Monday, December 20, 2004

Evolution or Creation?

“Well, hearing a creationist define evolution is a little bit like having Madalyn Murray O’Hare define Christianity. You’re not really going to get the straight story there” - Eugenie Scott (director, National Center for Science Education)

Taking Ms. Scott’s comment into account, I guess you had better take what I am about to say with a grain of salt. I have no scientific background, but I do have some common sense (or at least, I like to think so). Besides, ‘The tendency of modern science is to reduce proof to absurdity by continually reducing absurdity to proof.’ But, it is the glory of science to progress, so I willingly turn to other ground. Or more so, to my point, which is this: evolution as an explanation of our origins is ludicrous.

Firstly, there is a total lack of undisputed examples, fossilized or living, of the millions of transitional forms (“missing links”) required for evolution to be true. Evolution does not require a single missing link but many. We should be surrounded by these “missing links” that cannot be categorized as one particular life form. Yet, we do not see this. Darwin acknowledged that if his theory were true, it would require millions of transitional forms. He believed they would be found in fossil records. They haven’t been.

Secondly, evolution is said to have begun by spontaneous generation – a concept ridiculed by biology. Louis Pasteur proved that life only comes from life – this is the law of biogenesis. Evolution will tell us that the first living cell came from a freak combination of nonliving material (where that nonliving material came from we are not told). Evolutionist admit that the chances of evolution progress are extremely low. Yet, they believe that given enough time, the impossible became possible. Any reasonable person would admit that greater periods of time make the possible likely. It will not however, make the impossible possible. No matter how long it is given, non-life will not become life.

Third and final point. The complexity of living systems could never evolve by chance – they had to be designed and created. In a recent interview Bill Gates was asked when he felt that computers would become as intelligent as humans. You would hardly think that computers can exhibit any ‘intelligence’ without having a source of higher intelligence. They will exhibit ‘intelligence’ because a more intelligent source (humans), program it into them. Information Science teaches us that in all known cases, complex information requires an intelligent message sender. DNA, for example, is by far the most compact information storage and retrieval system known to man. Any complex system cannot be random – they have to be designed and created. Only a twit would think that DNA came about ‘by a long series of chances’.

When dealing with origins, everyone who believes anything does so by faith. Either faith in God, modern science or whatever. The Bible’s teaching on creation is correct and the evidence around us supports that belief. Nothing on the market beats, “In the beginning God created…” But some of us prefer wishful thinking (evolution) to the Truth (Word of God). We are indeed a reasoning rather than reasonable species.

Come, Let Us Pray

If a picture is worth a thousand words, then a quote is worth a thousand paragraphs. To that end I would like to share some quotations on the subject of prayer. Of course the scoffers and doubters might come jeering; but should we expect anything else? For it has been well said that almost the only scoffers at prayer are those who never tried it enough. On that note, here are the quotations. ‘God shapes the world by prayer. Prayers are deathless. They outlive the lives of those who uttered them’. ‘Seven days without prayer makes one weak’. ‘Prayer is not eloquence, but earnestness; nor the definition of helplessness, but the feeling of it; not figures of speech, but earnestness of soul’. ‘God prefers bad verses recited with a pure heart to the finest verses chanted by the wicked’. ‘Man is the only creature which rises by bowing, for he finds elevation in his subjection to his Maker’. ‘There are four ways God answers prayer: No, not yet; No, I love you to much; Yes, I thought you’d never ask; Yes, and here’s more’.

Under no circumstances should one look for empirical proof that prayer works. The impossibility of empirical proof is a spiritual necessity. Anyone knowing that an event had been caused by their prayer would feel like a magician. Their head would turn and their heart would be corrupted. You would only, I think, be deceiving yourself by trying to find special evidence for prayer working in some cases more than others. If it seems to be working, keep doing it. If it does not, keep doing it. I leave you with the words of Charles H. Spurgeon, ‘We cannot all argue, but we can all pray; we cannot all be leaders, but we can all be pleaders; we cannot all be mighty in rhetoric, but we can all be prevalent in prayer.’ Our nation sorely needs it and we can achieve nothing meaningful without it. We need it like the Spurs need Duncan, like BET needs banning from all civilized societies, you know…real bad.

Tuesday, December 14, 2004

We Think, But not Enough

“The writers against religion, whilst they oppose every system, are wisely careful never to set up any of their own” – Edmund Burke

There seems to be a great many people who seem to be more and more worried that the Christian doctrine is true. And rightly so. The closer a man is to Christ in his heart, the more strongly he will object to Christianity. One interesting thing is that in none of the submissions is any alternative offered. You will hear the same old boring arguments about religion brainwashing, no evidence, same empty rhetoric. Charles H. Spurgeon once said, ‘Avoid foolish questions’. And avoid foolish debates I would add.

To appease the scoffers, let us say, ‘religion is nonsense’. This Young Fool has some questions he would like answered. I await, not holding breath. From whence did we get the ability to think? Thinking is a miracle, by the way. How is it possible for life to come from non-life? We came from nothing? That would mean your thinking, came from nothing and will in the end, pretty much will amount to nothing. So why should any right-thinking Bajan listen to you? Please help this Young Fool.

Would any scoffer bet their soul on their arguments? I doubt. Very often, ‘men will fight for their verbal creed but refuse flatly to allow themselves to get into a predicament where their future must depend upon that creed being true. They always provides themselves with secondary ways of escape so they will have a way out if the roof caves in.’ At the end of the day, God is a feel not a think. Is it not quite amusing that those who talk so much about God are those who insist there is no God. Now there is something to think about. Someone is running scared, and it is not the Christians. We must be patient though, because for some the longest way ‘round is the shortest way home.

Wednesday, December 01, 2004

The Seven Series – The “I am” statements

INTRODUCTION

This Gospel presents carefully selected evidence that Jesus was Israel’s Messiah and God’s incarnate Son. The supporting evidence includes (1) seven signs and seven discourses by which Jesus clearly disclosed his true identity; (2) seven “I am” statements (6:35; 8:12; 10:9; 10:11; 11:25; 14:6; 15:1) by which Jesus revealed figuratively what he is redemptively for the human race; and (3) the bodily resurrection of Jesus as the ultimate sign and climactic proof that he is “the Christ, the Son of God” (20:31).

The number seven is prominent: seven signs, seven discourses and seven “I am” statements which testify as to who Jesus is. Even though not related we should also note the prominence of the number “seven” in John’s book of Revelation. Of other note in this Gospel are key words and concepts associated with John’s writings: “light”, “word”, “flesh”, “love”, “witness”, “know”, “darkness” and “world”.

This study seeks to shed some light on the significance of the seven “I am” statements spoken by the Lord Jesus. We will see that beneath these seven simple, yet powerful, claims the Lord Jesus reveals to us more of his mind and divine character. On that note, let us begin.

#1 à I AM THE BREAD OF LIFE

(John 6:35) “And Jesus said unto them, I am the bread of life: he that cometh to me shall never hunger; and he that believeth on me shall never thirst.”

Here Jesus shows that he is the true bread; he references this concept multiple times: John 6:33, John 6:35 and John 6:48-51. Jesus is to the soul what bread is to the body. Jesus, as the Bread of life nourishes and supports spiritual life, in the same way bread nourishes the bodily life. Our bodies could better live without food than our souls without Christ. If we eat of this living bread we will have eternal life.

He is living bread (John 6:51). Bread in and of itself is a dead thing. It nourishes but only aided by a living body. Christ is himself a living bread, nourishing by his own power. Christ can nourish on his own power because he is ever living, everlasting bread. He needs nothing to sustain him for in him is life itself. He is the source of all life.

(John 6:58) “This is that bread which came down from heaven: not as your fathers did eat manna, and are dead: he that eateth of this bread shall live for ever.” Manna was given to Israel. There was manna enough for them all. So also in Christ is a fullness of grace for all believers. Israel lived upon manna until they came to Canaan. Our manna is the living Bread of Christ.

This “I am” statement pertaining to the Bread of life, illustrates the importance of our feeding upon Christ. He also makes this point further on in (John 6:53) “Then Jesus said unto them, Verily, verily, I say unto you, Except ye eat the flesh of the Son of man, and drink his blood, ye have no life in you.” Two points stand out in this passage. One, it is absolutely certain that you have no spiritual life in you if you have no desire towards Christ, nor delight in Him If the soul does not hunger and thirst, we can almost be certain that it does not live. Two, you can have no spiritual life, unless you derive it from Christ by faith. Apart from Him you can do nothing (John 15:5). This also ties in with one of the other “I am” statements (John 15:1).

Faith in Christ is the primum vivens – the first living principle of grace; without it we have not the truth of spiritual life. This also relates to another of the Lords’ “I am” statements – Jesus the Way to the Father (John 14:6). Jesus is life, there is no meaningful existence apart from Him. Life needs nothing to sustain it, we need life to sustain our existence. Jesus Christ is that life, that Bread of Life.

#2 à I AM THE LIGHT OF THE WORLD

(John 8:12) “Then spake Jesus again unto them, saying, I am the light of the world: he that followeth me shall not walk in darkness, but shall have the light of life.”

Christ is the light of the world. We read in the Old Testament (Daniel 2:22) “He revealeth the deep and secret things: he knoweth what is in the darkness, and the light dwelleth with him.” He knows what is in the darkness, and what is done in the darkness and darkness itself cannot hide from him. Light dwells with him and he dwells in the light.

God is light, and Christ is the image of the invisible God. Christ was expected to be a light to enlighten the Gentiles (Luke 2:32). He is a light to the entire world; not only the Gentiles (Jewish church). The visible light of our world is the sun, Christ is the Sun of righteousness. One sun enlightens the whole world, so does one Christ, He will suffice. Christ in calling himself the light expresses (1) what he is in himself – excellent, perfect and glorious and (2) what he is to the world – the true light, who can enlighten everyone. The world would be dark without the sun in the physical. In the spiritual realm, it would be even darker without Christ by whom light came into the world.

The first part of this “I am” statement deals with who Christ is as “light”. The second part makes the inference that those who follow him, as a traveller following light in a dark night, shall not walk in darkness. Yes, he is light but only if we follow the light can we have the light of life, not walking in darkness. If Christ is the light of the world then it is our duty to follow Him in everything. We should take our direction from the light of the world, lest we stumble in the darkness. Earlier in John we read (John 1:9) “That was the true Light, which lighteth every man that cometh into the world.” He is the true light, implying that there are false lights – ignes fatui, which lead men to destruction.

It is therefore not enough just to acknowledge or look at this light, but to follow it, believe in it and walk in it. By walking in the light of Christ we are guaranteed a rich spiritual life in this world and everlasting life in the next, where there will be no death or darkness. If we follow Christ we shall undoubtedly be happy in both worlds. Follow Christ, and we shall follow him into heaven. Only the true light, can know the way to the Father. Let us therefore walk in the true light manifested in Christ Jesus.

#3 à I AM THE DOOR (OF THE SHEEP)

(John 10:9) “I am the door: by me if any man enter in, he shall be saved, and shall go in and out, and find pasture.”

Those who enter through Jesus will be saved and have abundant eternal life. For in verse 10 He continues, “The thief cometh not, but for to steal, and to kill, and to destroy: I am come that they might have life, and that they might have it more abundantly.”

Jesus is the only gate for salvation; none other exists. (Acts 4:12) “Neither is there salvation in any other: for there is none other name under heaven given among men, whereby we must be saved.” Here, Jesus emphatically makes the point that He is the only door. This might sound narrow minded in this age of pluralism but the Lord is more interested in truth than popular opinion.

Christ is the door of the sheep. If any man enter into the sheepfold, as one of the flock, he shall be saved. We can note two things here. One, it is a clear direction on how to come into the fold. We must come in via Jesus Christ. In Genesis God drove Adam out. The perfect relationship with God had been lost (Genesis 3:24). However God so loved the world that he determined to reconcile himself at the cost of His Son’s life (Gen 3:15). In Genesis 3:15 God implicitly promises to redeem the world. It predicts the ultimate victory for humankind and God over Satan. It prophesies about the spiritual conflict between the offspring of the woman (Jesus Christ) and the offspring of the serpent (Satan and his followers). Here, God promises that Christ would be born of a woman (Isaiah 7:14) and would be “struck” through his crucifixion. Yet, he would rise from the dead to completely destroy (crush) Satan, sin and death, for the salvation of the human race.

Those who observe this direction of Christ will be saved. True believers are at home in Christ; if they go out, they are not shut out as strangers, but have liberty to come in again; when they come in, they are not shut in as trespassers, but have liberty to go out. God does not (not cannot) touch our free will. We may go in and come out as we choose, but He will never turn us away.

One of the themes which seems to run throughout these “I am” statements is that apart from Christ there is no hope for salvation. We must draw nearer to God only through Christ Jesus, relying on his sacrificial death to cover our sins and praying in faith for strength and mercy to help us with all our needs. We must not allow any other created being take Christ’s place.

#4 à I AM THE GOOD SHEPHERD

(John 10:11) “I am the good shepherd: the good shepherd giveth his life for the sheep.”

Jesus declares himself to be the promised good shepherd. Frequently in the Old Testament God uses a metaphor comparing himself to a shepherd to illustrate his great love for his people: Psalm 79:13, Psalm 80:1, Psalm 95:7. In (John10:11) the Lord Jesus also uses the same metaphor in order to express his relationship to his people. It is as if he is saying “I am toward all who believe in me, as a good shepherd is toward his sheep – caring, watchful and loving.” The distinguishing mark of Christ as the good shepherd is his willingness to die for his sheep. This emphasizes the uniqueness of Christ the shepherd: his death on the cross saves his sheep (Mark 10:45) “For even the Son of man came not to be ministered unto, but to minister, and to give his life a ransom for many.”

In (Hebrews 13:20) he is the “great shepherd”. In (1Peter 5:4) he is referred to as the “Chief Shepherd”. The title of “Chief Shepherd” implies that there are other shepherds who also have the responsibility of caring for his flock. These would be pastors and other Church leaders. True pastors will care for their sheep just as the Chief Shepherd cares for the entire flock. It is interesting if we cross reference this concept further down in John when Jesus reinstates Peter. Jesus said to him, “feed my lambs” (John 21:15) and again “feed my sheep” (John 21:16). Jesus’ description of believers as lambs and sheep implies three things. (1) We need pastoral care. (2) We need to feed constantly on the Word (which is God, who is the Bread of life) and (3) Since sheep are prone to wander into danger we need repeated guidance, protection and correction.

Christ is the shepherd. He was prophesied of under the Old Testament as a shepherd, (Isaiah 40:11), (Ezekiel 34:23) and again in Ezekiel (37:24). In the New Testament he is spoken of as the great Shepherd, the chief Shepherd, the Shepherd and bishop of our souls, (1Peter 2:25) “For ye were as sheep going astray; but are now returned unto the Shepherd and Bishop of your souls.

#5 à I AM THE RESURRECTION

(John 11:25) “Jesus said unto her, I am the resurrection, and the life: he that believeth in me, though he were dead, yet shall he live: (John 11:26) “And whosoever liveth and believeth in me shall never die. Believest thou this?”

For the person who believes in Jesus, physical death is not a tragic end. It is instead the gateway to abundant eternal life and fellowship with God. The “…will live” of verse 25 refers to the resurrection; the “will never die” of verse 26 means that the resurrected believers will never die. They will have new bodies, immortal and incorruptible (1Corinthians 15:42).

The phrase “I am” is very significant. Martha had stated the resurrection rather as a doctrine, a current tenet: Jesus states it as a fact, identified with His own person. He does not say, “I raise the dead” or “I perform the resurrection”, but rather, I am the resurrection, In His own person, representing humanity, He exhibits man as immortal, but immortal only through union with Him.

Man consists of body and soul, and provision is made for the happiness of both. For the body; here is the promise of a glorious resurrection. Though the body be dead because of sin it shall live again. The body shall be raised a glorious body. He promises immortality. He that liveth and believeth, uniting to Christ by faith, lives spiritually by virtue of that union. They shall never die. That spiritual life shall never be extinguished, but perfected in eternal life. As for the soul, it is immortal by its very nature. It shall never die, there will be no intermission or interruption of its life, as there is of the life of the body. The mortality of the body shall at length be swallowed up of life; but the life of the soul, the believing soul, shall be immediately at death swallowed up of immortality. The body shall not be for ever dead in the grave; it dies but for a time. And when time shall be no more, and all the divisions of it shall be numbered and finished. A spirit of life from God shall enter into it.

Christ goes on to ask Martha, “Believest thou this? Can you take my word for it He seems to be saying. When we have read or heard the word of Christ, concerning the great things of the other world, we should seriously put it to ourselves, “Do I believe this?” “Does my belief of this Word give my soul an assurance?” So that we can not only say this I believe, but this is why I believe. Martha was doting upon her brother's being raised in this world; before Christ gave her hopes of this, he directed her thoughts to another life, another world: the resurrection. The crosses and comforts of this present time would not have such an impact on us as they do if we would only believe the things of eternity as we ought to.

It should be of comfort to all good Christians that Christ is the resurrection and the life. The resurrection is a return to life. Christ is the author of that return. We look for the resurrection of the dead and the life of the world to come, and Christ is both. He is the author and principle of both, and the ground of our hope of both.


#6 à I AM THE WAY, THE TRUTH, AND THE LIFE

(John 14:6) “Jesus saith unto him, I am the way, the truth, and the life: no man cometh unto the Father, but by me.”

Leading up to this “I am” statement, Jesus was promising to return (John 14:3). Thomas enquired concerning the way (John 14:5). Christ was going to the invisible world, the world of spirits, to which spiritual things only have a reference.

The Lord’s response to this question reveals some powerful truths about Him. The is the way, the truth, and the life. He did not say one of the ways or one of the truths. He does not mince his words, He said: the way, the truth, they life. He is Truth, therefore everything He says then must be true. The Truth cannot lie. We can run from, distort, bend or reject the truth. In the end however the Truth still stands. The truth, just is.

Christ is the way; the highway we read about in (Isaiah 35:8). Christ was his own way, for by his own blood he entered into the holy place (Hebrews 9:12). He is our way, for we enter (the holy place) by Him. By his doctrine and example he teaches us our duty, by his merit and intercession he procures our happiness, and so he is the way. In him God and man meet, and are brought together. We could not get to the tree of life in the way of innocence (Genesis 3:24), but Christ is another way to it. By Christ as the way, an intercourse is settled and kept up between heaven and earth; the angels of God ascend and descend; our prayers go to God, and his blessings come to us by him.

He is the truth. Christ is the true manna (John 6:32) and the true tabernacle (Hebrews 8:2). The doctrine of Christ is true doctrine. Everyone seeking the truth, need not look further than Jesus Christ, who is full of grace and truth. He is true to all that trust in him. Christ is the way, the truth, and the life. He is the true way to life, the only true way; other ways may seem right, but the end of them is the way of death.

Fallen man must come to God as a Judge. The only way to God as a Father is through Christ as Mediator. We cannot come to God without the Spirit and grace of Christ. So Jesus further qualified this “I am” statement by adding “no man cometh unto the Father, but by me.

#7 à I AM THE TRUE VINE

(John 15:1) “I am the true vine, and my Father is the husbandman.”

This “I am” statement also serves as the beginning of the parable/allegory/discourse of the vine and the branches. Jesus describes himself as the true vine, which would make one think there are false vines out there that only serve to keep one in bondage. The disciples are described as “the branches”. By remaining attached to him as the Source of life, they produce fruit. God is the gardener (husbandman) who takes care of the branches in order that they make bear fruit. God expects us all to bear fruit.

There are four words to which this parable/allegory/discourse may be reduced: 1. Fruit (John 15:1-8), 2. Love (John 15:9-17). 3. Hatred (John 15:18-25). 4. The Comforter (John 15:26, John 15:27). For the purpose of this study we are interested in Fruit.

Jesus speaks of two categories of branches: fruitless and fruitful. The branches that cease to bear fruit are those who no longer had the life in them that comes from enduring faith in and love for Christ. These “branches” the Father cuts off, that is, he separates them from vital union with Christ (Matthew 3:10).

The branches that bear fruit are those who have life in them because of their enduring faith in and love for Christ. These “branches” the Father prunes so that they will become more fruitful. The Father, will remove from their life anything that hinders or diverts the vital life-flow of Christ into them. Bearing fruit is the quality of Christian character that brings glory to God through life and witness (Matthew 3:8).

Jesus makes it abundantly clear that our job is to bear fruit. If we remain in Him, we will bear much fruit. Just as the branch has life only as long as the life of the vine flows into it, so believers have Christ’s life only as long as Christ’s life flows into them. The conditions by which we remain in Christ, maintaining that vital life-flow of life are: (1) keeping God’s Word continually in our hearts and minds and making it the guide for our actions, (2) maintaining the habit of constant intimate communion with Christ in order to draw strength from him, (3) obeying his commands, remaining in his love and loving each other and (4) keeping our lives clean through the Word resisting all sin and yielding to the Spirit’s direction.

CONCLUSION

There is something in a name. In (Exodus 3:14), the Lord gave himself the personal name “I AM” (from this is derived the Hebrew Yahweh, which indicates action). God was here in effect saying to Moses, “I wish to be known as the God who is present and active.” Inherent in the name Yahweh is the promise of the living presence of God himself day by day with his people. It expresses his faithful love and care and his desire to redeem his people and live in fellowship with them. It is also of significance that Jesus Christ called himself by the name “I am” (John 8:58).

Christ establishes himself as the creator with this simple, yet powerful phrase “I am”. This title denotes a self-existence. Christ did not say “I was”, but “I am”, meaning that He is the first and the last, immutably the same (Revelation 1:8). This reveals his divine nature; that he is the same in himself from eternity (Hebrews 13:8) “Jesus Christ the same yesterday, and to day, and for ever.”

Morality and the Intolerance of Tolerance

“Tolerate persons in all circumstances, by according them respect and courtesy even when their ideas are false or silly.” Gregory Koukl

Liberal Tolerance is one of the primary challenges to the Christian worldview. Its proponents will argue that it is intolerant, narrow-minded and inconsistent with the principles of a free and open society for Christians (and other faiths) to claim that their moral and religious perspective is somewhat superior and should be embraced by society.

Liberal tolerance it not what it is cracked up to be. It is a partisan philosophical perspective with its own set of dogmas. It assumes, whether its proponents realize it or not, a relativistic view of morals. This false assumption has shaped the way many people think about critical moral issues such as homosexuality and abortion. It has resulted in a situation where a liberally tolerant position concerning such issues is seen as correct and should therefore reflected in wider society. But with this dogmatic position: their ‘tolerance’ has become intolerant. It asserts that there is only one correct view on these issues (that of liberal tolerance), and if one does not comply with it, one will face public ridicule. Unfortunately, most of what passes for tolerance today is really intellectual cowardice. Those who hide behind ‘tolerance’ are often afraid of intelligent engagement. It is much easier to hurl an insult, than to confront the idea and either refute it or be changed by it.

Moral rules are directions from God for operating the human machine. They are Christ’s signature on His greatest masterpiece: written upon all of our the hearts. We are rebels who need to lay down our arms. This rebellion will not last forever, mind you. If we build on the right foundation, Jesus Christ the Creator, we could turn our nation around. Any other foundation leaves us with our feet firmly planted in mid-air.

Monday, June 07, 2004

Want out of debt? Overcome greed

The rich ruleth over the poor, and the borrower is servant to the lender – Proverbs 22:7

Borrowing has become interwoven into our lives, unfortunately so has debt. We are racking up billions of it according to a recent press report. Materialism is the root of the debt problem and Satan is lord of materialism. Materialism is the lie Satan whispers to you that: “You will be happier if you have more money, possessions and power.” This lie fosters discontent which breeds greed and greed gives birth to debt. It is designed to keep you in bondage and keep your eyes off the truth.

Before borrowing, honestly answer this question: Is the monthly bondage payment worth getting this possession now? Barring an overwhelming need to borrow, don’t. More money equals more problems, whether you owe it or own it. Debt causes a denial of reality. An author commenting on American society writes, “we drive our bank-financed cars, running on credit car gas, to open a department-store charge account so we can fill our savings and loan-funded homes with installment-purchased furniture. We’re living a lie and hocking the future to finance it.” I would dare venture to say that we have copied this lifestyle from our North American counterparts. We have unlimited powers to rationalize. Do not rationalize your debt habit. Recognize that debt is not a matter of insufficient funds, rather insufficient self-control. A person in much debt with little income, will be in much debt with much income.

There is a debt which we could never repay. Christ paid it for all at Calvary. The only debt that should remain outstanding is to love one another (Rom 13:8). The truth is you were made for one person (Jesus) and one place (Heaven). Until both conditions are met, you will never be genuinely happy. As you reflect on that remember, all truth passes through three stages. First, it is ridiculed. Second, it is violently opposed. Third, it is accepted as being self-evident. Let material things serve their use but let the spiritual be the object of your desire.

Monday, May 24, 2004

The Three Hardest Tasks

I remember someone asking in a letter about why people hold on to hate. I think it was with regards to slavery or something along those lines. It’s always the question. I think the reason we cling to our hates so stubbornly is that deep down we sense that once the hate is gone…we will be forced to deal with pain. We don’t like dealing with pain. That is why many will cling stubbornly to hate.

Remember that the three hardest tasks in the world are not physical or intellectual. They are moral: to return love for hate, to include the excluded, and to say, “I was wrong.” Only the Spirit of the living God can help a person with these three tasks. Left to our flesh and human nature…we are simply not capable. 1John 4:16 “And we have known and believed the love that God hath to us. God is love; and he that dwelleth in love dwelleth in God, and God in him.”

Monday, May 17, 2004

Taste...see for yourself

“And no sneers at the limitations of logic either…amend the dilemma” – I. A. Richards.

Many probably experience the limitations of “logic and reasoning” when examining the ways of the living God (Christ Jesus). However, He is in no way committed to our “logical constructs”. We have been trained to build logical frameworks around everything. Think of the number of times you use…“If so-and-so then…” etc. When dealing with God our “logical constructs” are woefully inadequate. If we could dissect Him with logic…He wouldn’t be much of a God now would He? He has to be experienced to be believed. You cannot tell what goes bump in the night by reasoning alone. At some point you will have to abandon reason and go see for yourself. That is why we are exhorted to…“Taste and see that the Lord is good…” (Psalm 34:8).

We cannot put God in a box (logical framework). He is differently related to our “time and space” (but not cut off from it). This is why He can do anything including: “become man”, walk on water, transfigure…perform miracles. Best of all…He can lay down His life and take it up again. No one took it from Him (John 10:18). God is timeless…so that what “was”, “is now” and “will be”…all “happen at the same time” for Him. Time is really a mode of perception…not something that exists in-and-of-itself (now I know why He used parables!). C.S. Lewis puts it well: “The difference [God's] timelessness makes is that this now (which slips away from you even as you say the word now) is for Him infinite.” He is a Spirit…Spirit gives birth to Spirit. The flesh is confined to “this time and space” we call reality (more like Satan’s dream world). The Spirit…as God showed when He “became man”…is not. Don’t take my word for it. Read His…taste and see for yourself…Jeremiah 29:13 “And ye shall seek me, and find me, when ye shall search for me with all your heart.”

Thursday, May 13, 2004

On your ‘Marx’, Get Set…

For as bats’ eyes are to daylight so is our intellectual eye to those truths which are, in their own nature, the most obvious of all – Aristotle.

Reasoning (to be valid) cannot be denied. Some say all human ideals are illusions and human loves are ‘biological by-products’. Besides reasoning, we also make moral judgements. We ‘ought’ or ‘ought not’ do this. No one pays attention to moral judgements, which can be shown to come from non-moral and non-rational causes. The Freudian and Marxist both attack morality on this ground.

They forget though that what discredits particular moral judgements must equally discredit moral judgement as a whole (or has basic philosophy been forgotten?). If the fact that men have such ideas as ‘ought’ and ‘ought not’, can fully explained by irrational and non-moral causes, then those ideas are themselves illusions. Here is their escape – all ideas are impulses, which we have been conditioned to feel. Yet, at the sight of social injustice they write like men of genius... proclaiming what is good (better pay) and denouncing what is bad (wuk-up culture).

This is strange though. Since their thoughts…are themselves the impulses by which nature has conditioned we Homo sapiens. It says nothing about any objective right or wrong – so why all the fuss? Maybe they forget that when they write, for that is their glory. To hold a philosophy, which excludes humanity; yet try desperately to remain human. Trying to escape from their difficulty…they flatly contradict themselves.

‘Opiate of the masses’? A true ‘Marx-man’ indeed…always off-target. 2 Corinthians 4:3-4, comes to pass on this occasion, doesn’t it? That is how powerful the Word of God is. Just like He said in Isaiah 55:11. As the world turns…the web continues to be woven… http://www.religion-online.org/ …Go! Can’t run from the truth though…can we?

Come let us pray?

What could be wrong with “the coming together of different religions” for “witness to unity and development”? Actually a lot is wrong with it. The problem is – religions have contradictory claims. Christians are praying to God who is Jesus. Other faiths are praying to a God who is not Jesus. God cannot be Jesus and not be Jesus at the same time. Therefore we all cannot be praying to, serving, or worshipping God. At bare minimum, one of us must be wrong. It could be we are all wrong. But one thing that we can never say is that we are all right. Different faiths can never seriously say let us come together and worship the same God. Beliefs may be all equally valid in the sense that they are consciously held by sincere people, but they cannot be equally true if they are contrary beliefs.

Not participating in such an event (Inter-Faith Service) immediately would have branded the Evangelicals in the minds of some as some kind of religious fanatics, a group so blinded by their narrow-minded convictions that they have no tolerance for other beliefs. Pluralism in the religious arena is evil. The idea that it does not really matter what philosophy or religion you follow, as long as you have got God (or Gods in some cases) in there somewhere and you are following your religion sincerely then everything will be ok.

This “religious tolerant” view never encourages people to assess the truth value of their religious claims. It is saying do not think about those things, do not criticize and do not say others are wrong. If you subscribe to that then you cannot criticize even the assessment of your own spiritual claims. Religious truth claims must be challenged if we are to have any confidence that they are true.

We need to stop misleading people with words like “tolerance” and “open-mindedness”. They mislead because much of what passes for tolerance today is not tolerance at all, but actually intellectual cowardice. Some prefer hiding behind the myth of neutrality (religious pluralism) to intelligent engagement. It hinders us from dealing with the real issues facing society – what should we be encouraging as a society? The pluralistic idea behind an Inter-Faith service is false by its very nature. That is why it should be rejected, not encouraged. We can live, eat, work and play together…the one thing we cannot do though is say “Come...let us pray.”

The 'Free Ticket Letter'

“The soul is a spiritual thing, riches are an earthly extract, and how can these fill a spiritual substance? How man does thirst after the world, but alas, it falls short of his expectation. It cannot fill the hiatus and longing of his soul” – Thomas Watson.

I’m quite amazed at how many people actually buy into gambling. The Bible does not explicitly forbid gambling. However, there are several biblical principles that should make one think twice. Proverbs (28:20,22) warns of disaster for people who want to get rich quickly. In Proverbs (13:11) we learn that wealth that comes easily goes just as easily. Easy come… easy go. Worst of all it is addictive…right up there with deadliest vices. The moral high ground is often taken by claiming that we are supporting ‘worthy causes’. How comforting. Actually…people don’t gamble to support ‘worthy causes’…people gamble to support their own cause and win ‘nuff cash’. Quit pretending already. Gambling is really a secret tax on people who are bad at math.

It is cheap to play the odds. Thing is, we always (not sometimes) end up paying dearly chasing after what is cheap. Gambling can never do a better job than God in providing your needs (not to be confused with everything your heart desires). If we came from nothing…anything would go (including gambling, murder and theft). Anything doesn’t though…since we ‘ought not to’… say…gamble, murder or steal. Our morals come from an absolute moral wisdom (of God). Keep God out of the equation and you will always come up with the wrong answer. Thing is, so many are bad at math.

So you’re still thinking of all the things that you can do with that money? Well, I’m not a gambling man…but I bet it will (not might) turn into…“My God, look what all this money has done to me.” Who “owns” who? Something to think about as you stand in line to purchase that ticket.

Isn’t it always the Question?

If life were my favourite topic, I would try to secure eternal life. If it were truly my favourite topic, I would try to have it more abundantly. How? Simple, believe John 3: 16 with all your heart. But alas, my intellect will not allow me to accept that beautiful gift. Is that not for the “common man” who knows no better? What, abandon my intellect and believe in such fables and fairytales? It’s always the question, isn’t it?

Using the mere existence of causes for a belief as a way of raising a presumption that the belief is groundless, are we? Amusing at best. If the truth (Word of God) were groundless and based on no evidence, wouldn’t it be easily refuted? But alas, no refutations are forthcoming. All we are hearing is empty rhetoric, aren’t we? It’s always the question, isn’t it?

The enemies of the cross are standing, feet planted firmly in mid-air. They are thrown the eternal lifeline of the gospel of Jesus Christ (all praise and glory be unto Him). Alas, who would reach out of the darkness and hold onto this precious truth? C. S. Lewis once said, “A man can no more diminish God's glory by refusing to worship Him than a lunatic can put out the sun by scribbling the word, “darkness” on the walls of his cell.” Can a man ask questions which God finds unanswerable? Yes, very easily. After all…all nonsense questions are unanswerable. It’s always the question, isn’t it?

My blogs will pass away...but the truth that is in the Word of God however will never pass away. Then the curtain falls, true. But the show must go on. This begs the real question, Which show will you be watching for eternity? Now there is a serious question to ponder. Life, a fascinating topic indeed but it’s always the question, isn’t it? It’s always the question. No wonder there is http://www.christiananswers.net/