Thursday, November 9, 2006

John 3:5- What does it mean to be born of water and Spirit?

I was talking with my good friend Nate who raised a question concerning the birth of water and Spirit spoken of in John 3:5. I believe that the birth of water and Spirit that Jesus spoke of is Christian baptism. The Greek construction of this passage lends support to this belief.

I will give the construction of the Greek text of John 3:5 and then translate it.

"απεκριθη Ιησους, Αμην αμην λεγω σοι, εαν μη τις γεννηθη εξ υδατος και πνευματος, ου δυναται εισελθειν εις την βασιλειαν του θεου."

"Jesus answered, 'I certainly tell you, if one should not be born of water and the Spirit, he is not able to enter into the kingdom of God.' "

The significance of the Greek construction is that the preposition "ek," which means out of, is not stated twice in the sentence; both before "water" and then also before "spirit." Instead, "ek" is used only once and then followed by both "water and spirit." To illustrate this distinction think of it like this: The passage does NOT read "...be born out of water and out of the Spirit" but it DOES read, "...be born out of water and the Spirit." When the preposition in Greek is followed by two objects it "may indicate that the author considered both objects as an undivided unit" (Young 87). David Black puts it this way, "Because a preposition tends to be repeated before each noun in a serious of nouns...sometimes the non-use of a second or third preposition ...may be significant, indicating that the writer regarded the terms in one list as belonging together in concept or reality." Black actually lists John 3:5 as an example and says that, " 'water and Spirit' together form a single means of regeneration" (87).

To sum it up, the birth talked about in John 3:5 is one birth that is composed of two elements: water and Spirit. Other passages in the New Testament shed light on a spiritual birth that is composed of both water and the Spirit. Acts 2:38 describes an event in which water and the Holy Spirit are combined in a single act to bring life, "Repent and be baptized, every one of you, in the name of Jesus Christ for the forgiveness of your sins. And you will receive the gift of the Holy Spirit." Baptism is immersion, if you disagree refer to the word study I wrote on baptism. Titus 3:5 says, "He saved us through the washing of rebirth and renewal by the Holy Spirit." The word for washing in this passage is "loutros" (λουτρος) which referred to a washing of the entire body.

I hope this is helpful and free of confusion but if it is confusing let me know and I will try my best to clear things up.
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Bibliography

Black, David Alan. It's Still Greek to Me. Grand Rapids: Baker Books, 1998.

Young, Richard A. Intermediate New Testament Greek. Nashville: Broadman & Holman Publishers, 1994.

Monday, October 16, 2006

Can a Christian in Good Conscience Be Wealthy?

I'm sorry that I haven't updated my blog in a very long time but I have finally gotten to it. I wrote this paper for my Timothy and Titus class and my professor was specifically asking the question, "Can a minister in good conscience be weatlhy?" That is the focus of the paper but I want every Christian to understand that there is no distincion between "clergy" and "laity." All Christians are ministers. Yes there are leaders in the church but all Christians are called to holiness and the standard of holiness doesn't change because it is essentially God's unchanging nature. "But just as he who called you is holy, so be holy in all you do; for it is written: "Be holy, because I am holy." (1 Peter 1:15-16). Therefore what is written in this paper applies to all Christians.

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“That disgusts me!” shouted my oldest sister Amelia as she told me about a preacher of a mega church who owned a brand new red Corvette and lived in a lavish multimillion dollar mansion. Why was that so repulsive to her? Is there a limit on what a minister can and cannot have? The root of all this is the question, “Can a minister in good conscience be wealthy?” Another question results from the first, “Would wealth likely help or hurt a person’s ministry?” The best place to look in order to find the answers to these questions is in the Scriptures; especially the Pastoral Epistles which Paul wrote to the young ministers Timothy and Titus.

It is important to establish whether or not church leaders should even receive pay in the first place. Paul clearly explains that Elders were to be paid. 1 Timothy 5:17 says that Elders who lead the church well are worthy of double honor. The word “honor” originally meant “to set a price on” indicating that honoring somebody involved pay (BDAG). It also meant showing respect for someone. In this context it is clear though that Paul specifically has in mind paying Elders, for he quotes Scripture to back up his point. He refers to the Old Covenant command that people weren’t to muzzle their ox while it was in the process of threshing grain; meaning it was to receive “pay” for its work. Jesus also explicitly says that a worker is worthy of his wage. The same is true for worker of the church; they are to receive pay for their labor.

The question now becomes, “Is there a limit as to how much the minister should be paid?” Scripture does not answer this question, but it does give qualifications on what kind of a person should be in church leadership to receive that pay. Elders and Deacons are to be men that do not love money or pursue dishonest gain (1 Tim. 3:3; Tit. 1:7). In this passage is does not say that they are to be without money, but to be without the love of money (Getz 268). This is in stark contrast to the false teachers who think that godliness is a means to financial gain. Instead of being greedy for money true ministers are to be content with life’s basic necessities as adequate pay for doing their work (1 Tim. 6:8). Paul tells Titus that the very motivation of the false teachers for their teaching is to gain financially (Tit. 1:11). The heart of a godly leader does not desire to be a leader in the church for the purpose of gaining financially but to take care of God’s flock.

Can a minister in good conscience be wealthy? Yes and no. Scripture doesn’t limit how much pay a person receives but it directs his heart as to how he is to use it! The only way a wealthy minister can have a clear conscience is if he is using his wealth the way God desires him to. There are clear examples of this in Timothy and Titus. Believers in Jesus Christ are to take care of their relatives financially when they are in need; God is pleased when his people learn to put their religion into practice and care for their own family that is in need (1 Timothy 5:4). “Anyone who does not provide for their relatives, and especially for their own household, has denied the faith and is worse than an unbeliever!” (1 Tim. 5:8). Thus if you are a wealthy minister making far more than you need and you turn a deaf ear to the genuine needs of others then you cannot have a clear conscience. Paul instructed Titus, “Our people must learn to devote themselves to doing what is good, in order to provide for urgent needs and not live unproductive lives” (Tit. 3:14). The rich of this world who are disciples of Jesus are not to put their hope in wealth but they are “to be rich in good deeds, and to be generous and willing to share” (1 Tim. 6:18). “God’s people may at times be enormously wealthy, but a major purpose of God granting them wealth is to share it with the needy” (Blomberg 59).

A minister who rightfully uses his wealth can have a perfectly clear conscience. Craig Blomberg clarifies the rightful uses of wealth magnificently. “The key to evaluating any individual, church, or nation in terms of its use of material possessions is how well it takes care of the poor and powerless in its midst” (84). He sets forth the principle that “People always take priority over prosperity.” God is the one who entrusts wealth to people and he expects his people to be good stewards of his resources. The “golden mean” with regard to our attitude toward wealth is seen in Proverbs 30:8, “…give me neither poverty nor riches, but give me only my daily bread.” At the heart of this passage is that God wants his people to be content, not greedy for worldly wealth. If God does bless someone with an amazing amount of material prosperity it only means that there is increased responsibility to wisely use that privilege (84). Under the Old Covenant wealth was never the goal but it was the means to an end which was sharing with the needy (84). He states forthrightly that it cannot be said that the rich cannot be disciples of Jesus (145). The principle of giving under the New Covenant is not simply ten percent! Paul urged the Corinthians to excel in the grace of giving for the destitute believers in Jerusalem. Paul told them to give according to their means for the goal of equality. “…the gift is acceptable according to what one has, not according to what one does not have” (2 Cor. 8:7, 12). Therefore it is up to the minister to decide in his own heart how he will use the wealth that God has blessed him with, either in a godly way or in an ungodly way.

Would wealth likely help or hurt a person’s ministry? The answer to this question ties directly in to how the minister will use his wealth. There are numerous bad examples that have both local and national impact. The wealthy pastor my sister described is hurting his ministry by his selfish use of his wealth. Benny Hin has hurt his ministry by his use of wealth. The infamous televangelists have turned many people away from the Gospel by begging people to give to the cause of Christ as they sit in golden chairs. There are also excellent and admirable examples of Christian leaders who have used their wealth to greatly help their ministry. It is hard to discredit the motives of a man who makes hundreds of thousands of dollars a year and splits his income: giving some to his church, some to Indians on a reservation and receiving for himself only what was necessary to live on; such was the integrity of Rich Mullins.

Wealth will help the ministry of a minister who is a person of integrity. There are some examples of this in the New Testament. When the 12 apostles were starting the church in Jerusalem they chose 7 other men to serve the widows who were being neglected so that they could devote themselves fully to the ministry of the word and prayer (Acts 6). It is right to assume that the basic necessities of the Apostles were being taken care of. Paul explicitly explains that the apostles had the right to receive food and drink (basic necessities) from those they minister to (1 Cor. 9:4). This helped their ministry because they didn’t have to work outside of the church to support themselves which meant that they had more time to edify the body of Christ. Paul’s ministry was made possible when he was under house arrest in Rome by the financial gift that the Philippian church had given him (Phil 4:15). Wealth allows the minister to give himself fully to the work God has called him to.

Wealth also helps a minister’s ministry because when it is used properly it brings pleasure and praise to God, even from those who do not obey the Gospel! The opposite is true of a person who does not use his wealth properly; it displeases God and brings shame to the name of Jesus. A wealthy minister is expected to take care of his parents when they are in need. Paul says that this brings pleasure to God (1 Tim 5:4). Paul commands the rich to be rich in good deeds. What he means is that the rich need to use their wealth in a positive way, “…be generous and willing to share” (1 Tim. 6:18). Jesus taught his disciples to let their light shine before others, so that they may see their good deeds and praise their Father in Heaven (Matt. 5:16)! God’s will for his people is that they take care of each other in tangible ways, this includes providing financially for those who don’t have their basic needs met (James 2:14-16). Jesus said that all people will know who his disciples are by their love for each other (John 13:34). One way that the world can see the tangible love of Christians for each other is in the area of financial care! When people literally see our good deeds then they will praise God! This is not only the right thing but it is actually evangelistic! Wealth properly used can draw people to Christ. A minister can model integrity for others and then they will know that there is something real about being a Christian.

In summation, the amount of wealth a minister has does not matter. What does matter is his stewardship and honesty in the sight of God with it. If my sister had seen a minister who properly modeled the Gospel in his entire life, specifically his financial life, she could very well have said, “What an awesome man of God he is!” instead of “That disgust me!”

Bibliography:

Bauer, Walter, William F. Arndt, F. Wilbur Gingrich, and Frederick William Danker, Eds. A
Greek-English Lexicon of the New Testament and other Early Christian Literature.
Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 2000.

Blomberg, Craig L. Neither Poverty Nor Riches: A Biblical Theology of Material Possessions.
Grand Rapids: William B. Eerdman’s Publishing Company, 1999.

Blomberg, Craig L. Heart, Soul, and Money. Joplin: College Press Publishing Company, 2000.

Getz, Gene. Rich in Every Way: Everything Gods says about money and possessions. West
Monroe: Howard Publishing Co., 2004.

Hurley, Virgil. Avoiding the Judas Complex. San Diego: Black Forest Press, 2001.

Friday, June 23, 2006

Jesus Among Other Gods

I just finished the book Jesus Among Other Gods by Ravi Zacharias. This book is well written but more importantly it answers hard questions. I remember thinking earlier in my life that if there are so many people in the world and there are so many religions in the world how could I possibly ever discover the one that is true? This book has given me peace of mind because the author grew up in India where there are as many "gods" as there are things in the world. He explains how Jesus is unique among the other religions and religious leaders and gives convincing proof for why he alone is the true God. I will share just a few things that make Jesus so amazingly unique:

1) No other person in all of history has ever seriously claimed to have no beginning and to have come from heaven.

2)No other person in all of history has ever claimed to be without sin or error. Jesus did! He urged his false accusers to just bring up one instance in which he was guilty of wrongdoing and they couldn't!

3)Jesus' message is unique because what he taught pointed to himself! Unlike Buddha, Mohammed, and Krishna who pointed their followers to something that was more powerful than themselves. Jesus was identical to his message! Who else ever said, "I am the resurrection and the life" "I am the true bread that came down out of heaven" "I and my Father are one" "I am the way, the truth, and the life" ?

Friday, May 12, 2006

This is a philosophical mind bend!

I have been reading the excellent book "Jesus Among Other Gods" by Ravi Zacharias and I came across an amazing thought. This blog won't be long but take to heart this quote by C.S. Lewis. Wrestle with it and examine your life and see if this is true:

"Heaven understands hell and hell does not understand heaven... To project ourselves into a wicked character, we have only to stop doing something and something we are already tired of doing; to project ourselves into a good one [i.e. good character] we have to do what we cannot and become what we are not."

That is a profound thought and it also reveals why the world so desperately needs Jesus the King.

Friday, May 5, 2006

Greek Word Study- "patience" μακροθυμια (pronounced mah-krah-thoo-me-ah)



Patience. That English word evokes a feeling, not an image. Patience is an important word because it is one of the nine fruits that the Spirit produces in the Christian’s life (Gal. 5) and it is also the first characteristic of love as Paul lists it in 1 Corinthians 13:4, “Love is patient…” The goal of this paper is to clearly define the meaning of the Greek word makrothumia, “patience,” so that God’s people can have a clearer understanding of the good qualities he is developing in us as we remain in him.

makrothumia is a compound of two Greek words: makros “long (in the sense of both Space and Time); large” (Liddell and Scott 1075) and thumos “spirit; soul; feeling and thought (especially of strong feeling and passion)” (810). Further, thumos is derived from the word thuo which means, “to rage; to seethe” (813). When makros was used in a spatial sense it described the length of ships, a long distance torch race, and the length of a man. makros was used to describe a shout (i.e. a long shout); this shout was not long in duration but it was long in the sense of being able to reach a long distance, thus it was a loud shout (1075). When makros was used in a temporal sense it refers to a long time, “a long cherished wish,” long discourses, and someone taking too long (1075).

Thumos is a Greek word that bursts with different meanings but the meaning that is understood when it is compounded with makros to form makrothumia is “anger” (810). In the first century and onward the meaning of thumos is limited to an “intense expression of the inner self (expressed as strong desire, or passion)” and more often “a state of intense displeasure; anger, wrath, rage” (Bauer 461). When the two words are compounded into the word makrothumia the meaning then is “taking a long time to become angry or be fill with rage.” The Greek word for patience is intrinsically different from the English word because the Greek word practically defines itself, though the meaning is still determined by context. The adjective form makrothumos means, “being self-controlled in the face of provocation; patient, forbearing” (613).

The word makrothumia appears late in the Greek world, but it “is extremely rare” (Brown and Falkenroth 768). Menander used the word to describe the situation of mortals as compared to the situation of the gods. “Being a human never with freedom from grief, ask of the gods, rather to have forbearance.” The word used in this instance carries the idea of “forced acceptance” (Horst 375) and it is not a quality exercised toward humans. In essence Menander is saying, “To be human is to have grief, therefore ask the gods for endurance to deal with life.” Aretaeus used the word makrothumie to describe the patience and endurance of a physician who treated a “severe chronic illness” with little to no hope of actually curing the person (375). A master calls his stubborn donkey “a patient son of sluggishness” (375). In this instance the master is commenting on the speed of his donkey and not on the donkey’s disposition to remain calm and not become angry. Of these three uses of makrothumia only Aretaeus’s use is helpful in determining the meaning of makrothumia in the New Testament.

In the Septuagint makrothumia is used five times, but only two of the uses correspond to equivalent Hebrew words (Gilbrant 105). Proverbs 25:15 says, “In forbearance is success for kings, and a soft tongue shatters bones” (LXX). In this context the meaning of makrothumia could be either endurance or forbearance. If the meaning were taken as endurance then a king’s success would come from his persistence in his duties as king and if the meaning were taken as forbearance then his success would come from being a person who is not easily angered by others. makrothumia is used in Jeremiah 15:15. In this context God declares that he will give the wealth of Israel away and that he will punish them for their sins. Jeremiah appeals to God that he be long-suffering with him and that he not take him away (TNIV). The LXX wording is different because Jeremiah requests that God not be long-suffering with Jeremiah’s persecutors. Either way this usage of makrothumia has the idea of being forbearing towards a person (i.e. not being filled with rage quickly).

Makrothumia is used twelve times in the New Testament. There are basically two meanings that are derived from the uses of makrothumia in the New Testament. The first meaning is “patient endurance; perseverance.” This meaning is focused primarily on persevering through hardship. James 5:7-11 carries this sense of the word. In this passage James encourages Christians to be patient until the Lord’s coming. James illustrates how Christians are to be patient by comparing the Christian’s patient endurance to that of a farmer who waits for his land to produce crops. James also recalls how the prophets and Job patiently persevered through their suffering. Hebrew 6:10-12 reflects the same meaning of makrothumia. The author of Hebrews encourages his readers to be diligent and not become lazy but to, “imitate those who through faith and patience inherit what has been promised.” The focus here is on perseverance in the face of painful circumstances not on being slow to anger toward people.

The other meaning that is seen in the New Testament for makrothumia “being self-controlled in the face of provocation; forbearing” occurs more often. In Romans 2:1-4 Paul is rebuking self-righteous people that condemn “sinners” because those who condemn others are sinners themselves. Paul then asks them, “Or do you show contempt for the riches of his kindness, forbearance and patience (makrothumia), not realizing that God’s kindness is intended to lead you to repentance?” In this context God’s patience is his slowness to anger and his slowness to pour out his wrath on people. In 1 Timothy 1:16 Paul says, “I was shown mercy so that in me, the worst of sinners, Christ Jesus might display his immense patience as an example for those who would believe in him…” Jesus exercised his “immense patience” toward Paul who had killed and persecuted Christians before his conversion. The verb form of makrothumia is used in 1 Peter 3:9, “The Lord is not slow in keeping his promise, as some understand slowness. Instead he is patient with you, not wanting anyone to perish, but everyone to come to repentance.” It is clear in this passage that patience is being slow to anger even when you are wronged. God exercises his patience with sinners who are wronging him in hope that they will repent. Patience is “restrained wrath” (Brown and Falkenroth 769).

The word family of makrothumia is small and simple. The verb form is makrothumeo “to be patient” and the adverb is makrothumon “patiently” and makros “long, distant” (Robinson 85).

Greek words that are synonymous with makrothumia are hupomone and anoche. The distinction between makrothumia and hupomone is that makrothumia for the most part expresses patience with respect to persons and hupomone with respect to things (Trench 198). This is not always the case though (see New Testament uses). The distinction between makrothumia and anoche is that the patience of anoche is temporary and “transient.” anoche was the Classical Greek word for “truce; or suspension of arms.” anoche is the kind of patience that “after a certain lapse of time, and unless other conditions intervene, it will pass away” (199).

W. E. Vine sums up very well the meaning of makrothumia. “Longsuffering is that quality of self-restraint in the face of provocation which does not hastily retaliate or promptly punish; it is the opposite of anger, and is associated with mercy…Patience is the quality that does not surrender to circumstances or succumb under trial; it is the opposite of despondency and is associated with hope…” (Vine 12).

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Bibliography:

Bauer, Walter, William F. Arndt, F. Wilbur Gingrich, and Frederick William Danker, Eds. A
Greek-English Lexicon of the New Testament and other Early Christian Literature.
Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 2000.

Brown, Colin and U. Falkenroth. “makrothumia.” The New International Dictionary of New
Testament Theology. Ed. Colin Brown. Vol. 2. Grand Rapids: Zondervan Publishing
House, 1979. 1-1023. 3 vols.

Earle, Ralph. Word Meanings in the New Testament. Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1986.

Gilbrant, Thoralf. The Complete Biblical Library: The New Testament Greek-English
Dictionary: Lambda-Omicron. Vol. 14. Springfield: The Complete Biblical Library,
1986. 16 vols.

Horst, J. “makrothumia, makroyume;w, makro;yumov, makroyu;mwv.” The Theological Dictionary
of the New Testament. Eds. Gerhard Kittel and Gerhard Friedrich. Translator Geoffrey
W. Bromiley. Volume 4. Grand Rapids: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company,
1985. 1-1126. 10 vols.

Liddell, H.G., and R. Scott. Greek-English Lexicon. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1996.

Robinson, Thomas A. Mastering Greek Vocabulary. Peabody: Hendrickson Publishers, 1990.

The New Englishman’s Greek Concordance of the New Testament. Wilmington: Associated
Publishers & Authors, 1972.

Trench, Richard C. Synonyms of the New Testament. Grand Rapids: W. B. Eerdman’s
Publishing Company, 1973.

Verbrugge, Verlyn D. New International Dictionary of New Testament Theology: Abridged
Edition. Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 2000.

Vine, W. E. An Expository Dictionary of New Testament Words. Vol. 3 Old Tappan: Fleming
H. Revell Company, 1966.

Friday, April 28, 2006

A Readers Guide for the Book of Romans

For my Romans class we had to create a readers guide for the entire book. I don't even want to pretend to understand every detail of this book but I think the major concepts that Paul communicates in this letter can be easily understood. The principles of the Gospel and Christian living are found in this letter and it is an amazing book. I hope that this readers guide helps you see the big picture in the book of Romans.

Romans Reader's Guide:
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Thought Flow of the Book of Romans:

I. All of humanity stands justly condemned before God and all people are justified by faith in Jesus (Romans 1-4).

--->✠ Gods’ wrath remains on immoral and wicked people (1:18ff).
--->✠ God’s wrath remains on “moral” Gentiles and on Law keeping Jews (2:1ff).
--->✠ Jewish blood does not equal friendship with God (3:1-20).
--->✠ Righteousness and justification comes from Christ alone (3:21ff).
--->✠ Abraham: the supreme example of righteousness by faith (4).

II. Jesus and the Spirit solved the problems that the Torah could not solve: sin and death and making people holy (Romans 5-8).

--->✠ Jesus fixed the mess that Adam introduced into the world (5:12ff).
--->✠ The sinful life died with Christ in baptism, therefore don’t live in sin (6:1-14).
--->✠ Sin is no longer the master so stop submitting to him, submit to Christ the new master who gives eternal life (6:15ff).
--->✠ Christ has released us from the Law so that we can serve God in the Spirit (7:1-6).
--->✠ The problem with the Law is sin, not the Law itself (7:7ff).
--->✠ The new way of serving God is in walking by the Spirit (8:1-17).
--->✠ Christ’s love is permanent (8:31ff).

III. God has always been faithful to his promises throughout history and his plan has always been to create one people for himself made up of Jews and Gentiles, the Church. (Romans 9-11).

--->✠ God’s promise to forever be the God of Abraham’s descendents has not failed; it has been misunderstood (9:6-13).
--->✠ God has the right to choose whom he will show his mercy (i.e. Israel Old Covenant, Church New Covenant) (9:14-18).
--->✠ The Scriptures reveal that God’s plan was to form one people and they also reveal that this new people would be made righteous through faith (9:19ff).
--->✠ The Jews are not part of God’s people because they try to establish their righteousness through the Torah instead of through faith in Christ (10).
--->✠ God did not reject the Jews; on the contrary they rejected him (11:1-10)!
--->✠ The Jewish people can have fellowship with God when they repent and believe in Christ (11:11-24).
--->✠ All of this happened according to God’s sovereign plan (11:25ff).

IV. How to live as the people of God in this world; love with God’s kind of love. (Romans 12-15).

--->✠ Offer your body as a living sacrifice and be transformed (12:1-2).
--->✠ Be humble and use the gifts God has given you to build others up (12:3-8).
--->✠ The characteristics of sincere love (12:9-13).
--->✠ How love reacts to persecution and opposition (12:14ff).
--->✠ How love interacts with higher authorities (13:1-7).
--->✠ The essence of love (13:8-10).
--->✠ Christians must live in anticipation of the coming age (13:11-14).
--->✠ How strong and weak Christians should treat one another (14-15:13).

• Concluding Matters (Romans 15:14-16).

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Romans 1-4

Summary: Paul begins the letter to the Romans by introducing himself and his Gospel. The Gospel is the primary focus of the entire letter. Paul states, “I am not ashamed of the gospel, because it is the power of God that brings salvation to everyone who believes…For in the gospel the righteousness of God is revealed- a righteousness that is by faith from first to last…” (1:16-17). A legitimate question that one may ask at this point is, “What do I need to be saved from?” That question leads directly into the main focus of Romans 1-4. We need salvation because the wrath of God rightly remains on all people because of their sins and all people can be justified through faith in Christ alone.

Paul explains why God’s wrath remains on all people in the first 2 chapters. Paul says that immoral and wicked people are under God’s wrath because they know what is morally right but still choose to suppress the truth and practice evil (e.g. sexual immorality; homosexuality; etc) (1:18ff). Paul then explains that “moral” Gentiles stand justly condemned because when they pass judgment on people who do wicked things they are actually judging themselves because they have done the same things! Then Paul explains that the Jews who observe the Torah (the Mosaic Law) stand justly condemned because even though they have God’s specific commands they still break God’s commands! All of humanity stands condemned before God!

The only way that mankind can be made right with God is through faith in Christ. Christ removed the death sentence looming over our heads because of his perfect sacrifice. God’s wrath was fully satisfied when it was laid upon Jesus on the cross. We are justified through faith in Christ not by law keeping. Abraham is proof that God justifies on the basis of faith and not on the basis of keeping the Law.

Key Words: Wrath, Law, Faith, Righteousness, and Justification/Justice.

Application:
• Romans 1-4 explains why we so desperately needed Jesus. When you present the Gospel to others try to explain to them why they need it in the first place.
• In this section we see the helpless situation of fallen humanity. The good news is that God got his hands bloody to make things right again and it focuses on what God did to overcome evil. Examine your life. When you get angry about things that are messed up in the world focus on what you can do to change that problem and commit to change it.

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Romans 5-8

Summary: Paul’s main point in this section is that the Law was not capable of putting an end to sin and death and that it could not make people holy. Jesus and the Holy Spirit on the other hand did solve all those problems. Paul begins his logic in this section by assuring us Christians that our future is secure in Christ because he took it upon himself to put sin and death to an end before we even loved him (5:1-11)! The Law could not justify, it could only condemn. Then Paul explains how Jesus solved the problem of sin and death that Adam had introduced into the world. The Law was established during the time between Adam and Christ but it only increased sin it didn’t cure it (5:12ff). Death is a natural consequence of sin so when Christ did away with sin he also did away with death.

Now that sin and death has been taken care of in Christ one thing yet remains to be accomplished: making sinful people holy. Paul teaches that the weakness of the flesh combined with sin’s abuse of the Law held humanity captive to sin. The Law actually became a contributor to humanity’s slavery to sin; though not because it was sinful in and of itself. The problem with the Law is that it could only tell people what they must do but it did not provide the power to actually obey. Paul explains the agony of a person who desires to obey God but does not have the inner power to do so (7:7ff). This problem was fixed when our flesh was crucified with Christ and when we were raised with him (6:1-14). Christians are now slaves of God and no longer slaves to sin (6:15ff). Being a slave to God is the same thing as having a mind that is controlled by the Spirit (8:5-8). Now that we have the Holy Spirit it is possible for us to “put to death the misdeeds of the body” and live. Those who walk by the Spirit are pleasing to God and are not controlled by the flesh. The Spirit of God intercedes for us so that we might be conformed to the image of Christ.

Key Words: Spirit, Flesh, Sin, Slave.

Application:
• Sin is no longer an obligation but a desire! We don’t have to sin any more because we died to sin; we now sin because we choose to. Daily remind yourself that you are not bound to sin anymore.
• We need the Spirit’s help in order to overcome sin even though we are dead to it. We walk by the Spirit by setting our minds on the things of the Spirit. Choose to set your mind on the things of the Spirit.

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Romans 9-11
Summary: This section of Romans deals with the faithfulness and trustworthiness of God. Paul is standing in God’s defense and explaining that God has always been faithful to every promise he has ever made and that his plan has always been to create one new people for himself made up of Jews and Gentiles, the Church. Paul has to address a Jewish misunderstanding because he has just said that nothing will ever be able to separate us from the love of God that is in Christ Jesus (8:37ff). This statement is problematic to a Jew because he is left wondering, “If nothing can ever separate you from God then why has God just forgotten about Israel, his chosen people!”

God promised Abraham in Genesis 17:7 that he would forever be the God of Abraham and his descendents. Paul affirms that God’s word did not fail (i.e. his promise was not broken) but his promise has been misunderstood (9:6). Israel is whoever God wants “Israel” to be. Abraham had many children but his line was carried on by Isaac alone (9:7). Moreover, Isaac had twins, Jacob and Esau, but God only chose Jacob to carry on the line of Abraham. Paul argues that God has the right to choose whom he wants to show his mercy because nobody deserves it anyway. God does not owe national Israel salvation. They felt that they were entitled to salvation but when God chose to show his mercy through the Church instead of through Israel they got upset. Paul then shows his opponents from their own scriptures that God’s plan was to form one people for himself and that this new people would be made righteous through faith (9:19ff).

The only reason the Jews are no longer God’s people is because they choose to try and make themselves right with God through observing the Torah instead of through faith in Christ (10ff). The argument comes full circle on the Jews because it is not God who had rejected them it was they who had rejected God (11:1-10)! Jews are free to reenter into fellowship as God’s people when they repent of their unbelief and trust in Christ (11:11-24). “Israel” is now the church which is made up of Jews and Gentiles and all of this has come about because of God’s sovereign plan (11:25ff).

Key Words: Mercy, Kindness, Grace.

Application:
• It is a temptation to think that God is obligated to us. God does not owe us salvation; he gave it as a gift. If you are a teacher or preacher or small group leader do not be tempted to believe that just because of what you do for God means that God owes you salvation. Salvation comes only through faith.
• God’s grace allows no room for superiority complexes. If we look down on other people that are less “spiritual” then it is time to check our pride. All have fallen short of God’s glory.

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Romans 12-15

Summary: Now that Paul has explained that the Church is God’s people and that faith in Christ is the only way to be justified he focuses his attention on how God’s people are to live in this world. The first instruction Paul gives is that we need to offer our bodies as a living sacrifice and he then urges us to be transformed by the renewing of our minds (12:1-2). This thought echoes Paul’s teaching on walking by the Spirit (8) which is the foundation of Christian living. Paul teaches that God’s people are to use their individual gifts to build up the body of Christ and to be humble (12:3-8). Paul then draws a picture of what sincere Christian love looks like so that believers can model their lives after it (12:9-13). The people of God are to respond to persecution and opposition with love and to allow good to overcome evil (12:14ff).

The love that characterizes the believer’s life is so immense that it affects every area of their life. When Christian love is expressed toward governing authorities, submission and respect is the result (13:1-7). It would take books to explain the way Christian love changes specific situations in life. Paul sums up the essence of Christian love; “Love does no harm to its neighbor.” He leaves the exploration of this principle up to us (13:8-10). As God’s people, not the people of the world, we are to live in anticipation of the coming age by clothing ourselves with Jesus Christ (13:11-14). Paul turns to address a specific situation that was dividing the church in Rome and urges the mature Christians who realize that they are not bound to food laws not to use their freedom if a weaker Christian brother or sister will be destroyed by it. Paul urges the weaker Christians to not judge their brothers over morally neutral issues (14:15-13). The people of God are to live in harmony with one another and they are to love with God’s brand of love.

Key Words: Good, Love, Judge.

Application:
• Real love only acts from a disciplined will. The kind of love that God is calling us to show others is tough. Real love seeks the good for others even when it doesn’t feel so great for us. We need to get rid of the idea that love is a feeling and replace it with the idea that love is a commitment.
• At the core of Paul’s teaching on eating meat is the idea that we are not to put another believer’s soul in danger by what we do. If someone you know feels that it is morally wrong to drink wine don’t drink wine in front of them. Be considerate of the conscience of other people for the sake of their spiritual health.

Wednesday, March 22, 2006

Greek Word Study on "baptizo" (to baptize)


(This ship is "baptized")

It is important to understand the purpose of a word study. A word study is not meant to prove doctrine but it is meant to prove a particular word's true definition. That is what I have done in this word study. I did not deal with the theology of baptism but the definition of "baptize." The reason this is an issue is because some churches teach "baptism" by sprinkling or something like that. I hope this paper clarifies the definition of baptism for you.


Greek Word Study: βαπτιζω "baptizo" (to baptize)

The word “baptize” in English is an obscure word. This is due to the fact that the word “baptize” is almost an exact transliteration of the Greek word baptizo; other forms of the word are transliterations as well (e.g., “baptism,” “Baptist”). In Walter Bauer’s Lexicon it is rightly stated that, “The transliteration ‘baptize’ signifies the ceremonial character that NT narratives accord such cleansing, but … the term baptizo was not nearly so technical as the transliteration suggests” (Bauer 164). The goal of this paper is to reveal the correct meaning of the Greek word baptizo so that the word can actually be translated, not simply transliterated, into English.

The word baptizo comes from the word bapto which means “to dip, immerse” (Gilbrant 526). baptizo is the intensive form of bapto, thus baptizo means “to immerse, submerge, plunge.” In order to better grasp the intensive distinction it may be helpful to liken the difference between the words bapto and baptizo to the difference between the English words “jog” and “sprint.”

The way a word is used determines its meaning. Therefore the meaning of baptizo must be consistent with how it was used in its time. I will present the usage of baptizo in its Classical Greek contexts; in its Septuagint contexts; and in its New Testament contexts. Baptism is a topic of debate in the theological realm and often times the meaning of the word “baptize” has been misunderstood or skewed due to what different churches have taught and practiced for centuries. Examining the Classical Greek usage of baptizo is extremely helpful because the Classical authors did not have a theological agenda to promote which provides a more objective basis for determining the meaning of baptizo.

Baptizo was used widely in the ancient world and it was used in several ways. Soranus described a practice in which a scalpel or knife was “baptized” (immersed, plunged) into an embryo (see endnotes). The context is unclear as to whether or not this was to kill the embryo or to perform a type of surgery on the fetus but what is clear is that Soranus used the word “baptize” to describe the action of the scalpel (immersion) into the embryo (Liddell and Scott 305) . Plutarchus used baptizo in the context of commanding someone to “baptize” himself into the sea and he also described a man named Dionyson “immersing/plunging” himself into the sea. Plutarchus did not associate the word baptizo with any religious rite so it is clear that he was simply using the word to describe what the people did: they submerged themselves into a body of water. Epictetus used baptizo passively to describe the drowning of a person (i.e., “he was being immersed/drowned”). It seems that Epictetus was describing either a man being murdered by being plunged in water, or a man trying to escape the power of the ocean from pulling him under the water and thus drowning him. Even though it is unclear how the man was drowned the meaning of baptizo is certain: submersion. Polybius recorded the sinking of a ship as a “baptism” of a ship. It is obvious that this is not anything other than submersion. The nature of the word “immersion” requires that there is something to immerse into. Josephus used baptizo metaphorically to describe the massive amount of people who were flocking into the city of Jerusalem, “They baptized (immersed) the city.” Josephus was using hyperbole to portray a frantic scene of people that were seeking protection from the Roman army by entering the fortified city of Jerusalem. The picture is a city packed and crammed with people. Another author used baptizo to describe “a certain man being immersed in sleep.” This usage does not depict a person who is simply comfortably asleep. baptizo is an intensive form of the word “dip, immerse” and it is important to draw out that quality. It would be accurate to say that this man is “sleeping like a rock.” Liddell and Scott give the meaning that this is referring to “lethargic sleep.” Hippocrates wrote that certain individuals, “draw breath like out of the event that they had been immersed.” Hippocrates was describing a certain kind of breathing. The context given in Liddell and Scott is limited, but perhaps Hippocrates was describing the way a sprinter inhales after a long, hard sprint (i.e., he gasps for air the same way a person gasps for breath when he comes up out of water after he has been submerged for a long time (either willfully or unwillfully)). This expression could fit many contexts (e.g., sprinting; breathing hard when getting scared; a man gasping for breath when he is being tortured; etc.). Hippocrates’ usage of baptizo is extremely helpful because it defines the word to the idea of complete submersion. Gasping for breath after being submerged in water for a long time is a universal experience. The expression could not work if baptizo did not mean immersion/ submersion. baptizo is used metaphorically by Plato to describe people (?) who had been immersed (soaked) in wine. Plato is likely using figurative language to express just how terribly drunk some people were. They were not just a little tipsy; rather they were totally saturated with wine. Plato is drawing upon the intensive meaning of the word baptizo. Plutarchus used baptizo to describe a person who had been immersed in debt. For this quote Liddell and Scott translated the expression into English as a person who is “over head and ears in debt.” Plutarchus, like Plato and other writers who used baptizo metaphorically, used the word to describe just how great of an amount of debt this person was in. baptizo is a strong, emphatic word and that is precisely why ancient writers used it metaphorically. If I may paraphrase Plutarchus’ quote it would read, “This person is hopelessly buried under a mountain of debt.” Josephus used baptizo to describe a person who, “was being immersed with a lack of sense perception (lack of sensation) and sleep” (i.e., this person had totally lost all consciousness). Achilles Tatius described the dissolution of a man’s anger, “the one who had been immersed (overwhelmed) with wrath is being sunk (i.e., his wrath was going away).” Achilles Tatius was not talking about a person who was just a little bit upset he was talking about a man who was burning with passionate anger and he used baptizo to describe just how full of anger this person was. The last example of the classical usage of baptizo comes from Libanius who mentioned a person whose soul had been immersed (baptized) with grief. It is absolutely clear from classical usage that baptizo meant complete (even overwhelming) submersion under water when it was used literally and when it was used metaphorically it was drawing upon the power of the literal image.

Baptizo was used in the Septuagint four times. In Judith 12:7 baptizo is translated as “bathing.” In the context of the passage Judith would go out and bathe in the spring and her bathing was for the purpose of ritual purification. In this passage there is not enough detail to infer whether or not Judith fully submerged or not. Sirach 34:25 says, “Wash (baptizo) after touching a corpse and then touch it again, and what have you gained by your washing?” This usage of baptizo, like Judith, has the idea of ritual purification and this quote is too vague to glean an understanding of the word. baptizo is used in Isaiah 21:4 when Isaiah described a coming invasion, “Lawlessness immerses me.” The Septuagint’s translation of the Hebrew is not very accurate for this passage but the meaning of baptizo can be defined. In this passage the intensive force of baptizo is felt and it is clear that the phrase is communicating an overwhelming amount of lawlessness. The most important usage of baptizo in the Septuagint is in 2 Kings 5:14 (4 Kings in LXX). This is the only time in the LXX that baptizo actually corresponds to a Hebrew word (Gilbrant 526). The story in this passage is about a man named Naaman who was a commander of Aram’s army. He had leprosy and he was told by a captive Israelite woman to go to the prophet in Israel to be cured of his leprosy. Elisha told Naaman to wash in the Jordan seven times and that if he did this his flesh would be healed. After some reluctance Naaman “went down and dipped (baptized) himself in the Jordan seven times…” It is clear that baptizo means immersion/submersion in this context.

Of the many occurrences of baptizo in the New Testament I will only examine certain uses of the word. baptizo was used metaphorically when John the Baptist said, “I baptize you in water…He [Jesus] will baptize you in the Holy Spirit and fire” (Matt. 3:11). In this passage baptism is used in both the literal and metaphorical sense and both instances refer to complete immersion. In Matthew 3:16 the text gives enough detail to conclude that baptism is total submersion, “As soon as Jesus was baptized, he went up out of the water.” Jesus asked his disciples if they could be baptized with the baptism that he would be baptized with and Jesus affirmed them that they would (Mark 10:38-39). If Jesus and his disciples would be baptized in the same way the meaning of this immersion is defined as an immersion into suffering (i.e., they would be overwhelmed with suffering). The account of the conversion of the Ethiopian eunuch further confirms the meaning of baptizo. Philip shared the Gospel with the Ethiopian eunuch and the eunuch responded by being baptized, “…both Philip and the eunuch went down into the water and Philip baptized him. When they came up out of the water…” (Acts 8:38-39 italics mine). This passage actually defines baptism as complete immersion!

Baptizo is just one word in its Greek word family. The words in the Bapto (dip) word family are: baptizo (dip, immerse, plunge); baptismos (dipping, washing); baptisma (baptism); and baptistes (Baptist, baptizer) (Verbrugge 85). As already mention baptizo is the intensive of Bapto and the -izo suffix indicates the doing; causing; or being of the action of the verb (Robinson 138). baptistes is only used of John the Baptist in the New Testament and the -es suffix is normally the agent through whom an action is carried out, thus “the one who immerses” (138). The distinction between baptismos and baptisma is harder to define but “baptismos has not…arrived at the dignity of setting forth Christian baptism at all” (Trench 371). baptismos is distinguished by the -mos suffix which was used to describe both the contemplation and the doing of the act (the act of baptism) (370). baptisma is different because the –ma suffix expresses the result of the act and not so much the act itself (370). baptismos refers to “any ceremonial washing or lustration” which has been ordained by God or created by men but has no real significance while baptisma refers to the institution of Christian immersion and also specifically to the “washing of rebirth” (371-72). “baptismos denotes the act alone and baptisma the act with the result (Gilbrant 529).

There are other words in the New Testament that are similar to baptizo but none of them match the meaning of baptizo perfectly. The word louo means “wash, bathe” and it usually refers to the washing of the whole body (Bauer 603). Louo does not carry the sense of immersion like baptizo, though this does not mean that louo could never possibly mean immersion, but the main focus is on cleansing. Nipto is synonymous with louo but usually the focus of nipto is on washing a certain part of the body (e.g., hands; face; feet) (674). Pluno is very close to the meaning of nipto meaning simply “wash” but the main difference is that pluno emphasizes “washing something other than a part of the body” (832). Pluno was used of washing nets (Luke 5:2) and washing clothes (Rev. 7:14).

Based on the usage of the Greek word baptizo in classical Greek literature, in the Septuagint, and in the New Testament the true translation of the word baptizo is “immersion, dipping, submersion.” Baptizo is a unique word among similar Greek terms and it is the intensive form of the root word bapto in its word family.

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Endnotes:

All the examples of the Classical usage of baptizo cited in this paper were given in their Greek contexts in the Lexicon, thus all English translations of the Classical Greek writers are my own.

All examples of classical Greek usage of baptizo that are cited in this paper were found in the Liddell and Scott Greek-English Lexicon pages 305-306.
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Bibliography:

Bauer, Walter, William F. Arndt, F. Wilbur Gingrich, and Frederick William Danker, Eds. A
Greek-English Lexicon of the New Testament and other Early Christian Literature.
Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 2000.

Beasley-Murray, G. R. “Baptizo.” The New International Dictionary of New Testament
Theology. Ed. Colin Brown. Vol. 1. Grand Rapids: Zondervan Publishing House, 1979.
1-822. 3 vols.

Earle, Ralph. Word Meanings in the New Testament. Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1986.

Gilbrant, Thoralf. The Complete Biblical Library: The New Testament Greek-English
Dictionary: Alpha-Gamma. Vol. 1. Springfield: The Complete Biblical Library, 1986.
16 vols.

Liddell, H.G., and R. Scott. Greek-English Lexicon. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1996.

Oepke, Albrecht. “Bapto, Baptizo, Baptisma, Baptismos, Baptistes.” Theological Dictionary of
The New Testament. Ed. Gerhard Kittel. Vol. 1. Grand Rapids: WM B. Eerdmans
Publishing Company, 1964. 1-793. 10 vols.

Robertson, A.T. Word Pictures in the New Testament. Vol. 4. Nashville: Broadman Press,
1931. 6 vols.

Robinson, Thomas A. Mastering Greek Vocabulary. Peabody: Hendrickson Publishers, 1990.

Thayer, Joseph Henry. Greek-English Lexicon of the New Testament. Grand Rapids: Zondervan
Publishing House, 1977.

Trench, Richard C. Synonyms of the New Testament. Grand Rapids: W. B. Eerdman’s
Publishing Company, 1973.

The New Englishman’s Greek Concordance of the New Testament. Wilmington: Associated
Publishers & Authors, 1972.

Verbrugge, Verlyn D. New International Dictionary of New Testament Theology: Abridged
Edition. Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 2000.

Wednesday, March 1, 2006

The Gospel of Thomas: Truth or Fiction?



Truth is under attack. There are many “scholars” who would love to convince an uniformed mind that the early church fathers withheld and destroyed genuine records of Jesus life and words and selected certain works (the books of the New Testament) that would best promote the church’s agenda. Did the early church intentionally pervert the true Jesus? Since the finding of the Gospel of Thomas and many other ancient texts modern scholars claim that the historical Jesus has been lost (Witherington III, 20). Are these claims substantiated though? Is the Gospel of Thomas a trustworthy source that should have been included in the canon? This can only be determined after the facts have been presented.

The Gospel of Thomas was discovered in Nag Hammadi, Egypt in 1945 along with twelve other books full of various Gnostic works. The gospel found at Nag Hammadi was written in Coptic and dates to 400 A.D. (Wilkins, 23). The Gospel of Thomas was originally written in Greek and fragments of the Greek papyri date to about 200 A.D. (Brill, 117) but can be dated no earlier than 150 A.D. (Wilkins, 23). There is a fair agreement among scholars that the Gospel of Thomas was written after the canonical gospels and that the author relied heavily upon them to compose the work as well (23).

The Gospel of Thomas bears a misleading title. First of all it is deceitful in claiming that it was the apostle Thomas who wrote the book, and secondly because the good news (the gospel) is not even remotely similar to the message of the four canonical gospels. Since the book can be dated to no earlier than 150 A.D. it is impossible that Thomas the apostle wrote it. Thus, even before one begins to read the Gospel of Thomas there is an untrue claim of authorship. The “gospel” presented in the Gospel of Thomas is nothing similar to the Christian Gospel.

Before digging into the contents of this gospel it is important to understand the foundation that influenced the entire thing. Even non-Christian scholars agree that Gnostic theology influenced the book (Brill, 117). At the core of Gnostic belief is that the created world and matter is evil and that everything spirit was good (Douglas, 566). An inferior being created matter and he kept humans from escaping it with the help of archons. Only those who possessed a “divine spark” and had been enlightened could escape from physical existence (566). Gnostic thinking depreciates the life, death and resurrection of Jesus (in fact opposes it) and the concept of salvation is not the idea of being delivered from sin but is self-realization (understanding that one is truly God) (566). Gnosticism had various sects and other beliefs such as elitism and a low view of women. Without understanding these beliefs the Gospel of Thomas comes across very bizarre.

The Gospel of Thomas is a collection of sayings, which are similar to Jesus’ sayings in the New Testament Gospels (Boyd, 117). Even though half of the Gospel of Thomas is composed of sayings that are found in the canonical gospels not a single saying is exactly the same as the biblical parallel (Helmbold, 58). The parallels include the parable of the sower, the parable about the fisherman and the catch of fish, Jesus sending the disciples out among the country and instructing them to eat what is given to them, Jesus’ teaching his disciples that he did not come to bring peace to the world but a sword, the parable of the mustard seed, the parable about keeping watch lest a thief break in and steal, Jesus’ teaching about removing the plank from your own eye before helping remove the speck out of your brother’s eye, and various others. Some sayings are capable of either orthodox or Gnostic interpretation but many sayings are blatantly Gnostic (57). It is quite possible that the author of the Gospel of Thomas took canonical sayings and gave them a gnostic twist (59). This seems to best explain how the author created the work. For example, in the parable of the fisherman the fisherman pulled up a net full of small fish but discovered “a fine large fish” and threw back all the small fish and kept the large one (Brill,118). This parable is derived from Matthew 13:47-50 where the fishermen let down their net and pulled up all sorts of fish and separated the good from the bad. The elitist belief held by the Gnostics is taught in this parable instead of the original idea that at the end of the age the good will be separated from the wicked in Matthew. The elitist belief is also seen in the Gospel of Thomas when Jesus’ disciples asked him whom they should follow after he had left them. “Jesus told them, you are to go to James the righteous, for whose sake heaven and earth came into being” (119).

In light of the Gnostic slant in the Gospel of Thomas it should not come as a surprise that the author recorded neither any narratives nor the entire Passion Week, which is so strongly emphasized in the four Gospels (Helmbold, 57). Jesus is the revealer, not the redeemer. Jesus did not come to give his life as a ransom but to teach “secret” truths to his followers in the Gospel of Thomas. Jesus teaches to bring forth that which is within us in order to save us but if we do not have it we will die. Jesus teaches that only the solitary will enter the bridal chamber (Brill, 126). In Thomas, Jesus teaches that his light yoke will allow his followers to find “repose” and he also teaches that when the shepherd found the one lost sheep out of the 100 that he told the one lost sheep that he cared for it more than the 99 (129). Jesus teaches that he will make women male so that they too can become a living spirit and enter the kingdom of Heaven (130). The Jesus of the Gospel of Thomas resembles nothing of the Jesus in Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John.

The reliability of the Gospel of Thomas as a genuine source of true historical information is weak. It is absurd to think as the Jesus Seminar does that the canonical gospel writers used both the Gospel of Thomas, a text that dates a century after the New Testament gospels, and the gospel of Q, a “hypothetical gospel” (which really amounts to just a figment of some “scholar’s” imagination), as sources to draw from when they wrote their own accounts of Jesus’ life. On the contrary, if there is anything genuine at all in the Gospel of Thomas it is because the author used the reliable New Testament accounts to compile the text. One cannot say that the Jesus of the four gospels depends on any saying that is found in the Gospel of Thomas (Boyd, 118). Further, the earliest date of the Gospel of Thomas is 150 A.D., but the Gnostic ideas communicated in the Gospel of Thomas are Gnostic ideas that were circulating in the second and third centuries but not in the first (118). To add to the problems of the Gospel of Thomas’ reliability is that the manuscript evidence for the text is weak. There are only a few Greek fragments and the Coptic manuscript found at Nag Hammadi. Compare that to the New Testaments’ 5000 Greek Manuscripts.

The Gospel of Thomas was never under consideration as a text to be included in the canon because it was clearly Gnostic and Gnostic gospels and other Gnostic documents were never under consideration for inclusion in the canon. The early church recognized that they were perversions of the true records of Jesus. On the other hand there were non-gnostic books that were greatly debated over as to whether or not they should be included in the canon. No document written after 120 A.D. was under consideration to be included in the canon because the authors weren’t in direct contact of the apostles (Witherington III, 22). The most likely place that the Gospel of Thomas would have been included in a Christian canon would have been in Alexandria, Egypt because it was the home region of the Nag Hammadi texts, but even there the Gnostic texts were not included in the canon. On top of that there was a clear distinction between the Christian canon and Gnostic works because when the Nag Hammadi documents were found they did not have a single book contained in the New Testament canon mixed in with them (23).

The Gospel of Thomas is evidence of the perversion of early Christianity (Wilkins, 25). The early church fathers did not exclude the Gospel of Thomas from the canon because they were trying to suppress the truth about Jesus, rather they were concerned about preserving the true accounts of Jesus. Origen said, “The Church possesses four Gospels, heresy a great many” (219). Irenaeus said that the Gnostics were like a man who took a mosaic portrait of a king, broke it apart and rearranged the pieces to make a picture of a dog…then called it the kings portrait (Helmbold, 59). Aside from awkward and twisted parallels, the Gospel of Thomas is just that.

Bibliography:
Boyd, Gregory A. Jesus Under Siege. Wheaton: Victor Books, 1995.

Brill, E. J., et. al. The Nag Hammadi Library in English. San Francisco: Harper & Row
Publishers, 1977.

Douglas, J.D., et. al. The Illustrated Bible Dictionary. Vol. 1. Wheaton: Tyndale House
Publishers, 1980.

Geisler, Norm L. Baker Encyclopedia of Christian Apologetics. Grand Rapids: Baker Books,
1999.

Guillaumont, A. The Gospel According to Thomas. New York: Harper & Brothers, 1959.

Helmbold, Andrew K. The Nag Hammadi Gnostic Texts and the Bible. Grand Rapids: Baker
Book House, 1967.

Wegner, Paul D. The Journey from Texts to Translations. Grand Rapids: Baker Academic,
1999.

Wilkins, Michael J. and J.P. Moreland. Jesus Under Fire. Grand Rapids: Zondervan Publishing
House, 1995.

Witherington III, Ben. “Why the “Lost Gospels” Lost Out.” Areopagus Journal (2005): 6:5.

Sunday, February 12, 2006

BBC Winter Banquet



Sarah and I at the Winter Banquet! She is gorgeous!!

Wednesday, February 8, 2006

God's Design For Marriage

Marriages in America are decaying. You hear similar phrases like this from people of all walks of life. These statements do not lack truth, but more importantly we must realize that statements such as these imply that there is an ideal by which we judge a marriage healthy or unhealthy. That logically leads us to the question, “What is an ideal marriage?” Even though it is obvious when one marriage is healthier than another, we must still seek to understand what the ideal marriage is so that we can strive to personally maintain a healthy marriage and also be able to offer unchanging principles that can transform the ugly marriage into one of beauty.

God is the One who designed marriage. “We might say that marriage was God’s idea for the human race” (Ryken, 538). God created the earth, the plants, animal, and also man. Man is unique to creation and his uniqueness was first experienced when there was no helper fit for Adam. God is the One who said, “It is not good for man to be alone” (Gen. 2:18). God pronounced the first marriage union in history (538). Thus, an appreciation and respect of God’s institution is a principle we must honor with our minds and our lives. Honoring marriage is honoring God’s creative work.

Closely related to the institution of marriage is the foundational purpose of marriage. God said that it was not good for man to be alone so he made a helper fit for him. By His words God declared that the reason marriage is necessary is because man is not a complete creature without an intimate companion. Even in a perfect world with unhindered fellowship with God Adam still lacked companionship! Companionship therefore is essential to our nature as created human beings. The need for companionship is fulfilled in different ways: friendships, parents, brothers and sisters. But companionship is exclusive in the context of the intimate companionship of marriage. The intimacy is so deep in the unique marriage bond that the Bible declares that two persons become one flesh (Gen. 2:24). This intimacy demands that the closest relationship a man should have with another human being is his/her spouse. So, the purpose of marriage is to fulfill man’s need for companionship. We must acknowledge this by ridding ourselves of an overly independent “I don’t need anyone else” attitude and openly admit our created need for companionship.

It is essential to understand that God patterned the marriage relationship after the kind of relationship he has with his people. This truth is repeated in both the Old and New Covenant. This truth is what enables us to understand the reason for exclusivity in marriage. God is jealous for his people and expects complete faithfulness from them. The first commandment states, “I am the Lord your God…you shall have no other gods besides me” (Exod 20:2-3). Since God likens himself to a husband and his people to a bride we can infer that the first commandment of the marriage relationship is, “I am your husband, you shall have no other husbands but me!”

Since that is true then sex is also exclusive to the marriage relationship. Marriage companionship is far deeper than friendship alone it also involves “romantic passion” (Ryken, 538). Sexual union fuses two souls into one physically, emotionally, and spiritually. Scripture addresses this union from both a positive and negative aspect. Genesis describes the two becoming one flesh and Paul in his letter to the Corinthians expounds on that same truth. He explained that a Christian who unites himself with a prostitute has become one flesh with her (1 Cor. 6:16). Since sex creates such a deep union it is logical to understand that we don’t want to be united to anything that is not of God.

Another principle of the ideal marriage is that of a covenant. Again, this idea comes directly from the same type of relationship God has with his people. God gave Moses the Old Covenant. By a covenant God promised to Abraham that he would bless the entire world through him (etc.). Jesus’ sacrifice instituted the New Covenant and in that covenant he promised that he would never leave nor forsake those who obey him. A covenant is a promise of commitment and faithfulness. When the Israelites were about to enter the Promised Land Moses implored them, “Love the Lord your God and keep his requirements, his decrees, his laws and his commands always” (Deut. 11:1 emphasis mine). Hosea was a living parable for Israel because he symbolized God’s faithfulness to his people. After Israel had broken the covenant they had made with God, He was still faithful. God assumed the image of a cheated husband and said to Israel, “I will betroth you to me forever; I will betroth you in righteousness and justice, in love and compassion” (Hos. 2:19) and God said this after his people had committed adultery. A covenant is permanent. Thus God expects marriages to be “till death do us part.” Micah directly stated that marriage was a covenant when he told the people that their prayers weren’t answered because, “You have been unfaithful to her, though she is your partner, the wife of your marriage covenant” (Mic. 2:14). God expects that both husband and wife commit themselves to each other for life; therefore he hates divorce (Mic. 2:16)!

God’s command of husband and wife is to be productive. This means bringing forth children. God wanted his creation to be full of his creatures and he gave man the amazing privilege of joining him in his work.
The family unit was meant to function as a “little church” (Thomas). The roles and responsibilities of the husband and wife are different but this difference is what brings out the most complete image of God known to humanity. Just as Christ is the head of the church the husband is the head of the wife and just as Jesus loved the church so much that he gave his life for her the man should love his wife in that same manner (Eph. 5:23-25). Just as God wants love, respect, and obedience from his people a man wants the same from his wife. Likewise just as the people of God need his sacrificial love so a wife also needs sacrificial love from her husband.

These principles must be understood in order to give proper counsel to those who are married so they can work toward an objective and ideal goal that actually works because it is God’s design for marriage. In a nutshell marriage is, “a personal-sexual-spiritual companionship ordained and instituted by God” (Buttrick, 286).

Bibliography:

Buttrick, George Arthur. The Interpreter’s Dictionary of the Bible. 5 vols. Nashville: Abingdon
Press, 1962.

Ryken, Leland and James C. Wilhoit and Tremper Longman III. Dictionary of Biblical Imagery.
Downers Grove: Intervarsity Press, 1998.

Strong, James. The Strongest Strong’s Exhaustive Concordance of the Bible. Grand Rapids:
Zondervan, 2001.

The Revell Bible Dictionary. New Jersey: Fleming H. Revell Company, 1984.

Thomas, Gary. “A Marriage After God’s Own Heart.” Discipleship Journal July/August 2004:
24:4.

Wright, H. Norman. The Pillars of Marriage. Glendale: Regal Books, 1980.

Wednesday, January 18, 2006

The Moral Argument



One of the arguments to support the existence of God is the moral argument.

The moral argument states:

->Moral values are objective facts:

--->Either atheism or theism must account for these facts.

----->Atheism cannot account for the facts.

------->Theism (belief in God) can account for the facts therefore theism is correct.


For the moral argument to work 2 things must be proven:

1) Moral values are truly objective (not subject to anyone's personal opinion but rather are always true despite how some people may feel about them).

2) Atheism really can't account for the existence of objective morals.


Are moral values truly unalterable? Can some moral decisions be "true" for some people and "untrue" for others? Let's get out of the realm of the abstract and let's get to a down to earth situation to answer these questions.

Suppose your wife or your mother decides to go out for an evening to get some groceries. She goes in, gets everything on the list and checks out. Then she carts the food out into the parking lot and gets all the food into the car. Seeing that it is 9:00 PM and very dark she gets into the car and after she gets a mile down the road she feels a gun pressed to her neck and a raspy voice telling her where to go. After driving a couple of hours outside of anyone's sight the man tells her, "Stop the car. Get out. Take off your clothes." After a restless and frantic night of police calls and every desperate measure to find out where your wife was you get word from an officer who found the car and the woman a couple hours outside of town. "I'm sorry to be the one to tell you this sir, but your wife was raped several times and then she was murderer."

If something inside you doesn't burn with the most violent rage at the person who would do such a thing, something is terribly wrong! We start thinking of the most painful torture fit for such evil people!

Now let me ask you a question. Can someone really say "Rape is ok for me but you may have a different opinion and we will just have to respect each others differences?" My answer to that is a HELL NO! Don't just listen to me though, ask yourself how you would feel in such a circumstance. How do newscasters report these stories? Do they do it with a grin like the weatherman who gives the 5 day forecast? No!! They are distraught and disturbed. They are solemn.

Ok I think most people will agree with me on that particular matter but are morals truly objective and not determined by personal preference? Let's look at some moral issues that are widely debated. Abortion. Some people think its ok and some think its wrong. Does this prove that morality is determined by people? No. The reason this isn't so is because the main issue at stake in abortion is not whether or not murder is wrong but what is argued is whether or not abortion classifies as murder! It is helpful to think of morals in columns: Adultery: Murder: Stealing: Lying. Now it is obvious that everyone agrees that these are wrong but what is argued about is whether or not something falls under that category. For example, Mormons believe that it isn't wrong for a man to have many wives. Even though that is the case adultery is still a sin to them! How can that be? It is possible because they don't think of having many wives as breaking the moral code of adultery but being unfaithful to those wives is adultery. A mormon would consider adultery as one of his wives having a sexual relationship with someone else or even himself having sex with a woman other than his wives.

This is important to understand because the only thing disputing about morals does is ensure that there truly are objective morals!! Consider these evidences of an objective moral code as well:

1) Humans live as if they are obligated to obey certain real values.
2) Moral outrage is evidence of a universal moral obligation.
3) Moral judgments are evidence of a universal moral obligation.
4) Every society has a similar moral code.

Let's look at this negatively as well. If all moral decision were relative then...

1) No moral code could be better than another!
2) There can be no such thing as moral progress ("I'm becoming a better person!").
3) Moral effort becomes meaningless.
4) No human being is better than another human.
5) All choices are equally good.

Really think about some of those. If there isn't a standard to judge our actions by then there is no correct behavior! That is not how we live though. We live with the weight of moral obligation every day of our lives. Would you really believe that there are no evil or good people? Was Mother Theresa a better person than Hitler? Not if you believe that morality is based on personal opinion because if it is then there is no correct opinion.

The reason Atheism can't account for the existence of objective morals is because something can only be objective (free from opinion) if it is determined by an eternal and unchanging source. The God of the Bible, Yahweh, has told us that he is that eternal and unchanging source. Since that is the case his character becomes the standard for all right behavior because he is the eternal One! Amen.

Friday, January 13, 2006

An Awesome Hope- 1 Thessalonians 4:13-18



Crystal's question:

Daniel,
I want to know or learn more about " The dead shall rise first" in 1 or 2 Thessalonians. What does that mean in the whole picture of things?

1 Thessalonians 4:13-18

“Brothers and sisters, we do not want you to be uninformed about those who sleep in death, so that you do not grieve like the rest, who have no hope. We believe that Jesus died and rose again, and so we believe that God will bring with Jesus those who have fallen asleep in him. According to the Lord's word, we tell you that we who are still alive, who are left till the coming of the Lord, will certainly not precede those who have fallen asleep. For the Lord himself will come down from heaven, with a loud command, with the voice of the archangel and with the trumpet call of God, and the dead in Christ will rise first. After that, we who are still alive and are left will be caught up together with them in the clouds to meet the Lord in the air. And so we will be with the Lord forever. Therefore encourage one another with these words.” (TNIV)

EXPLANATION:

We can conclude just from reading this passage that the Christians in Thessalonica weren’t completely sure about what happened to their fellow Christians who had died. Paul gives the reason for teaching this lesson on resurrection in verse 13. Paul didn’t want the believers in Thessalonica to grieve for the believers who had died as if they didn’t have any hope of seeing them ever again. Some scholars suggest that the church in Thessalonica thought that the believers who had died before Jesus’ return would miss out on the resurrection. Paul counters this false idea by teaching and emphasizing that it is the believers who had died that would be the first to experience resurrection not those living at the return of Christ! The main emphasis of this passage is the hope that all Christians look forward to whether alive or dead.

Paul then goes on and gives the resurrection hope that all Christians share based on the resurrection of Jesus. God is going to bring the dead Christians with him when he returns at the Last Day and at that time they will be the first to experience their life in their new resurrected bodies! The time between the resurrection of the dead and the resurrection of the living won't be long though. All resurrections will happen on the same day, there is just an order that God has for the resurrection.

When Paul says that the believers who are still alive at the return of Christ will not “precede” those who have died in Christ he is saying that we will not be the first to be raised! It says that the dead in Christ will rise first. So Crystal to answer your question, what Paul is talking about when he says that the dead will rise first is that on the Last Day, the Day that Jesus returns, the Christians who have died will be resurrected first and then the Christians who are still alive will be resurrected second.

In the whole picture of things this is an encouragement that all Christians will be resurrected and will be with God and that God has an orderly plan for how things will proceed on the Last Day. This is meant to be an encouragement to all Christians so that we can rejoice in what awaits us!

HOW ARE WE TO APPLY THIS MESSAGE?

As Christians we need to have such a firm confidence of our hope of being resurrected that when the death of a believer occurs we will not grieve like the world. In William Barclay’s commentary he quotes an ancient letter that says,

“Irene to Taonnophris and Philo, good comfort.
I was sorry and wept over the departed one as I wept for Didymas…But nevertheless against such things (death) one can do nothing. Therefore comfort one another.”

That’s it? That’s all the world can offer to encourage people who are experiencing the painful loss of a loved one? That is pathetic! How different is the hope that we have as Christians? Paul tells us that the dead will be resurrected into a new healthy, powerful body and that Christians will be reunited to their loved ones that have died. Best of all, after our resurrection we will be with the Lord FOREVER! That is why Paul says “Encourage one another with these words” (1 Thess 4:18). We can encourage each other with a genuine hope.

Another way that we can apply this passage is by being active in sharing our faith. Something that scares me more than anything is when my friends tell me that someone close to them has passed away and I ask them, “Was he a faithful Christian?” Something that you may want to highlight in your Bible is the phrase “in him” and “the dead in Christ.” This hope and promise is only for the person who has trusted and believed in Christ unto death. What hope can we offer as Christians to people that are grieving over the loss of a loved one who was not in Christ? None. That is a hard pill to swallow but it is the truth. God doesn’t expect us to evangelize the world but he does expect us to be a light to the people he has placed in our lives.

If you aren’t a Christian you can claim this hope for yourself by learning what Jesus has done for you then repenting of your sin and being baptized for the forgiveness of your sins and also to receive the Holy Spirit. You need others as well. Talk to a friend who is a Christian for guidance.

Finally, I would encourage all of you to imagine what that Day will be like when God will raise his people. Think of both the resurrection of those you love and also of your own personal resurrection. For me this passage is so encouraging. I ponder the resurrection of my Dad. His body has been battered because of all the years he has been a mechanic. He has been through 5 surgeries. I have cried every time I have visited him before he goes into surgery. It hurts me to hear how bad his back is killing him. I remember seeing him with 2 large metal staples in his neck. His body hurts and he’s my Dad! I can’t wait to see the resurrection of my Dad! I wonder how God will do it? I want to watch as God removes the metal from his bones and then maybe I will see my Dad’s flesh return to a young healthy state. I want to see his cuts vanish and his glasses broken. I want to hear shouts of joy instead of painful groans. I want to see my Dad sprint to me as God renews me! What a day. It will be better than we could ever possibly imagine!

Read 1 Corinthians 15:35-58.

Wednesday, January 11, 2006

Back Home





Sarah and I felt like being dorks while we were waiting for our food to cook so we took some fun pictures. I conveniently haven't posted the really dorky pics.

Monday, January 2, 2006

Eternal Security


The doctrine of eternal security is not as difficult as it has been made out to be. At the heart of the matter is the question, "Once I become a Christian is it possible for me to fall away from God and lose my salvation?" Those who would answer "no" to this question usually don't know how this thinking ever even came about. Briefly, the doctrine of eternal security is rooted deeply in Calvinism. The five key beliefs of Calvinism are:

Total Depravity- man is born completely dead in sin and is powerless to even respond to God.

Unconditional Election- God chooses those whom he wishes to pardon by the blood of Christ and those whom he chooses not to forgive.

Limited Atonement- Christ's blood was only shed for those whom God chose for salvation.

Irresistable Grace- Since God has called and chosen certain people to receive His grace it is impossible for them to refuse Him.

Perseverance of the Saints- Since God has chosen certain individuals for salvation and forgiven them by Christ's blood and since they cannot resist God's grace they are kept by the power of God and cannot fall away from their faith.

This forms the acronym "TULIP." Today most "Calvinists" are only "Modified Calvinists." You will rarely ever meet a 5 point Calvinist but you meet 1 point Calvinists all the time. Can you guess which of the five points they believe? Right! Perseverance of the Saints! Why do people want to believe this doctrine? In my opinion people either don't want to worry about losing their salvation because they might continue sinning and feel safe in that lifestyle or because they don't understand what truly happens when one is baptized and becomes a Christian. What most 1 point "Calvinists" fail to see is that the whole system stands or falls together. The key to understanding Calvinism is CAUSATION (the belief that God causes all things to happen). The problem is that when you ask a 1 point Calvinist if they believe in free will they have violated the entire system of Calvinism because in their theology free will can not exist because then God would have to respond to man in some situations and thus wouldn't be completely in control of everything. The opposition to Calvinism is called Arminianism and the key to Arminianism is the belief the God is completely in CONTROL of everything that happens but he doesn't cause everything because He has given man free will.

Now aside from all of that theological baggage the Bible is much simpler (who would've thought that?). The Bible indicates that man truly does have free will. God put Adam in the Garden of Eden and gave him a real choice: obey God or disobey God. Adam's true free will is evidenced by the fact that both he and Eve disobeyed God. Let's focus now more on the topic of eternal security as seen in the Bible. Can a genuine Christian turn his back on God and lose his salvation? The Bible yells "Yes"!

In Luke 8 Jesus tells the parable of the sower. The seed that was sown was scattered on four different types of soil. The seed is the word of God and the soil are different people that the word comes to. Three out of the four soils accept the "seed" but only one soil retains the seed and brings forth fruit.

When Jesus was telling his disciples about the events they would experience he told them that they would be handed over and put to death but, "whoever stands firm to the end will be saved" (Matt 24:13). The parable that Jesus told immediately after his discourse on the destruction of Jerusalem's temple and the end of the age proves that it is possible for faithful believers to be unfaithful. Matt 24:42-51 shows that a faithful servant can turn wicked and be assigned to a place with the hypocrites where there will be weeping and gnashing of teeth (24:51).

Read John 15. Jesus said that IF we remained in Him we would bear much fruit but if we didn’t we would be cut off and thrown into the fire (15:6). There is a genuine responsibility on our part to remain in the true vine.

Read Acts 5. Ananias and Sapphira were members of the early church. They lied to the Holy Spirit and paid for it. They obviously chose to disobey God.

In Colossians 4:14 Paul mentions one of his companions, Demas. At that time Demas was working with the church but at the end of Paul’s life he says that “…Demas, because he loved this world, has deserted me and has gone to Thessalonica" (2 Tim. 4:10).

Read Hebrews 6:4-12. This passage at first seems brutal and scary but those who fall away and persist in their rebellion are those who can’t come back to repentance. This passage does show that it is not only possible to fall away from the faith but that it is a reality that people fall away. One of the main purposes of the book of Hebrews was to encourage Jewish Christians to persevere in their faith in Christ and not fall away. How can we possibly believe that we can never fall away when it is written,

“You need to persevere so that when you have done the will of God, you will receive what he has promised. For,
"In just a little while,
he who is coming will come
and will not delay."

And,
"But my righteous one will live by faith.
And I take no pleasure
in the one who shrinks back."

But we are not of those who shrink back and are destroyed, but of those who believe and are saved” (Hebrews 10:36-39).

The Bible is filled with the reality that we must remain faithful to God. (James 5:19-20; Revelation 2:7, 2:10-11, 2:17, 3:1-6). The entire book of Revelation stresses the need for Christians to live victoriously to inherit eternal life with God.

Bible Study

Hello Family and Friends,

I have the desire to post some Bible studies on this blog but I really need help in choosing a book to go through. E-mail me and let me know what you might want to study.