-denial are labeled as hatred and bigotry, and despicable judgmentalism, or when any mention of obedience and good works is quickly dismissed as Pharisaic legalism, there is a serious misunderstanding of the New Covenant. And it’s not just liberals I’m talking about here; many evangelical traditions are run amuck with these types of misunderstandings as well.

With regards to the current crisis facing the United Methodist Church over how to be in ministry to the LGBTQ community and in response to the same-sex ceremony performed in a UM Church in Charlotte, NC, which the ministers involved called an act of ‘biblical obedience’, a couple of weeks ago I posted on social media a link to the book “Unchanging Witness: The Consistent Christian Teaching on Homosexuality in Scripture and Tradition” with the following statement:

Was the recent ceremony at First UMC in Charlotte really an act of “biblical obedience”? Bible Scholar Luke Timothy Johnson (at Emory), who is LGBT affirming says the following: “The task demands intellectual honesty. I have little patience with efforts to make Scripture say something other than what it says, through appeals to linguistic or cultural subtleties. The exegetical situation is straightforward: we know what the text says.” Later he goes on to say: “I think it important to state clearly that we do, in fact, reject the straightforward commands of Scripture, and appeal instead to another authority when we declare that same-sex unions can be holy and good.”

I also heard ultra liberal Phyllis Tickle say that it’s a fool’s game to try to prove from the Bible that same-sex relationships are not sinful. There are many other liberal scholars who would say the same, but like Johnson they just simply reject the Biblical commandments. As a matter of fact, this is what Adam Hamilton’s bucket # 3 is for. Donald Fortson and Rollin Graham in their book, “Unchanging Witness”, present an abundance of evidence from the ancient primary sources that reveals why liberal scholars in the church and outside the church would say something like what Johnson and Tickle have said. The Bible really is clear on this issue despite all the efforts to muddy the clear waters.

Professor Johnson, nonetheless, argues (article “Homosexuality and the Church: Scripture and Experience”) for the authority of experience over Scripture in a way that he still somehow believes is being liberal in the name of the gospel. It’s hard to see how that can be when the gospel is the fulfillment of the promise of the New Covenant in which the laws of God are written on His people’s hearts by the Spirit so they will obey. In Romans 8 Paul indicates that it is the mind of the flesh, being hostile to God, opposed to the Spirit, which refuses to submit to God’s law thereby pleasing God. The promise of the new covenant ratified by the blood of Christ is a healed heart and the gift of God’s Spirit so we can and will obey God’s commands not reject them (Deut 30; Jer 31; Ezk 36).

In spite of this, in response, some progressive clergy still tried to play the game of muddying the waters. One asked why I only referenced Old Testament scripture, apparently missing my reference to Romans 8, and asked me to tell her what Jesus said about it under the New Covenant. In addition to the reference to Romans 8, also lost on my colleague was the fact that the OT references I gave in parenthesis were in fact promises of the New Covenant, the new thing that God promised to do for His people after exile. Predictably, my colleague also made the fallacious argument from silence that since Jesus didn’t explicitly say anything about same-sex relationships it must be okay.

At any rate, so many of our arguments center around a failure to understand, or a disingenuous refusal to acknowledge the differences between the Old Covenant with Israel mediated through Moses, and the New Covenant mediated and ratified by Jesus and activated by the Holy Spirit. The Old Covenant foretold the New Covenant and indicated that there would be differences, although it didn’t spell out all of those differences exactly.

Heart on Fire

So we shouldn’t be surprised that the New Covenant is not exactly the same as the Old Covenant, especially since Jeremiah specifically tells us that it would not be (Jeremiah 31:31-34). The promise of the circumcised heart in Deuteronomy 30, for instance, is one of those differences, the result of which would be wholehearted love for God evidenced by obedience to God’s commandments. Jeremiah specifies that this would involve God’s laws being written on the hearts of His people and the forgiveness of sins to be remembered no more. Ezekiel also indicated that this would include the renewal of the heart and the transformation of the human spirit to be accompanied by the gift of God’s very own Spirit, again the end result being obedience to God’s commandments.

Yesterday was Pentecost, the time when the Church commemorates and celebrates the outpouring of the Holy Spirit, which Peter proclaimed to be a fulfillment of that which God had spoken through the prophet Joel, that he would pour out his Spirit on all flesh, male and female, young and old, slave and free (Joel 2:28-29). But we must understand the extraordinarily generous outpouring of the Spirit within the context of the promise of the New Covenant, which Jesus inaugurated.

The purpose of this outpouring of the Spirit of God wasn’t simply to give us warm and fuzzy feelings in our hearts and cold chills on our skin, but to transform us from the inside out to be an obedient people who gladly submit to God’s moral law from the heart, not just outwardly as arrogant legalists, but also not to use God’s grace as an excuse for lawlessness (i.e. antinomianism). The Bible has nothing good to say about legalism; neither has it anything good to say about lawlessness.

Of course the New Covenant is not a simple prescription of prohibitions; it is a promise with power. The Old Covenant could only reveal sin; the New Covenant deals with it once and for all and empowers God’s people to overcome it by the power of God’s Spirit to be gladly and joyfully obedient to God’s law, which is evidence of love for God and love of neighbor.

The Holy Spirit would certainly never lead God’s people to reject the straightforward commands of scripture, which are clearly stated and warned about in both the Old and New Testament. Instead, the Holy Spirit would enable us to submit to God’s law, which is an impossibility in the flesh, our corrupt sinful nature, as Paul says in Romans 8. This is the promise with power; this is the authority of the New Covenant.

Yet these truths have been buried under a mountain of misunderstanding, misinformation, misdirection, poor interpretation, reimagining, rethinking, and human traditions conformed to the reasoning of idolatrous minds and the sinful desires of a fallen world. The past few days of General Conference it seems there has been a full-court press to pile on to this mountain.

Countless have been the calls to love, but not love as it is defined in scripture. Love is keeping the straightforward commandments of scripture, the commandments of the living God, not rejecting them. Countless have been the calls to follow the Holy Spirit, but not as that is defined in scripture. The Holy Spirit would not lead us to fulfill the desires of the flesh and of the mind to please ourselves (Eph 2), but to fulfill the just requirements of the law and to submit to God’s law in order to please Him (Romans 8). The Spirit would inspire us to welcome all people from everywhere no matter what sins they have committed and how they may be uniquely tempted, as the Gospel is the fulfillment of the promise to Abraham that in his seed all the peoples of the earth would find blessing, but not to try to sanctify any particular sinful desire and behavior.

Those cannot be calls inspired by the Holy Spirit. We need to be truthful. The New Covenant has been buried under a mountain of distorted reasoning and human tradition built thereon. Last Friday morning one of our bishops during a sermon misrepresented the position of our church as stated in our Book of Discipline. No person created in the image of God, who is of sacred worth, is deemed to be incompatible with Christian teaching, although certain behavior is. This same bishop, Bishop Sally Dyck, also implied that the church does not deem other sins, specifically in her sermon murder and racism, to be incompatible with Christian teaching. Of course we do, even though the term “incompatible” may not be used. With regards to murder we acknowledge the binding authority of the 6th commandment, which clearly indicates that we find murder to be incompatible with Christian teaching and racism is a chargeable offense for UM pastors, not to mention contrary to the vows in the baptismal covenant in our own hymnal. And in that context, apparently in a desperate attempt to justify homosexuality, she went on to say that she didn’t really want to add anything to the list. She said,“I want us to go learn mercy and not have anything declared incompatible with Christian teaching in our Church.” Early, however, she said that it was incompatible with Christian teaching to declare anyone incompatible with Christian teaching. What does this really mean? Although it really is a disingenuous, dishonest, and an incoherent straw man argument, I think it is quite revealing in another way.

The bishop’s rant actually reveals a competing covenant. It’s a covenant built around the liberal notion of love, which is defined by the liberal notion of tolerance and permissiveness, do what thou wilt as long as it’s consensual. It appears to be a virtually lawless love, save one, “Thou shalt not judge!” And the mercy offered seems to be defined as making people more comfortable with who they are as sinners rather than helping them to be set free from sin and its death-dealing consequences to become saints. I really wanted to believe that she simply misspoke when she said she did not want “anything to be declared incompatible with Christian teaching”, but in the context of her message it seems that is what she meant. That’s a lawless love, which is not really love at all according to scripture. It’s a covenant where sin is forgiven without repentance and sinners being transformed and empowered to resist temptation and to live holy lives it seems.

Bishop Harvey did much better this morning when she preached on the parable of the invitation to the wedding banquet from Matthew’s Gospel. She rightly said that we are invited to come as we are, but we are not welcome to enjoy the party by remaining that way. By accepting the invitation to the party we must also accept the proper attire, the robe, provided compliments of the host. Allowing God to clothe us in righteousness and holiness on His terms is required. Unfortunately Bishop Harvey mistakenly offered an exemption for the LGBT community by comparing sexual orientation with things like race and biological gender rather than other sexual temptations like consensual adultery (i.e. swinging), which, by the way, the founding father of the sexual revolution, Alfred Kinsey, deemed to be acceptable because he believed it was “natural” as he believed homosexuality and a lot of other things to be as well. Nonetheless, this is an exemption that is not authorized by either the Old or the New Covenants.

To truly be in New Covenant ministry for the salvation of sinners for the kingdom of God we must stay within the parameters of the New Covenant itself and remember that it’s not just a prescription of prohibitions; it’s a promise of God the Father with power because of the she blood of Jesus Christ and the power of the Holy Spirit.

Of course the gospel is not change so you can be saved. Sinners can’t change, any more than a leopard could change its spots (Jeremiah 13:23). It is impossible for any sinner to change themselves. The good news is that with God all things are possible and sinners can be changed, all sinners can become saints by the transforming grace and power of God. This is the promise of the New Covenant, often buried and forgotten, but a treasure nonetheless.

Do you not know that the unrighteous will not inherit the kingdom of God? Do not be deceived! The sexually immoral, idolaters, adulterers, passive homosexual partners, practicing homosexuals, thieves, the greedy, drunkards, the verbally abusive, and swindlers will not inherit the kingdom of God. Some of you once lived this way. But you were washed, you were sanctified, you were justified in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ and by the Spirit of our God. (1 Corinthians 6:9-11 NET)

 

Religious Liberty: A Cover for Discrimination?

“’It seemed to me the height of disingenuousness, absurdity, and indeed disrespect to tell someone it is okay to ‘be’ gay, but not necessarily okay to engage in gay sex. What do they think being gay means?’ she writes in her Becket paper. ‘I have the same reaction to courts and legislatures that blithely assume a religious person can easily disengage her religious belief and self-identity from her religious practice and religious behavior. What do they think being religious means?’”

These are the words of the Barack Obama appointee, Georgetown trained lawyer, and current commissioner of the Equal Employment Opportunities Commission (EEOC), Chai Feldblum. Feldblum has been a champion for the LGBT rights movement, and identifies herself as a lesbian (as quoted by Rod Dreher in the American Conservative). She also honestly acknowledges that there is a real conflict between the right to the free exercise of religion and LGBT rights laws.

Yet leftists, including many of my progressive, leftist clergy colleagues, continue to act like any of the concerns over religious liberty among conservatives like me, are just cloak and cover for irrational animus and discrimination. Yes, it is really about discrimination, one way or another, as Feldblum herself acknowledges when she says that not all discrimination is necessarily bad, because some form of discrimination in the law is just necessarily necessary. Some people who engage in certain behavior are going to be discriminated against in society; it’s simply a matter of who and why. Feldblum, herself, uses the example of employment discrimination against people who abuse children.

According to Feldblum the tipping point for whether discrimination is allowed or not depends on whether the majority of society deems a particular characteristic morally problematic and the level of outrage against a particular characteristic or behavior. She admits, against some of her fellow activists, that there is inherently a significant moral dimension to these issues. Thus, contrary to those who have argued you can’t legislate morality, the truth is morality, or immorality depending on your perspective, will be legislated. It’s simply a question of whose and what form it will take.

Unlike, the majority of the leftists we are hearing and reading today, who mockingly put ‘religious liberty’ in scare quotes and blithely dismiss the claims that there is a real threat to it, at least Feldblum was honest enough to admit that there are real conflicts and real burdens placed on traditional religious people in our country. In any case, she still thinks sexual identity, and I presume gender identity, concerns should trump concerns for religious liberty because she believes sexual and gender identity are more basic to human nature. But is has been a huge undertaking to bring society to the place where the majority, especially among government, academic, business, entertainment, and sporting elites, believe this to be true as well. So how did we reach this tipping point where the majority of society is ready to subordinate religious liberty to sexual freedom and gender identity expression? How did we get to the point where American society is willing to flush the First Amendment as it pertains to traditional Christian beliefs about sex, marriage, and gender distinctions down the toilet of a gender neutral bathroom?

Well, the short answer is through lies, deceit, making pariahs out of those with traditional views, and through less and less subtle forms of threat and intimidation. This isn’t just my assessment of what is happening; it’s actual strategies endorsed and promoted among leftist radicals themselves. Reading Sal Alinsky’s “Rules for Radicals”, which is definitely one of the leftists’ playbooks, will help you understand how we have reached the tipping point.

Before you dismiss this a a wildly baseless conspiracy theory, take note that I was in a “Christian Missions” class at Duke Divinity School in Durham, NC where the professor specifically talked about using Sal Alinsky’s tactics directly from “Rules for Radicals” to further the cause of “social justice”. He first tried to allay potential uneasiness among some of the students about the unscrupulous nature of Alinsky’s tactics. Theologians and clergy in mainline denominations and seminaries have been using the church to promote a leftist political vision of social justice for quite some time. One of the most prominent Methodist theologians, Thomas Oden, who was converted to an orthodox faith by study of the church fathers, admits this is what he was doing.  Alinsky was apparently one of his mentors (see review of Oden’s memoir HERE in an article entitled, “From Radical Leftist to Orthodox Theologian”)

Nonetheless, Alinsky didn’t invent all of these tactics, but he compiled them in a systematic and concise way, to be used as a playbook for the political left, which receives much comfort, aid, and support from the religious left. Here’s a sample of Alinsky’s philosophy and strategy.

“’Power comes out of the barrel of a gun!’ is an absurd rallying cry when the other side has all the guns. Lenin was a pragmatist; when he returned to what was then Petrograd from exile, he said that the Bolsheviks stood for getting power through the ballot but would reconsider after they got the guns!” Alinsky, Saul (2010-06-22). Rules for Radicals (Location 117) Kindle Edition. (Here he is talking about those who quote Mao Zedong, and cautioning them through the wisdom of Vladimir Lenin to be patient until they actually have the guns, i.e. power).

“The man of action views the issue of means and ends in pragmatic and strategic terms. He has no other problem; he thinks only of his actual resources and the possibilities of various choices of action. He asks of ends only whether they are achievable and worth the cost; of means, only whether they will work. To say that corrupt means corrupt the ends is to believe in the immaculate conception of ends and principles. The real arena is corrupt and bloody. Life is a corrupting process from the time a child learns to play his mother off against his father in the politics of when to go to bed; he who fears corruption fears life.” (pp. 24-25)

“He who sacrifices the mass good for his personal conscience has a peculiar conception of “personal salvation”; he doesn’t care enough for people to be ‘corrupted’ for them.” (p. 25)

“Ridicule is man’s most potent weapon. It is almost impossible to counterattack ridicule. Also it infuriates the opposition, who then react to your advantage.” (p. 128)

“Keep the pressure on, with different tactics and actions, and utilize all events of the period for your purpose.” (pp. 128-129)

So following the principles of people like Alinksy leftists radicals operate with a no-holds-barred approach against those with opposing views, who Alinksy insists are enemies who deserve no quarter. The ends justifies the means, period; and, according to Alinsky it doesn’t matter if the ends are corrupt because according to his view corruption is all there really is because all is relative. One should not be concerned with being corrupted or about being contradictory because life itself is simply a corrupt struggle for power riddled with contradiction.

Conservatives are often baffled by the inherent absurdities in some of the views on the left, but for many, if not most, of them it is ultimately not about logic, coherence, or harmony with God’s design in nature and the revelation of His will in Scripture. What it’s really about is desire and the will to power to achieve one’s desires, and whoever “controls the narrative” rules the world. This is what they themselves have told us that all claims to truth really are, just that, claims without regard for real knowledge designed to procure power for some over others. At it’s heart the leftist vision is about the imposition of their will over those with opposing views and even over nature and nature’s God. The can talk about gray areas and demand tolerance when it suits them, and they can also be the most wooden literalists when it works to their advantage against their opponents, especially once they “have the guns,” i.e. the power. It’s a game of slippery selectivity.

In regards to the sexuality debates, Alfred Kinsey in the 1940’s and 1950’s employed similar tactics to promote the idea that virtually all forms of consensual self expression are perfectly natural and normal and should be practiced early and often. In Freudian fashion he promoted the idea that many societal ills stem from sexual repression rather than unbridled expression in direct and intentional contradiction to the traditional Judeo-Christian view. I remember discussing his suspect methodology, and horrifically unethical data collection practices when I was an undergraduate psychology major. He and his cohorts collected data on criminal samples and from child molesters, at least one, who actually molested children and supposedly journaled about their orgasmic experiences, some as young as five months. Kinsey and his cohorts in academia and media also promoted the lie that his studies were representative of average Americans, whom he smeared as sexual hypocrites. Kinsey, who was in an open marriage, which included for him relations with both men and women, and an advocate of zoophilia, was actually just projecting his own unbridled twisted sexuality onto the general population. (see the book “Sexual Sabotage” by Dr. Judith Reisman for more on one of the founding fathers of the sexual revolution)

Many others who followed in Kinsey’s footsteps to promote “free love”, to encourage free sexual expression and discourage sexual restraint as “unnatural” (a reversal of the teaching of the Bible, i.e. Romans 1) have been no less unscrupulous.

In the late 1980’s Marshal Kirk, a researcher in neuropsychiatry, and Hunter Madsen, a PHD in political science and an expert in public persuasion and social marketing, wrote a book called “After the Ball: How America will Conquer its Fear and Hatred of Gays in the 90’s” It has functioned as somewhat of a playbook for the LGBT agenda since it’s publication. Their philosophy and strategy echoes Kinsey and Alinksy.

Their goal was to offer strategies and tactics to be used to normalize and mainstream homosexuality in society, which necessarily includes the marginalization, even the intentional vilification of people who view homosexuality to be abnormal and immoral. Mass Resistance provides an long excerpt from their book that explains the basic strategy (see HERE).

Note that Kirk and Madsen were not concerned with accuracy, logical coherence, or factual evidence , as they say “our effect is achieved without reference to facts, logic, or proof.” They insist “we mean conversion of the average American’s emotions, mind, and will, through a planned psychological attack, in the form of propaganda fed to the nation via media.” And regarding the media campaign they say, “it makes no difference that the ads are lies; not to us, because we’re using them to ethically good effect, to counter negative stereotypes that are every bit as much lies, and far more wicked ones; not to bigots, because the ads will have their effect on them whether they believe them or not.”

You can definitely hear echoes of Alinsky in Kirk and Madsen’s strategy, deceit being central and viewed as justified because of what they believe to be the ethical end. As reported several years ago by Albert Mohler (see HERE) the ruse suggested by Kirk and Madsen also involved intentionally false claims about the nature of homosexual orientation. They argue that, “for all practical purposes, gays should be considered to have been born gay–even though sexual orientation, for most humans, seems to be the product of a complex interaction between innate predispositions and environmental factors during childhood and early adolescence.”

The truth revealed in the second clause of their statement, after their suggestion of the useful fiction that gays are simply born that way, in their 1989 book is echoed in the current American Psychological Association (APA) statement on the causes of sexual orientation.

There is no consensus among scientists about the exact reasons that an individual develops a heterosexual, bisexual, gay or lesbian orientation. Although much research has examined the possible genetic, hormonal, developmental, social and cultural influences on sexual orientation, no findings have emerged that permit scientists to conclude that sexual orientation is determined by any particular factor or factors. Many think that nature and nurture both play complex roles; most people experience little or no sense of choice about their sexual orientation.

http://www.apa.org/topics/lgbt/orientation.aspx

While, I don’t think it is too mysterious as to why people develop attractions for the opposite sex given the self-evident biological complementarity of males and females, the causes for same-sex and bisexual attractions are not as cut and dry as leftists have made out. The constant comparisons to race, in spite of the provable absurdity, continue to be promulgated through the media, academia, and government. They compare homosexuality, and now even gender identity disorder, with race or other immutable physical characteristics such as eye color, left-handedness, disability, anything but other sexual predilections and desires such as polyamory and consensual adultery (i.e.  swingers), which Kinsey claimed were also natural sexual desires worthy of expression and fulfillment, early and often.

Right now The Ad Council has a propaganda commercial right out of the Kirk and Madsen playbook, where a same-sex couple is paired with an interracial couple and two sisters, one of whom is disabled. In a shorter version of a longer video that is being repeatedly aired on national television across a broad spectrum of channels. The implication is that anyone who disagrees with homosexual relationships is the equivalent of racists, and even people who would hate children with disabilities. The longer version also includes a elderly heterosexual couple implying that to believe same-sex relationships to be immoral would be just as silly as being against older people having sex. Billboards promoting this same “Love is Love” LGBT advocacy campaign have been strategically placed near high schools and middle schools in the area I live in.(see full video here replete with a catchy tune and song lyrics repeating “I can’t change even if I tried, even if I wanted to”)

The leftist agenda including the LGBT agenda (and they obviously do have an agenda in spite of their “agenda? what agenda?” denials) has been intentionally promoted through deception, and ever increasingly, through suppression of the truth and oppression, yes, even discrimination against those who speak it. Dr Eric Walsh, who worked for the state of Georgia, just recently joined the growing ranks of those fired over their religious views because of the content of sermons he preached within the walls of his church on his own time (see HERE). There is a purge of traditional orthodox Christians from mainstream society underway, and it’s gaining steam. Even one of my liberal clergy colleagues said that conservative Christians should be forced to live like they did in the pioneer days if they refuse to change their beliefs.

Indeed mainline and progressive evangelical clergy and theologians have played a major role in supporting the left-wing political agenda. Many now insist that you can’t really love people and be following Jesus if you don’t go along with gender neutral bathrooms and locker rooms which is not really just about bathrooms, as much as it’s about forging a gender neutral society in the name of their vision of equality. I saw where one progressive clergy person quoted Galatians 3:28, obviously without reference to the immediate or overall Biblical context, which says in part that in Christ there is neither male nor female, to demand gender neutral bathrooms in the name of Jesus and equality insisting it is “a cut and dry” issue. But the same person probably insists that the commands against and warnings in the Bible about blurring gender distinctions are unclear and/or outdated, even the warnings of the same author of Galatians 3:28, the apostle Paul.

For years progressive theologians and clergy have followed the principle that Kirk and Madsen recommended for converting churches to their way of thinking: that is, muddying clear waters. Kirk and Madsen suggested that moral and theological arguments be employed to confuse the issue, to make it seem like the Bible may have never condemned homosexuality altogether in the first place. They weren’t suggesting something that hadn’t already been put into practice, they were just encouraging its more widespread use. (see HERE again Albert Mohler’s 2004 article about why the LGBT movement won)

Beginning in the 1960’s after the advent of the sexual revolution, biblical scholars, theologians, and progressive clergy began to put forth arguments to bring the traditional interpretation regarding the practice of homosexuality into question, suggesting with various and often contradictory arguments that not all forms of same-sex sex acts were condemned in Scripture. After decades of ultimately flawed and unsubstantiated arguments, many more liberal scholars and clergy are admitting that they really are simply rejecting the Bible’s teaching on sex as antiquated, even though some still try to muddy the waters first. As I have mentioned before in other articles,  New Testament scholar, Luke Timothy Johnson, who is liberal on the sexuality issue, puts it this way:

“The task demands intellectual honesty. I have little patience with efforts to make Scripture say something other than what it says, through appeals to linguistic or cultural subtleties. The exegetical situation is straightforward: we know what the text says.” Later he goes on to say: “I think it important to state clearly that we do, in fact, reject the straightforward commands of Scripture, and appeal instead to another authority when we declare that same-sex unions can be holy and good.”

See full article where Johnson argues for the authority of experience in a way that he still somehow believes is being liberal in the name of the gospel, which is hard to see how that can be when the gospel is the fulfillment of the promise of the new covenant in which the laws of God are written on His people’s hearts by the Spirit.

https://www.commonwealmagazine.org/homosexuality-church-1

I recommend the book “Unchanging Witness: The Consistent Christian Teaching on Homosexuality in Scripture and Tradition” by Fortson and Grams which presents a mountain of evidence from primary sources that explains why liberal scholars like Luke Timothy Johnson admit that they are really rejecting Scripture not just reading it differently. The evidence they compile and the arguments they make from it puts the lie to the claims that the Bible and the Christian Tradition have been unclear regarding the immorality of homosexual practice, although some still try to maintain that line, but they do so contrary to the actual evidence. Of course some still sincerely believe that we have just misinterpreted the Bible or that it is unclear on the issue, but they are sincerely wrong.

I could go on, but I’m running out of time and the average blog readers attention span ran out a several paragraphs ago.

Nonetheless, by the admission of key leftists themselves their movement has gained ascendancy and cultural supremacy through deceit, vilification by ad hominem, and suppression of the opposing views through threat and intimidation. And yes Christians with conservative views on sex really are being discriminated against contrary to the original spirit of the First Amendment based on the false belief that so many have been indoctrinated into that same-sex sexual attraction and now transgender identity are akin to race or other immutable physical traits. So how should we respond?

We should not respond by cowering in fear; nor should we respond by shouting and screaming our views in rage, which, as Alinsky astutely noted, works to the advantage of those who seek to vilify us, and is just not right. Instead we should simply respond by courageously speaking the truth in love with compassion, especially for those who believe success in life depends on who can tell the best lies the loudest and relentlessly enough and that corruption and the will to power are the only options in life. The other option is surrender to the will of God through faith in His Son, Jesus Christ, and to be filled with the Holy Spirit who delivers us from a world of domination and manipulation built on the sinking sand of deceit (see Galatians 6:7-10)

Truth can’t be propped up with lies; right can’t be aided by wrong; good needs not evil to further its ends. Truth requires truths courageously spoken in love. Followers of the Truth incarnate, who commanded, “But let your communication be, Yea, yea; Nay, nay: for whatsoever is more than these cometh of evil” (Matthew 5:37 KJV) to warn against taking the name of the Lord in vain and bearing false witness in any way, shape, or form, can only speak the truth in love. Anything else is inspired of the evil one, whom Jesus says is the father of lies and the spirit who inspires those who lie in accord with their own deceitful desires. We resort to lies when we want what we want more than what God wants. Sinful desires are born of rebellion and need lies to thrive. Jesus said the devil is the father of lies and the father of all liars (see John 8:31-47). The very word “devil” means one who slanders others. Amazingly he is one of those to whom Alinsky facetiously, but perhaps more seriously than he realized, dedicated his book, “Rules for Radicals” saying:

“Lest we forget at least an over-the-shoulder acknowledgement to the very first radical: from all our legends, mythology, and history (and who is to know where mythology leaves off and history begins – or which is which), the first radical known to man who rebelled against the establishment and did it so effectively that he at least won his own kingdom – Lucifer.”   

Indeed, they are kindred spirits. But the good news is children of the devil can become children of God. People of the lie can become people of the Truth.

Ephesians 4:11-5 (ESV)

11 And he gave the apostles, the prophets, the evangelists, the shepherds[a] and teachers,[b] 12 to equip the saints for the work of ministry, for building up the body of Christ, 13 until we all attain to the unity of the faith and of the knowledge of the Son of God, to mature manhood,[c] to the measure of the stature of the fullness of Christ, 14 so that we may no longer be children, tossed to and fro by the waves and carried about by every wind of doctrine, by human cunning, by craftiness in deceitful schemes. 15 Rather, speaking the truth in love, we are to grow up in every way into him who is the head, into Christ, 16 from whom the whole body, joined and held together by every joint with which it is equipped, when each part is working properly, makes the body grow so that it builds itself up in love.

17 Now this I say and testify in the Lord, that you must no longer walk as the Gentiles do, in the futility of their minds. 18 They are darkened in their understanding, alienated from the life of God because of the ignorance that is in them, due to their hardness of heart. 19 They have become callous and have given themselves up to sensuality, greedy to practice every kind of impurity. 20 But that is not the way you learned Christ!— 21 assuming that you have heard about him and were taught in him, as the truth is in Jesus, 22 to put off your old self,[d] which belongs to your former manner of life and is corrupt through deceitful desires, 23 and to be renewed in the spirit of your minds, 24 and to put on the new self, created after the likeness of God in true righteousness and holiness.

25 Therefore, having put away falsehood, let each one of you speak the truth with his neighbor, for we are members one of another. 26 Be angry and do not sin; do not let the sun go down on your anger, 27 and give no opportunity to the devil. 28 Let the thief no longer steal, but rather let him labor, doing honest work with his own hands, so that he may have something to share with anyone in need. 29 Let no corrupting talk come out of your mouths, but only such as is good for building up, as fits the occasion, that it may give grace to those who hear. 30 And do not grieve the Holy Spirit of God, by whom you were sealed for the day of redemption. 31 Let all bitterness and wrath and anger and clamor and slander be put away from you, along with all malice. 32 Be kind to one another, tenderhearted, forgiving one another, as God in Christ forgave you.

Therefore be imitators of God, as beloved children. And walk in love, as Christ loved us and gave himself up for us, a fragrant offering and sacrifice to God.

But sexual immorality and all impurity or covetousness must not even be named among you, as is proper among saints. Let there be no filthiness nor foolish talk nor crude joking, which are out of place, but instead let there be thanksgiving. For you may be sure of this, that everyone who is sexually immoral or impure, or who is covetous (that is, an idolater), has no inheritance in the kingdom of Christ and God. Let no one deceive you with empty words, for because of these things the wrath of God comes upon the sons of disobedience. Therefore do not become partners with them; for at one time you were darkness, but now you are light in the Lord. Walk as children of light (for the fruit of light is found in all that is good and right and true), 10 and try to discern what is pleasing to the Lord. 11 Take no part in the unfruitful works of darkness, but instead expose them.

https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Ephesians+4%3A11-5%3A11&version=ESV

Becoming a New Creation for the New Creation

Easter is about much more than confirmation of an afterlife, although that would be a significant implication. Nevertheless, Easter, specifically here referring to the main event of Easter, the resurrection of Jesus from the dead, is the firstfruits of a much larger harvest to come, the general resurrection of the dead (see 1 Corinthians 15), and along with it the renewal and rebirth of the creation itself (see Romans 8). The consummation of this new creation is described in Revelation 21 and 22; the story of it’s beginning is found in the stories of Easter.

Jesus was raised from the dead on the first day of the week. That’s the first hint that his resurrection was about new creation. There are other hints as well, but the first day of the week is symbolic of the first day of creation, and in the case of Jesus’ resurrection it is the first day of the new creation. Another clue is that the body in which Jesus was resurrected was not the same as it was before he was raised from the dead. His resurrected body was no longer perishable or mortal; it was, and still is imperishable and immortal.

The body, still physical, flesh and bone, as the gospel accounts make clear (see especially Luke 24:36-43), with which Jesus was raised had been transformed from the one which was previously subject to death and decay, to one that no longer could die. His glorious resurrected body in which he appeared to his disciples on the first Easter was like the body that all believers will receive after the general resurrection when Christ comes again. This promised new body is specifically designed for the New Creation, which will also still be a physical reality. In Philippians 3:21 we find the promise of the new body when Paul there says Jesus, at his second coming, “will transform our lowly body to be like his glorious body” (ESV). 1 John says something very similar.

See what kind of love the Father has given to us, that we should be called children of God; and so we are. The reason why the world does not know us is that it did not know him. Beloved, we are God’s children now, and what we will be has not yet appeared; but we know that when he appears we shall be like him, because we shall see him as he is. And everyone who thus hopes in him purifies himself as he is pure.”                      1 John 3:1-3 ESV

In this passage from 1 John we get a strong hint about the connection between the resurrected Jesus and the life of believers before the general resurrection of all believers. The promise that we shall be like him when he appears, our ultimate hope, enables us to share in the purity that Jesus presently enjoys in his resurrected human form. According to John this purity sets us at odds with the world, the present age which John says is governed by sinful desire and pride, but is passing away (1 John 2:15-17). In the life of a true believer there is a dramatic change that takes place, and it’s not just a matter of following a different set of rules or principles that will enable us to have our best life now in the world. Instead it is a miracle that takes us out of the fallen world and takes the desires and ways of the fallen world out of us.

When someone believes a change of status and a change of being takes place. Faith moves a person from the status of being justly condemned as a sinner, to being declared righteous before God because of Christ. This also involves new birth, what John calls becoming children of God (John 1:12-13). There is a change in status, but also a change of being, from children of the devil, who live according to desires corrupted by sin,  to children of God, who receive the new heart and the new spirit promised to come under the new covenant (Jeremiah 31:31-34; Ezekiel 36:26-27). Through faith in Christ we receive forgiveness and the Holy Spirit, which begins the work of healing our hearts and renewing our spirits by giving us desires to please God rather than ourselves.

The Holy Spirit is just a down payment on a much greater inheritance (See Ephesians 1:13-14), but  make no mistake, he is a wonderful foretaste of glory divine. The new birth brings us out of one realm and brings us into another, the kingdom of God (see John 3). The change of being that takes place puts us at odds with the world because we are no longer of the world. As children of God, we become citizens of a new world, the new heaven and the new earth, and the new Jerusalem, which Revelation describes as eventually coming down from heaven to earth. But our citizenship in it doesn’t begin then, it begins the moment we believe. Children of God are children of the Jerusalem above, which will eventually come to earth (see Galatians 4:26, and context of course).

Back in Philippians, Paul conveys this idea by contrasting those who live to satisfy sinful earthly desires with those whose “citizenship is in heaven” (3:20). Our citizenship is present tense, although the fully consummated benefits of that citizenship we still await as we anticipate the return of Christ and the transformation of our bodies to be like his, the hope that we’re reminded of in the very next verse (v. 21). It is at that point that our spiritual citizenship in the heavenly Jerusalem will become a physical reality as the new Jerusalem comes down from heaven to earth in a renewed and reborn creation. But in the meantime, or the in-between-time, if you will, we live as citizens of the kingdom of God in a fallen and fading world subjected to bondage and decay because of sin, humanity’s rebellion against the Creator.

So Jesus’ resurrection could be considered the first act of new creation, but the new birth of believers is also an act of new creation. Interestingly, after his resurrection, when Jesus meets with his disciples behind closed doors in Jerusalem, after extending peace to them and showing his nail-scarred hands and spear-scarred side, John says “he breathed on them and said to them, ‘Receive the Holy Spirit'” (John 20:22). I believe this was an intentional sign-act echoing Genesis 2:7, where God breathes life into the first man. Here Jesus breathes new life, new covenant life, yeah, new creation life into his disciples in anticipation of their receiving the fullness of the promised Holy Spirit.

In 2 Corinthians where Paul is extolling the glory of new covenant ministry he alludes to Genesis 1:3 to explain what takes place in conversion. He says, “For God who said, ‘Let light shine out of darkness,’ has shone in our hearts to give the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ” (4:6). This is another hint that this is about new creation which becomes all the clearer when we get to 2 Corinthians 5:17 which says, “Therefore if anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation. The old has passed away; behold, the new has come.” (compare Galatians 6:15). This new creation life in the fading-but-not-yet-gone fallen world is described in verse 15 as no longer living for self, but for the one who died for our sake and was raised from the dead. By faith we enter into what has been called the “already-but-not-yet” reality of the kingdom of God, the new creation, and the new Jerusalem, meaning it started with the first advent of Jesus, but it’s fullness is yet to be realized at the second advent of Christ. Salvation is about becoming a new creation in Christ who will be fully prepared for the New Creation wherein there is only righteousness and no more sin, wherein there are only saints and no sinners.

In the meantime in the in-between-time, however, we are called and equipped by the word of God and the Spirit of God to become channels through which the ongoing work of new creation continues. In John, before Jesus breaths on the disciples, he commissions them saying, “As the Father has sent me, even so I am sending you” (20:21). He commissions them to proclaim forgiveness of sins and undoubtedly the new birth that goes along with it to bring others into the kingdom of God. The Gospel of Matthew puts it this way: ‘Go therefore and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, teaching them to observe all that I have commanded you. And behold, I am with you always, to the end of the age” (28:19-20). Dare I say, in other words, “Be fruitful and multiply and fill the earth” (Genesis 1:28). What else would we expect from the one who “creates in himself one new man” out of formerly separated Jews and Gentiles (Ephesians 2:11-22) to be restored into “the new self, created after the likeness of God in true righteousness and holiness” (Ephesians 4:24).

And, of course, the new human race began with the God-man, whom Saint Paul, in the midst of his teaching on the resurrection of the body, calls the last Adam (hint, hint). The first Adam, he says, referring to Genesis 2:7, “became a living soul”; the last, Jesus, he says, became a “life-giving spirit” (1 Corinthians 15:45). But, make no mistake, the later no more means that Jesus after the resurrection was just a spirit without a physical body than the former means the first Adam was just a soul (or that you or I now for that matter) without a physical body. In resurrection the essence of human life is no longer the natural and mortal soul of corruptible man infected with the disease of sin passed on to all from the first Adam; rather resurrected bodies will be sustained and maintained forever by the eternal Spirit of the Living God, which is passed on by the last Adam, the God-man, Jesus Christ, to all who believe and thus are saved (see also Roman 5).

To be saved is to be delivered “from the present evil age” as Paul says in Galatians 1:4, to be “delivered … from the domain of darkness and transferred … to the kingdom of [God’s] beloved Son” as he says in Colossians 1:13-14. Peter describes it as “having escaped from the corruption that is in the world because of sinful desire” (2 Peter 1:4), which John describes as having “passed from death to life” (1 John 3:14; also Jesus’ statement in John 5:24). But we are not saved and ushered into the kingdom for our own sake only, but also for the sake of others, so that God may use us to call others “out of the darkness into his marvelous light” (1 Peter 2:9). But we can’t call others out of the darkness unless we ourselves are children of the light who are walking in the light (see Ephesians 5 :8-14; 1 John 1:7), else we are just blind and deceived leaders of the blind and deceived both headed for the eternal pit.

Nonetheless, as part of the New Creation inaugurated by the resurrection of Jesus we are to live accordingly, no longer as citizens of the world according to the spirit of this age, but as citizens of heaven according to the Spirit of God (see Romans 8), and as ambassadors (see 2 Corinthians 5 again) of our heavenly home in the fallen world, which should now be foreign to us and we foreign to it.

We enter into the New Creation the same way Christ did, by dying and being raised with him. Easter Butterflies on Cross

“Do you not know that all of us who have been baptized into Christ Jesus were baptized into his death? We were buried therefore with him by baptism into death, in order that, just as Christ was raised from the dead by the glory of the Father, we too might walk in newness of life.

For if we have been united with him in a death like his, we shall certainly be united with him in a resurrection like his. We know that our old self was crucified with him in order that the body of sin might be brought to nothing, so that we would no longer be enslaved to sin. For one who has died has been set free from sin. Now if we have died with Christ, we believe that we will also live with him. We know that Christ, being raised from the dead, will never die again; death no longer has dominion over him. For the death he died he died to sin, once for all, but the life he lives he lives to God. So you also must consider yourselves dead to sin and alive to God in Christ Jesus.”

Romans 6:3-11

This sets the pattern for entrance into and life under the new covenant and the new creation, which is its ultimate goal. The call of Christ is a call to die to sin and a sinful world, so that we may truly begin to live and walk in newness of life. The pattern of Christian life in the world before Christ returns or calls us home to be with him in heaven is to continue the process of putting off the old and putting on the new until the “body of sin is brought to nothing.” We do this by the power of the Spirit (see Romans 8:13) in hope and joyful anticipation of the resurrection of our bodies when the entire creation itself will be set free and reborn. It is only within this framework that we can begin to make sense of Christian vocation, including morality and ethics.

For I consider that the sufferings of this present time are not worth comparing with the glory that is to be revealed to us. For the creation waits with eager longing for the revealing of the sons of God. For the creation was subjected to futility, not willingly, but because of him who subjected it, in hope that the creation itself will be set free from its bondage to corruption and obtain the freedom of the glory of the children of God. For we know that the whole creation has been groaning together in the pains of childbirth until now. And not only the creation, but we ourselves, who have the firstfruits of the Spirit, groan inwardly as we wait eagerly for adoption as sons, the redemption of our bodies. For in this hope we were saved. Now hope that is seen is not hope. For who hopes for what he sees? But if we hope for what we do not see, we wait for it with patience.” 

Romans 8:18-25

 

 

The Truth Buried, But Not for Long

 

Late last summer, while working in the office of the church, I got a call from someone who claimed to have some good news. He said it was just a “courtesy call” to inform me that our phone rates were being switched to a much lower rate than we were currently paying. By all impressions trying to be made, I thought I was talking with someone from our longtime current provider.The representative continued that there was nothing that I needed to do to get the lower rate other than answer a few questions.

Our existing provider had called about certain changes before, so at first I wasn’t too suspicious, although I have learned that even with them you need to be a little. Nonetheless, as the conversation progressed I did become much more leery. Finally, I asked, “Are you with AT&T?”

He said no, but he was with a company that handled service in some way for AT&T. It was actually a different telecommunications company, but even by the time I was to answer those few simple questions that he told me about I still hadn’t been given a straight answer on that. The first gentleman I talked with said that someone else would call me immediately after our conversation ended to ask the questions and get my confirmation to receive the great rate he promised.

It was during that conversation, although after I answered those questions, that I asked if our bill was still going to come from AT&T. At best I was obviously confused, but I’m pretty sure that I had been intentionally misled. At any rate, the woman I was now talking with confirmed that the bill would no longer come from AT&T because our phone service would be switched to a different provider altogether. The best I recall, she then asked if I was authorized for our “company” to be able to make this decision. I told her that I probably really needed to at least run it by our finance committee. I asked her to hold while I called our church treasurer on my cell phone.

After talking with our treasurer she and I decided that we shouldn’t switch without at least getting a little more information and conferring with our finance committee. While we were talking she did a quick google search of the company in question and immediately found complaints about them being … misleading.

When I got back to the call on the phone on my desk, I told the woman that we didn’t want to switch until we conferred further with our finance committee. At this point she transferred me to someone else, another representative, with whom I shared those same thoughts, and also concerns about the misleading nature of the initial call. She apologized for the “confusion” and assured me that everything would be canceled and she gave me her name and number to call if we actually did decide to switch.

A few days later I received an email from that company congratulating us on switching our church’s phone service to their company. I called them and told them that I was assured that our service would not be switched.  The representative heard my concerns, and again assured me that it would be handled and nothing would be switched. I also called AT&T to make sure they knew about the situation and that we didn’t want them to allow this other company to switch us from them. The AT&T rep saw no problems on her end, but they can only go by what shows up on the screen in front of them.

A few weeks later we received a bill from the other company for a couple weeks of service charges and about the same time a cancellation notice from AT&T.

After another call and receiving more false assurances, by another representative, who admitted to my wife that some of their sales reps will say anything to get people to switch, we received another bill. I called them again and afterwards called AT&T to get the service switched back, which they did, but not without the other company hitting us with a $1700.00 early termination fee.

After going round and round and explaining the whole situation to their company representatives seemingly to no avail, I filed a complaint with the NC utilities commission. While waiting to hear back from that I finally received a message from another company rep who said they would waive $1500.00 of the $1700.00 fee. I called back again and spoke to someone else and explained the situation. She agreed to send me an email stating the above offer to reduce the penalty, but she also gave me another number to call to see if I could get someone to agree to a further reduction.

A few days later I called and spoke to someone else who eventually agreed to waive the penalty altogether, but not before she tried to intimidate me with the recording of me answering those “simple” questions on day 1 of this whole fiasco. As I listened to the recording of the woman asking questions and me answering it seemed pretty obvious that the recording was doctored. All you heard from me was “yeah, yeah, yeah, right”, even when the woman gave me the wrong address for our church and asked if that was correct. I know I didn’t say “yeah” to that, but corrected her and gave her the right address, which they obviously got “somehow” because the bill ended up at the right place. When I pointed out that “interesting” fact to the person who played the recording to intimidate me and reminded her that it was really what I was assured of after that recorded conversation by another of their representatives that was really at issue, and informed her that I had filed a complaint with the state, she began to stammer a bit, put me on hold, and supposedly got approval from her manager to waive the entirety of the penalty. She also agreed she would send me an email stating that. She didn’t!

Eventually, I received another statement that still had a bill for the services rendered and a $200.00 penalty, and shortly after that I received an email from the state saying that they concurred with that statement based on the recording they were given.

I was misled and given partial truths and false assurances from the beginning; and, conveniently, the company only had record of information that supported them. But not only did they distort the truth, they tried to suppress it and silence me through subtle intimidation. They were also relentless with the ruse hoping I would just give up and accept the new service, I suppose.

Sin and evil, wickedness and unrighteousness, on a smaller scale or a much larger societal scale, requires distortion and suppression of the truth to thrive (see Romans 1, especially v.18). In other words, wickedness thrives only under the cover of darkness. Moreover, deceit and the self-justification that goes along with it also requires a stubborn relentlessness to not give up on the lies. Societal evils around the world and throughout history that have been entrenched in cultures, even codified into law, have required relentless distortion and ferocious suppression of the truth.

Although so much more could be said, the basic reason human beings lie and suppress the truth is because we want what we want more than what God wants, whether it be driven by greed, sexual lust, self-gratification, the pride of self-justificationJerusalem tomb, or mere comfort and convenience. In sin we seek to bury the truth.

On this holy Saturday, on the heels of Good Friday, we are reminded that the Truth was buried in the darkness of a stone cold tomb in Jerusalem some 2000 plus years ago; but He wasn’t buried for long. It appeared that the darkness had overcome the Light, but it only appeared that way.

“And this is the judgment: the light has come into the world, and people loved darkness rather than the light because their works were evil.” (John 3:19 ESV)

“The light shines in the darkness, and the darkness has not overcome it” (John 1:5)

 

Starving Corrupt Cravings

Right from the beginning the Bible tells us that the problem with humanity is sin, rebellion against the purposes and designs of our Creator. Sin not only refers to trespassing the commandments of God, going beyond the boundaries that God has set in place, it also refers to the spiritual force that inspires and compels us to rebel. Sin in the later sense works through our desires.commandments as gaurdrial

“So when the woman saw that the tree was good for food, and that it was a delight to the eyes, and that the tree was to be desired to make one wise, she took of its fruit and ate, and she also gave some to her husband who was with her, and he ate.” Genesis 3:6 ESV

Our human ancestors here succumbed to the temptations that the enemy of humanity still employs through the enticements of our fallen world, “the desires of the flesh and the desires of the eyes and pride of life” (1 John 2:16). At the root of humanity’s problem, which according to the Bible throws the whole of creation into disharmony (i.e. the curse pronounced by God later in Genesis 3; also see Romans 8:18-30), is desires gone wild.

Our desires are not inherently bad, and sinful desires aren’t completely separate from our God-given good desires. Sin and evil do not have an existence of their own; they are only distorted and twisted forms of good. Sinful desires are good desires gone wild, twisted to ends for which they were not intended. Desires gone wild exceed and redirect the God-given intended purpose to ungodly goals, which may seem right because it feels right, but the end thereof is enslavement to ungodly desire itself, which leads to death.

The devil is a liar and sin is deceitful; although the allure is apparent freedom the result is bondage. When we give in to sin, we become its slave (see John 8:31-47 & Romans 6-7). The apostle Peter, who describes Christians as those who have “escaped from the corruption that is in the world because of sinful desire” (2 Peter 1:4), also warns about false prophets and teachers who promise freedom while they themselves are actually “slaves of corruption” (2 Peter 2:19). In the last part of that same verse, Peter explains, “For whatever overcomes a person, to that he is enslaved.”

Sin desires to master us and it does so through distorted desires, corrupt cravings that lead to our own hurt and the detriment of society. In Genesis 4, as sin continues to work to bring further degradation to God’s good creation, Cain, one of Adam and Eve’s sons, is confronted by God before his jealous rage boiled over into the murder of his brother, Abel. God warns Cain that “sin is crouching at the door” and “its desire is for you, but you must rule over it” (Genesis 4:7). The implication is clear; if we don’t rule over, or master, sin, then sin will master us.

Sin not only masters individuals, it also masters families, and communities, societies, and even churches. Sin also seems to produce in people something akin to “Stockholm syndrome,” where captives tend to become sympathetic to the point of defending and even identifying with their captors. Desires gone wild run amok and wreak havoc, but sometimes their victims become their biggest supporters. Today entire churches and denominations have not only been mastered by sin, in part through seeking after the glory that comes from a fallen and fading world rather than the glory that comes from God (John 5;44, 12:43, & 1 John 2:15-17), they also sympathize with sin, defend it, and even encourage sinners to identity with it. Like the false prophets in Jeremiah’s day “they say continually to those who despise the word of the Lord, ‘It shall be well with you’: and to everyone who stubbornly follows his own heart, they say, ‘No disaster shall come upon you.'” In the words of Peter, “They promise them freedom (i.e. to sin and from the consequences of sin), but they themselves are slaves of corruption” (2 Peter 2:19).

Sin working through corrupt cravings, desires gone wild mastered the human race. By God’s grace it can be overcome, but not without a fight. The decisive battle that won the war was won on the cross of Christ Jesus our Lord and when God raised him from the dead. By the grace of God in Christ and through the power of the Holy Spirit we can defeat sin and overcome sinful desires, but not with taking up our own cross and not without self-denial.

In order to master our desires, we must mortify, put to death those evil desires within us that seem to have taken on a life of their own. We must put off the old self by putting it down. In order to really live, allowing our God-given desires to flourish toward the goals for which they were intended, ultimately the glory of God, we must put to death those things in us which lead us to befriend the world and to be hostile to God and His word. The Holy Spirit enables us to do this (see Roman 8:1-17, especially verse 13), to put down evil desires and deeds, and the Holy Spirit also enables us to put on those virtues that lead to abundant life and our flourishing.

 

Put to death therefore what is earthly in you: sexual immorality, impurity, passion, evil desire, and covetousness, which is idolatry. On account of these the wrath of God is coming. In these you too once walked, when you were living in them. But now you must put them all away: anger, wrath, malice, slander, and obscene talk from your mouth. Do not lie to one another, seeing that you have put off the old self with its practices and have put on the new self, which is being renewed in knowledge after the image of its creator. Here there is not Greek and Jew, circumcised and uncircumcised, barbarian, Scythian, slave, free; but Christ is all, and in all.

Put on then, as God’s chosen ones, holy and beloved, compassionate hearts, kindness, humility, meekness, and patience, bearing with one another and, if one has a complaint against another, forgiving each other; as the Lord has forgiven you, so you also must forgive. And above all these put on love, which binds everything together in perfect harmony. And let the peace of Christ rule in your hearts, to which indeed you were called in one body. And be thankful. Let the word of Christ dwell in you richly, teaching and admonishing one another in all wisdom, singing psalms and hymns and spiritual songs, with thankfulness in your hearts to God. And whatever you do, in word or deed, do everything in the name of the Lord Jesus, giving thanks to God the Father through him.  (Colossians 3:5-17; see also Ephesian 4:17-5:21)

Putting to death those things that lead to death, allows the real us, who we were created to be, to flourish with the abundant and eternal life for which we were intended. And one good way to kill our sinful desires is to starve them.

Through worship and prayer and careful listening to the word of God proclaimed and prayerful study of it, God will reveal to us what in us really needs to die so we can really live. In many cases it will come down to whether we will trust our own hearts (see Jeremiah 17:9 and compare to Jeremiah 23:17 quoted above) or God’s word. If we will submit ourselves to and trust God’s word, we will confess our sin, and be in a position to honestly begin to deal with it by dealing it death. Once we have identified that which needs to die within us, we can take up our cross, deny ourselves and kill it.

One of the ways to kill that which is killing us is through fasting. One sure way to allow sin to master us is to feed it; one sure way to master it, is to starve it. Fasting helps us to subdue desires run amok by starving the cravings that exceed the natural desires that bring blessing. The natural desire for food where we eat to live can easily turn into the corrupt craving to live to eat. The natural desire for sex geared toward procreation and covenant intimacy can mutate into the mere desire for self-gratification and pleasure for its own sake outside of the design and purposes of God. The natural desire for enjoyment  and recreation can lead to obsessions that distract us from the One and the ones that matter the most, in modern times even when the ones that matter the most are in the same room. The natural desire to work to meet our needs and those of our families may gravitate toward greed and the pride in riches that goes along with it. Instead of loving God and people as ends in themselves we easily end up using the idea of God and using people for lesser ends that we idolatrously magnify way beyond their own actual intrinsic worth.

As a special season of prayer and fasting, Lent, has proven to be incredibly helpful in my own life, and fasting in general has brought tremendous blessing.

Several years ago now, although I had been delivered by the grace and power of God from other major obsessions and addictions, I still found myself floundering rather than flourishing when it came to my physical health. Years and years of poor eating habits and food addictions had finally caught up with me as I was probably close to a stroke or a heart attack. I was way overweight and my blood pressure and other vitals were extremely high. I knew I needed to do something quick.

At first I changed the types of foods I was eating, which did help. In a pretty short period of time I lost about 20 pounds, but continued to struggle, and my vitals continued to suffer. During Lent that year I committed to cut out sugar and sweets altogether, except for once a week. Additionally, through the inspiration of a program called “Naturally Slim” offered through a clergy health initiative funded by the Duke Endowment called “Spirited Life,” I committed to not snack between meals, and only eat when I was actually hungry. It was definitely an exercise in self-denial and a serious wrestling match with powerful cravings that were physically killing me ensued.

By the end of Lent I hadn’t lost the battle with my cravings, but I did lose another 25 pounds. And thankfully all of my vitals, blood pressure, triglycerides, and cholesterol, were back in the normal range. That victory was sweeter than any sweet treat I had ever had. But the battle did not end.

The corrupt cravings were only set back for a season; they have repeatedly attempted a comeback. Whenever I have experienced setbacks, giving in to those corrupt cravings for too many days in a row, I have found general fasting, going without food altogether for a day or two at a time to be incredibly helpful to get me back on track. As a matter of fact, fasting from food, has been helpful to overcome sinful desires in general, as I believe there is a connection between all sinful desire that manifests itself in various ways. Nevertheless, fasting and self-denial bring tremendous blessing as paradoxical as it may seem.

God calls his people to self-denial, not to deny us joy, but to allow us to experience the fullness of joy that can only come from Him. Sin and sinful desires are nothing to coddle and get comfortable with. Desires that are out of harmony with the will of God must not be coddled; they must be killed. And one good way to put corrupt cravings to death is to starve them.

There’s an old Cherokee proverb that says there are two wolves struggling inside of every person, one good and one evil. The Bible says within every believer, there is a struggle between an old man and a new man, the former of the world that is passing away with its corrupt desires, the later of the new world, the kingdom of God, where only God’s will is done. Which one wins? It depends on which one we feed, and which one we starve.

“So then, brothers,we are debtors, not to the flesh, to live according to the flesh. For if you live according to the flesh you will die, but if by the Spirit you put to death the deeds of the body, you will live.” (Romans 8:12-13)