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Messianic Israel / Jew Evangelistic T-Shirt: Shema & Isa 53

God loves Israel! He loves Israel far more than did the Apostle Paul, who wrote under the inspiration of the Holy Spirit:

1 I say the truth in Christ, I lie not, my conscience also bearing me witness in the Holy Ghost, 2 That I have great heaviness and continual sorrow in my heart. 3 For I could wish that myself were accursed from Christ for my brethren, my kinsmen according to the flesh: 4 Who are Israelites; to whom pertaineth the adoption, and the glory, and the covenants, and the giving of the law, and the service of God, and the promises; 5 Whose are the fathers, and of whom as concerning the flesh Christ came, who is over all, God blessed for ever. Amen. … 1 What advantage then hath the Jew? or what profit is there of circumcision? 2 Much every way: chiefly, because that unto them were committed the oracles of God. (Romans 9:1-5; 3:1-2)

What does God say to those who harm Israel?  “He that toucheth you toucheth the apple of his eye” (Zechariah 2:8). As with the rest of mankind, Jews who do not believe the gospel will be eternally lost (Romans 11:28a), but nonetheless “as touching the election, they are beloved for the fathers’ sakes. For the gifts and calling of God are without repentance.” (Romans 11:28b-11:29).

 

What is the greatest blessing Jehovah has ever given Israel? The Messiah, the Savior of the world, God blessed for ever, Jesus!  To that end, we have designed the T-shirts pictured below, which have been added to the collection of evangelistic T-shirts and other materials I posted about some time ago. Both sides of the T-shirt reference the evangelistic pamphlet Truth From the Torah, Nevi’im, and Kethuvim (the Law, Prophets, and Writings) for Jews who Reverence the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Israel, which is online at https://faithsaves.net/Messiah/.  The front has this evangelistic website as well as the text of the Shema, Deuteronomy 6:4:

שְׁמַע יִשְׂרָאֵל יְהוָֹה אֱלֹהֵינוּ יְהוָֹה אֶחָד׃

Hear, O Israel: The LORD our God is one LORD:

Israeli flag Shema Deuteronomy 6:4 Messiah Jesus T Shirt

While the back has the evangelistic website and Isaiah 53:8b: “For he was cut off out of the land of the living: for the transgression of my people was he stricken.”

along with, on both sides, the flag of Israel.  (We did not see a way to design the shirt so that the vowels and accents could be included, although we recognize the Biblical and historical case for their inspiration and preservation.)

We believe that these shirts can be blessed by the God of Israel for Jews to embrace their crucified and risen Messiah, Jesus, as well as to help Gentiles come to repentance and faith in Him.  If you get to evangelize Muslims because of this shirt, Isaiah 53 is good for them also, since Muslims deny the Lord Jesus died on the cross, claiming the Gospel accounts are fabrications. But Isaiah 53, which clearly predicts His death by crucifixion and resurrection, and which we have physical, pre-Christian evidence for in the Dead Sea Scrolls, cannot be so explained away by Muslims.  This T-shirt can also help you explain the powerful evidence for the Bible from prophecy for agnostics and atheists and the powerful impact of Isaiah 53 to both Jews and Muslims. Furthermore, God promises to bless those who bless Israel and curse those who curse Israel (Genesis 12:1-3). Do you want to be blessed by the living God? Bless Israel!

The immediate motivation for our making these shirts was a pro-Hamas, anti-Jewish rally we saw in Los Angeles.  Jew haters there held signs such as “Resistance is not terrorism,” glorifying the murder of 1,200 Jews on October 7, 2023, the largest single-day slaughter of Jews since the Holocaust:

resistance is not terrorism pro Hamas anti Israel Jewish Semitic A. N. S. W. E. R. coalition

They also promoted “from the river to the sea,” advocating the destruction of the Jewish state and the murder of the Jews:

from the river to the sea Hamas terrorism kill Jews

The protesters were part of the anti-Israel hate group, the A. N. S. W. E. R. coalition, who argue that to say “Hamas is a terrorist organization” is a “lie.” (By the way, if you need more reasons to stop using Google as a search engine, note the pro-terrorism, anti-Israel search results that come up first if you search for “answercoalition.org Hamas terrorism”; compare those results with what you get on Duck Duck Go, where the top result [as of the time I am writing this] is the Anti-Defamation League explaining why Hamas is a bloodthirsty terrorist organization that calls for the eradication of Israel.)  The protestors also reproduced lies pumped out by Hamas about civilian deaths in Gaza, while saying nothing about the fact that Hamas wants civilians in Gaza to die and Israel does not. Of course, Islam allows Muslims to lie–after all, Allah is the best of deceivers.

They were blocking the street so that we could not keep going on the bus we were on in Los Angeles.  Our destination was not far away–a museum in LA.  We decided to get off the bus and walk there.  A few blocks away we saw an orthodox Jewish man walking in the direction of the advocates of terrorism.  We told him about the protest; he thanked us, and re-routed.  After we got home from the museum we designed the T-shirts. It is right to stand against terrorism and for the Jewish people.  It is especially right to stand for the greatest Jew of all, the resurrected Lord, Jesus.

We saw posters like the following a few blocks away.  The anti-Jewish, pro-Hamas protestors did not say anything about these people.

Jewish babies kidnapped by Hamas poster

Jewish youth kidnapped by Hamas hostage

Jewish grandmother hostage kidnapped by Hamas

They also said nothing about United States citizens killed by or held hostage by Hamas. They are also not important, it seems. (Let me add that the large majority of inhabitants in Gaza and the West Bank support Hamas’ murder of Jewish civilians–the large majority “extremely support” terrorism, while in a recent survey only 7.3% of survey participants were “extremely against” such terrorism, combined with 5.4% who are “somewhat against” it, for a total of only 12.7% of the population who are against terrorism; it is certainly possible survey results reflect some bias, but the overall picture is likely to be accurate.)

What about here in the USA? When asked if they support Israel or Hamas, 95% of those over 65 support Israel.  The percentages get progressively lower the younger people are.  Among 18-24 year olds, only 55% support Israel, while 45% support Hamas.  This is a terrible trend, and awful evidence of the anti-God garbage taught in the public school and university systems.  Maybe consider getting some of these T-shirts for yourself or as presents for others.  Perhaps you are afraid of Muslim violence or anti-Jewish violence if you wear one, since true Islam in America–like all true Islam–is violent and bloodthirsty, not peaceful.  Perhaps if you are living in Saudi Arabia or Iran it would be unwise to wear one of these shirts; but if you live in the United States of America, and you will allow threats of Muslim violence to curtail your free speech, something is very wrong.  Obviously Christians have liberty to wear or not wear a T-shirt like this, and it is perfectly fine not to wear one, but our decisions must be made out of Biblical principle and for the glory of God, not out of fear.  If you say you would have protected Jews in the Holocaust, but are afraid to stand for them and against their murderers now, why should we believe you would have stood were you in Hitler’s Germany? There are Biblical principles here.  God’s love for Israel is not saying God loves everything the modern state of Israel does–but God still loves Israel, and Scripture still says to bless Israel.  (By the way, if you are born again, God loves you with an infinite and special love, but He still does not love everything you do–He does not love your sin, nor does He love Israel’s sin.)  Be salt and light: stand up for righteousness. Do not let the wicked pro-terrorist people be the only ones who are making their voices known.  Stand for the God of Israel, for the Messiah of Israel, and for the nation of Israel.

Postscriptum:

As FLAME: Facts and Logic About the Middle East points out concerning anti-Israel, pro-Hamas bias in media reports about Gaza civilian casualties:

[T]he media insist on treating Hamas’s notoriously unreliable information feed as fact. Conversely, they refuse to give precedence to proven, reliable sources of information, such as the Israeli or U.S. governments, the latter of which confirmed Al-Shifa’s use as a Hamas headquarters. Israel presents photographs of Hamas blocking exit highways, so Gazans cannot leave the war zone . . . but Hamas denies it, says NPR. Such is the inane, “he-said, she said” pablum we are fed by the media.

The media also steadfastly refuse to ask the questions demanded by the story—and by any curious reader, listener, or viewer. When reporters interview Palestinians on the street or doctors in hospitals, the viewer cries to know: “Do you ever see any Hamas guys around here? Have you seen any tunnels?” But never does the reporter ask this, let alone questions like, “Do you support Hamas? Do you think there should be a Palestine next to Israel? What do you think about the October 7th attack on Israel?” These are obvious queries that responsible, curious, fact-hungry journalists would and should normally ask their sources. But they never do. Why?

The short answer is that if they asked these questions, the stories they tell wouldn’t fit the narrative they are trying to sell—the narrative in which the Palestinians are an oppressed people, Israel is an evil, colonial aggressor, and Hamas is a product of legitimate Palestinian resistance.

To sell their perverse narrative, international media swallow the wildly inflated death-toll numbers cranked out by the Gaza Health Ministry. For this reason, the media simply repeat the daily growing casualty figures Hamas gives them.

Reuters reports, for example, that as of November 22nd, Gaza’s Hamas-run government says at least 13,300 Palestinians have been confirmed killed, including at least 5,600 children. But Luke Baker, a former Reuters bureau chief who led the organization’s coverage of Israel and the disputed territories from 2014 to 2017, said on X (formerly Twitter), “Hamas has a clear propaganda incentive to inflate civilian casualties as much as possible.”

Moreover, the media almost never give a breakdown of the casualties. They don’t say how many were Hamas terrorists or how many were human shields, killed in residences schools or hospitals where Hamas were hiding. They never tell how many were killed—not by Israeli forces, but by Hamas and other terrorist groups—because of misfired rockets, or by Hamas shooting at Palestinian civilians heeding Israeli orders to evacuate.

In addition, it’s probable that a significant number of the “children” reported killed or wounded by Hamas are youths aged 13 to 18, who were located in Hamas facilities or even took an active part in the fighting.

If you are not aware of the connection between Soviet communist propaganda and modern anti-Zionist lies about Israel as a colonialist oppressor, please read the article here.

Fried Preacher

Early Personal Considerations

When I was a child, growing up in an independent Baptist church, I thought God dropped pastors down from heaven, at least something like that.  Even when I was in high school and college, I regarded these men with reverence.  God was infinitely higher and greater to me, of course, but they topped everyone else.  As I became a pastor myself, despite still highly regarding the office, I held lower estimation of the men in the office.

For one, when I became a pastor, I knew for sure pastors weren’t dropped from heaven.  I knew I wasn’t.  Then spending more time with several other pastors in closer relations, I had to reevaluate my lofty estimation.  I don’t write this to engender any disrespect for the man or his office.  I still love pastors and have a better understanding how difficult the job.  Many pastors are friends.

Pastor As Sunday Afternoon Meal

The idea of fried preacher relates to a Sunday afternoon meal.  In the spirit of fried chicken, a church family after church instead serves up a delectable main entre of “fried preacher.”  I read someone explain: “My mother would always say we were having fried preacher for dinner.”

If you grew up in church, maybe you fried your preacher sometimes for Sunday afternoon dinner.  My parents never did.  I never heard one foul word about a preacher in my home from my parents.  It amazes me, because my parents had negative things to say about people.  Their preacher was never one of them.  It happens though.

The Apostle Paul himself became fried preacher by the Athenians in Acts 17:18:

Then certain philosophers of the Epicureans, and of the Stoicks, encountered him. And some said, What will this babbler say? other some, He seemeth to be a setter forth of strange gods: because he preached unto them Jesus, and the resurrection.

They called Paul a “babbler.”  This portends a great pastime of criticizing a preacher and his preaching.  I don’t think Paul was bad.  Maybe no better preacher ever existed.

Pastors Say and Do Wrong Things

Prove All Things Preached

People might say true things about a preacher and his preaching.  They are sometimes right about him.  He did things and said things wrong.  Preachers also sin.

When someone hears preaching, he should consider whether it is true.  To do that, he judges it.  Paul commands this practice in 1 Thessalonians 5:21-22:

21 Prove all things; hold fast that which is good. 22 Abstain from all appearance of evil.

What To Do with Error

When someone tests or proves the preaching and finds something bad, what does he do next?  Does he criticize the preaching to others, maybe at home at Sunday dinner?  No.  Scripture reveals a certain way to deal with the error of someone else.  The goal is restoration or reconciliation (Galatians 6:1).  You help someone get it right, when he’s wrong.  That’s God’s will.

If bad preaching becomes the pattern, this necessitates a stronger reaction.  The deficient preaching should be obvious.  Very bad preaching occurs all over today.   Probably more bad preaching exists than good.  When I say good, I’m talking about when in general the preaching is good with a small minority of duds or awful preaching mixed in.

Dealing with Bad Behavior

Every preacher will also behave badly.  Hopefully that’s not normal for him.  1 Corinthians 13:7 says love “beareth all things, believeth all things, hopeth all things.”  You hope the best.  The goal isn’t to let a preacher get away with doing something wrong, but it is to believe the best about him.  That approach doesn’t tend toward frying the preacher.  Fried preacher doesn’t sound like love, does it?

It is hard to talk to certain pastors.  Like many other men, they don’t take it very well.  They could go further than that and say it’s mutiny, worthy of church discipline, heresy, or dishonor.  Some might try to destroy the critic, like Diotrephes, cast him out of the church, even without any due process.

Preachers Frying Preachers

Conference Cuisine

Preachers are also notorious for fried preacher.  No one can fry a preacher like another preacher.  Maybe the experience of frying prepares him to fry so well.  Preachers conferences can provide a kind of industrial sized instrument of frying.

I know another preacher who in recent days attended a preaching conference.  When he returned, he reported to another preacher friend of mine that the conference was a major and constant frying session of a non-attending man.  It was long, high temperature frying of this third party. They disintegrated him — “for the Lord.”‘  This kind of gang-style muckraking, one could even call, ganging up on someone.  Fifteen to twenty on one pouncing on him in a dark alley.

In Absentia

The crispified pastor wasn’t there to enjoy the benefits of this “helpful” criticism.  It was all out of his presence.  His critic preachers sat at meals doing so, identifying him by name.  It was all very fun and entertaining.  Sinful, but at the same time, in public they gave the impression they were in special alignment with God.

The conference attendees didn’t say anything to the preacher.  I know the preacher they fried.  He had no opportunity for self-defense.  He wasn’t there.  Fried preacher only occurs with the preacher gone.  Every preacher knows that.

The Prayer Request

In the fried preacher recipe book, the best chefs call fried preacher a prayer request.  Pray for preacher so and so, because he’s blah-blah-blah-blah-blah.  “Help me with my prayers.  What else can you say about him?”  Nothing to see here, they’re just praying for the guy.  Nothing to smell like fried foods.  You can smell that aroma from three blocks away.

Getting Caught

Fried preacher is a whole lot of fun in a conference setting.  The closer proximity brings a bonding among the participants, what some call a benefit.  If you can’t find doctrinal or practical unity, you could find a common enemy to bring everyone together.  It take just one person to report in order to cool the fry temperature.  Everything just turns soggy then.  Maybe you try to find out who reported to make the subject of your next gathering.

Accuser of the Brethren

One might wonder if anyone needed to say anything negative about someone who wasn’t present.  Scripture says a lot about the habit of this.  Everyone does it at some point.  Sometimes, people need to talk about a problem with another person.  When it spreads to an all-out gossip convention, this requires a commercial kitchen for such a fry fest.  This cannot, is not right.  Ever.  It requires at least a food service license in most states.

Revelation 12:10 says:

And I heard a loud voice saying in heaven,, Now is come salvation, and strength, and the kingdom of our God, and the power of his Christ: for the accuser of our brethren is cast down, which accused them before our God day and night.

Who is the “accuser of our brethren”?  God doesn’t need any “help” from the accuser.  This is Satan obviously.  Satan is the master chef of fried preachers.  To mix my metaphors, nothing is gained by backing up the dumpster and practicing demo-day on an absent fellow brother, stripping him down to the studs.

What Is Fried Preacher?

What is “fried preacher”?  About one hundred percent of this cuisine is personal aggrandizement.  It accomplishes lowering of the one fried and the supposed elevation of the fry chef.  Psalm 52:4 says, “Thou lovest all devouring words.”  Words are the oil in which a fried preacher fries.

The nature of the flesh, it loves hearing the scoop about someone when he isn’t there.  The flesh of someone loves gossip, except when it’s about him.  Then it’s something insidious or evil.

Is it ever wrong to say anything critical or negative about a preacher?  People must say the truth at times in a certain setting and in a particular way.  It usually starts with trying to help the man with whatever they think worthy of frying him.  Warning of the danger of a man or his teaching could come if a man is dangerous.  He should have heard about the kind of danger he is, first, at least from someone.

Men can expose false teaching in a public presentation.  They review the material and point out the error.  So then it becomes two people with public positions, who both interacted in public. Both are now open for review, which includes criticism.  No one is anonymous. This isn’t fried preacher.

For talk to be gossip, it must be without the target of the gossip present.  If he’s there, then it isn’t gossip.  That would be something akin to admonishment or exhortation.  Also, saying nice things about someone isn’t gossip.  Only disparaging comments about a missing person fit into the definition, even if they’re true.  That’s Fried Preacher.

Shaping a Jesus In Your Own Image and then Believing in Him for Salvation

Contrasting Christianity

Have you talked in public to an evangelical woman with a cross hanging down into her revealed cleavage?  You see the cross juxtapositioned with the other as a backdrop.  Not a fit, is it?  Maybe you, like me, wonder about the vast differences in professing Christianity.  They both claim to believe in Jesus Christ.  What’s going on?

One church you attend uses superficial, short preaching that centers on men’s felt needs.  They do series on self-interest topics that will attract people.  They keep it short with lots of humor.  The other opens the Bible and explains and applies exactly what it says, word for word.

Some churches use rock or pop music and call it praise.  Others use sacred music, saying that God rejects and hates rock or pop music and doesn’t want to hear it.  The former accepts worldly and even sinful dress or apparel.  The latter preaches against that in a practical way.

A church that calls itself Christian uses world amusements that target every demographic with alluring activities.  The other does exactly what the Bible presents as an obedient practice.

I could go on and on with varied descriptions of these two extremes, both calling themselves Christian.  Both of them say they believe in Jesus.  The modern or postmodern form of a professing Christian church wants toleration from the church with strict conformity to scripture.  When the biblical church, a true one, rejects the belief and practice of the false one, the false one calls this unloving, even unChristian.

Similar Doctrinal Statement, But….

Very often I’ve said that two indistinguishable churches have a very similar doctrinal statement.  The drastic incongruence between the two does not relate to their doctrinal statement.  The contradiction relates to a true or false or a beautiful or ugly imagination of God.  One fashions a god made after lust and the other after reverence.  God and all associated with Him stays sacred in a true church.  That church turns off a lot of people, not the aesthetic or feeling many professing Christians want.

Changing the God in the imagination changes everything about believing in Him, obeying Him, and worshiping Him.  It distorts everything.  Let me give you a simple illustration.

Scripture commands not to use corrupt communication.  It does not say what that is.  What was corrupt at one time and with the different imagination of God becomes uncorrupt.  It’s fine now.  Are you using corrupt communication?  No, because the meaning changed.  You have a different God that allows for that communication, so it’s fine.

The Beauty of Holiness

Psalm 96:9 says, “Worship the LORD in the beauty of holiness.”  That’s a command that one might obey or disobey.  Let’s say someone does something he calls worship and it is not in the beauty of holiness.  That isn’t worship.  Here is a person claiming to worship, but not worshiping and in reality disobeying God.  People also do not know who God is because of the false portrayal of God presented.

The false god in the imagination that might have a pretty good doctrinal statement still completely misses.  This is how two professing Christianities portray such vast difference between the other.  The true presents something according to true churches through most of history.  The false presents a counterfeit, calling itself authentic or genuine.

Most of the false Christianity deemphasizes repentance.  Some of it will hold to repentance as an entrance unto salvation in Christ.  However, it’s just the word repentance used.  It isn’t repentance, because it doesn’t turn from these worldly things that dishonor God.  It hangs on to them.

False Repentance

What does the false repentance turn from?  It can be the superficial turning of not believing to believing.  However, at the same time holding to an impostor belief.  A person still has not turned from unbelief, because he distorts belief too.  Other forms of false repentance occur.  The Apostle Paul showed how that people replace true repentance with something short of it in 2 Corinthians 7.

I don’t think what I’m writing is beyond comprehension for people.  They know that two things that are different are not the same.  Only one of these turns from the belief and practice of historic Christianity.  That’s the false one.

Many, many people have shaped Jesus into their own image and then received the false one.  They read their chosen version of the Bible, which says, believe in Jesus.  They do.  Now they think they’re saved.  He must be Jesus.  If He isn’t, they haven’t believed in Him.  They are lost.

What’s different about those believing in the false Jesus?  Jesus is immanent.  He comes down and close in His manner as described in scripture.  He’s also transcendent.  1 Peter 1:16 says, “Be ye holy; for I am holy.”  Jesus is holy.  Their Jesus is not.  He isn’t sacred and He does not require holiness like Peter says.

The Expectations of the Apostle Paul for the Visit of an Unbeliever to a Meeting of the Lord’s Church

Seeker Sensitive?

Maybe out of spiritual sensitivity someone seeks to visit a church meeting.  Such seeking happens though in far less frequency today.  A tension exists about the issue of seeking.

On the one hand, the Apostle Paul writes in Romans 3:11, “There is none that seeketh after God.”  That must be true.  God said it.

Yet, on the other hand, twenty-nine times scripture says “Seek (ye) the Lord.”  As if someone can seek the Lord when scripture says not.  A classic location for this is Isaiah 55:6.  It reads:  “Seek ye the LORD while he may be found, call ye upon him while he is near.”

One might ask, “How could God command someone to seek Him, when none can seek Him?”  Although by nature dead to God, He enables men to seek Him through His revelation.  When man seeks God, God caused that.  He wants man to find Him.

The Grace of God and Seeking

With the grace of God that appears to all men, men can seek God.  Without that grace, they would not.  A good overall understanding of this truth, the Apostle John writes in 1 John 4:19, “We love him, because He first loved us.”

Seeking based on the grace of God begins not with a worldly temptation to attend a church service.  That seeking is not seeking God.  That person follows his lust to a meeting, because a church drew him with it.  The worldly or fleshly enticement is not God’s love.  God doesn’t allure or entice.

The attraction of God is either God Himself or the things of God.  Those surpass any worldly or fleshly allure.  Yet, unbelievers still seek worldly or fleshly allure.  Church leaders know this.  To increase attendance, they use other attractions besides God and the Word of God.  Those don’t seek God.

Unbeliever Visits a Church

1 Corinthians 14:24-25

If an unbeliever sought after God and went to a church as a part of his search, what would he find?  The Apostle Paul writes what he should find in 1 Corinthians 14:24-25:

24 But if all prophesy, and there come in one that believeth not, or one unlearned, he is convinced of all, he is judged of all: 25 And thus are the secrets of his heart made manifest; and so falling down on his face he will worship God, and report that God is in you of a truth.

Carl Trueman wrote about this in World magazine:

Second, the church is not called to mimic the world. Far from it. There is only one description in the New Testament of how an outsider should react when he blunders by accident into a church service. It is in 1 Corinthians 14:24–25. Paul tells us that such a person will be convicted and fall on his face, knowing that God is there.

Presumably, this is because he finds himself in the presence of a holy God and is overwhelmed by his own sense of unworthiness. Turning worship into a comedy skit seems unlikely to produce the same result. In fact, far from being sensitive to the needs of any seeker, it sends a clear signal that the gospel is unworthy of attention by any serious-minded person, believer or unbeliever.

The Apostle Paul describes the random visit of an unbeliever to a church.  Trueman calls it, blundering by accident into a church service.  Paul’s description of a church meeting provides authority for what should characterize one.  These verses open a window into the worship of the first generation church.

Psalm 40:3

1 Corinthians 14:24-25 remind me of what David wrote in Psalm 40:3, depicting the worship of God’s people:

And he hath put a new song in my mouth, even praise unto our God: many shall see it, and fear, and shall trust in the LORD.

In this one verse, unbelievers witness the distinctive or new song of believers.  They see their praise and what?  Fear and then trust in the LORD.  These unbelievers aren’t excited, entertained, enchanted, or mesmerized when they join a meeting of God’s people.  Instead, they are shaken by “seeing” this praise from the mouths of a believing congregation.

Experience of Visitors with True Worship

When unbelievers choose to join a church meeting, 1 Corinthians 14:25 says the experience includes secrets of the heart made manifest.  Gill writes that these visitors are shown “the naughtiness of” their hearts,

discovering the lusts that are in it, detecting the errors of the mind, and filling the conscience with a sense of guilt, and a consciousness of deserved punishment; so that the person looks upon himself as particularly spoken to.

He falls on his face, speaking of a visitor’s shame over sin.  It also humbles him.  The first experience of a true seeker is “worship.”  God seeks for true worshipers (John 4:23-24), which is why they can seek Him.  The first act of true worship means the offering of a soul to God. He converts or restores the soul of the one who offers it by faith.  Jesus called this, losing one’s life for His sake.

Contrast with Contemporary Evangelical Experience

Qualities of 1 Corinthians 14:24-25 and Psalm 40:3 do not depict what most evangelicals offer an unbelieving visitor.  These churches or “communities” long ago departed from the true nature of a New Testament church.  They know their so-called “seekers” aren’t seeking those biblical, holy qualities.  Instead they give them something else more to their liking or better, lusting.  Then when they get a crowd of “seekers,” they attribute that to God working, which is a lie.  It is nothing like the work of God.

Trivialization of Worship

Trueman continues his rebuke:

Such trivialization of worship rests ultimately upon a trivialization of God Himself. It is a function of the same culture where sports stars refer to the Lord as “the big man upstairs,” as if God was just one of their drinking buddies . . . . one more example of a world that does not take the holiness and transcendence of God seriously.

It raises the fundamental question of whether some pastors even understand what the nature of worship is and why the church exists. When worship is turned into a clown show with a religious patina, Christianity and Christians are infantilized and God is mocked.

Our God, our New Testament God, is a consuming fire and to be approached with awe and reverence, as the book of Hebrews teaches. And those incapable of acting in accordance with that have no place in the pastoral ministry.

Finding a Sweet Spot

Some churches are very good at the “clown show with a religious patina.”  Other aren’t, but they still use the same strategy, only a lesser version.  Sometimes, they modify the show to avoid the extreme.  They attempt to find a sweet spot between reverence and lust.  In either case, it’s a show.  Sometimes it’s a show led by a natural showman.  He just can’t help himself.  He offers a show in the name of God.  It’s still a show though.

In John 12:25, Jesus said:

He that loveth his life shall lose it; and he that hateth his life in this world shall keep it unto life eternal.

If someone wants life eternal, he hates and loses this life.  A true seeker, who hates this life will stop seeking someplace to satisfy his lust.  A true church will stop providing a show to attract seekers by lustful allurements.

Paul Stands Against Peter and the Subject of Authority (Part Two)

Part One

The Point of Peter and Paul’s Authority

According to Galatians 2, the gospel was the point of Peter and Paul’s authority, not authority the point of their authority.  Paul used his authority with Peter, when the gospel was at stake.  He stood against him “before them all,” when Peter, Barnabas, and others “walked not uprightly according to the truth of the gospel” (Gal 2:14).  Their undermining of the gospel was in action.  It was a situation for “rebuke before all, that others may fear” (1 Tim 5:20), words written by Paul later.  The Apostle Paul used the authority of his apostleship “that the truth of the gospel might continue” (Gal 2:5).

The corruption of gospel in Peter’s walk needed correcting before them all.  It was not, let me show everyone who is boss.  Peter didn’t lose anything from what Paul did with him.  The truth and work of the gospel gained from it.   Authority was a means to an end, not the end.  After Paul wrote the narrative of this confrontation in chapter two, it kept on giving to the Galatian churches and others since then.

Pastoral Authority

You should say Paul and Peter possessed unique authority as apostles.  On the other hand, God still ordained Titus with pastoral authority.  Paul commanded Titus in Titus 2:15:

These things speak, and exhort, and rebuke with all authority. Let no man despise thee.

He is telling Titus, pastors should use all authority to execute this doctrine and practice in their churches.  “Authority” translates epitage, which means, “the right or authority to command.”  Pastors have the authority to speak, exhort, and rebuke someone when he won’t believe or do these things.  Paul doesn’t tell Titus, speak, exhort, and even rebuke church members over the matter of authority.

A lot of scriptural belief and practice clashes with the culture.  It would in Crete.  Cretans didn’t live like the expectations of Titus 2.  Pastors in Crete could tell people what they needed in order to live like God wanted them.  Pastors had the authority to do this.  The goal of course was these Cretans living like God wanted, not telling everyone that pastors were in charge.

The Goal to Help and Change

Space to Repent

As a pastor, helping people to live right requires patience and understanding.  Even the Jezebel of the church at Thyatira Jesus gave space to repent of her wickedness before bringing the hammer down (Rev 2:21).  The goal was the change, the sanctification, or even true conversion.  The idea here is not, “I’m cutting you off because you won’t do what I say.”  Or, “Here’s the box, go clean out your desk and leave the building.”

Meekness

Later in Galatians 6:1-2 Paul writes to those churches he planted in that region:

1 Brethren, if a man be overtaken in a fault, ye which are spiritual, restore such an one in the spirit of meekness; considering thyself, lest thou also be tempted. 2 Bear ye one another’s burdens, and so fulfil the law of Christ.

Truly saved people, which are spiritual, want restoration.  Getting there requires meekness.  Meekness isn’t weakness.  People used the Greek word in describing the constraining and usefulness of a powerful horse.  Paul includes bearing the burden of the person, understanding the pain, hardship, and difficulty.  It isn’t an inquisition, where men sit before their victim and harangue and pummel with harsh countenances.

Different Categories of People

Unruly, Feebleminded, and Weak

People in a church will break down into various categories.  Paul writes in 1 Thessalonians 5:14-15:

14 Now we exhort you, brethren, warn them that are unruly, comfort the feebleminded, support the weak, be patient toward all men. 15 See that none render evil for evil unto any man; but ever follow that which is good, both among yourselves, and to all men.

Paul reserves warning for the unruly.  Others get comfort and support.  Everyone gets patience.  Render to no one evil for evil.  Offering evil to evil does not solve evil.  Pastors are not the prison wardens, who treat church members like criminals.  They want to help them.  Pastors don’t start with accusations and warnings.  They investigate and find what could bring everyone to the best spot.

Older and Younger Men

Using his apostolic authority, Paul told Timothy in 1 Timothy 5:1:

Rebuke not an elder, but intreat him as a father; and the younger men as brethren.

Pastors might feel intimidated by an older man and what he might do.  You may notice especially today differences in older men.  Many of them don’t talk with an effeminate voice.  That voice may seem like it needs rebuke.  Paul says, intreat.  How does someone intreat?  We get rebuke, but what is intreat?

Rebuke provides a contrast.  Rebuke reprimands someone, calls him out on the carpet, dresses him down.  Smokes him.  Paul says never do that with an older man.

Showing Men Respect

Pastors, you will lose your men when you won’t show them respect.  You may not think they deserve your respect.  You may think that only you deserve respect, because you’re pastor.  Men do, because they’re made in the image of God.  God gave men a role that requires respect.  Paul told the wives of the church at Ephesus to reverence their husbands (Eph 5:33).

“Intreat” in 1 Timothy 5:1 translates parakaleoBDAG says this exact usage in 1 Timothy 5:1 means:

treat someone in an inviting or congenial manner, someth. like our ‘be open to the other, have an open door’: invite in, conciliate, be friendly to or speak to in a friendly manner

“Intreat” does not mean, sit hard faced with a monotone voice that espouses edicts.  It is not the following:

sternly tell them to behave well, to demand good behavior and warn them of dire consequences if they do not stop what they are doing

That falls under the definition of “reading the riot act.”  Some pastors are among the biggest professionals at this behavior.

Considering Thyself

Consistency and Inconsistency

In Galatians 6:1, Paul mentions a factor encouraging meekness in restoration:  “considering thyself, lest thou also be tempted.”  A person might sometimes violate the very belief and practice he confronts in another person.  No one is completely consistent in belief and practice.  Someone can try, but he’ll fail at perfect consistency.

When the proudest person you know confronts you harshly over pride, it’s tough to take that from him.  You should still listen to him.  Pride is bad.  Proud people expect great humility from the ones they confront.  If a proud man won’t save his lecture to someone else over pride, he might think of using meekness, considering his own history of pride.

Pride and Insecurity

Pride relates to self.  It manifests itself in dramatically different ways.  An insecure person focuses on his self.  A pastor might overcompensate for that insecurity by blowing other people away.  He doesn’t want others to see weakness.  Paul anticipated this possibility from both Timothy and Titus.  He commanded Titus, “Let no man despise thee” (Titus 2:15).  He meant, “Don’t let anyone ignore what you’re telling them to do; you’ve got the authority to expect this from them.”

Someone confident through focus on Christ does not need to compensate for weakness.  He exhibits real strength, finding security from God.  He knows his job is not about himself, but pleasing His Master.

Right Use of Authority

The Apostle Paul wanted to help Peter and Barnabas, the Antioch and Jerusalem churches, the Galatian churches, and everyone who needed a true gospel then and into the future.  His ministry didn’t destroy Peter.  He writes his second epistle (2 Peter) over twenty years after this event.  His leadership wasn’t stopped by Paul’s confrontation, but when the Romans crucified him upside down.  He continued an effective servant of God all the way to his martyrdom.

As a pastor, you don’t want your wrong use of authority to end relationships.  You might have your favorites, and you especially determine that by how they treat you.  Like a Rehoboam, you like the way they respond to you and your ideas.  That means they’re a good church member.  They treat you nice; you treat them nice.  It should matter to you when you lose someone who wasn’t lockstep with your authority.  You are not the pillar and ground for the truth.  The church is.

Perhaps every pastor will step over the line in his use of pastoral authority.  I like to say, “There are no dress rehearsals.”  It’s good to admit when you’ve done this.  I’m sure those you’ve violated would appreciate hearing you at least wonder whether you did this to them.

More to Come

Roman Catholicism Versus Protestantism: Candace Owens Show (part three)

Part One     Part Two

Worship, Roman Catholic or Protestant

Differences

Roman Catholic George Farmer debated Protestant Allie Beth Stuckey on the Candace Owens Show.  Picking up midway of part two, Owens challenged Stuckey about the silliness in evangelical worship.  I see this as a legitimate criticism of evangelicalism, not however a legitimate promotion of Roman Catholicism.

Everything about Protestantism does not not translate to modern evangelicalism.  Worship and church growth philosophy are two of these.  These relate more to the decaying culture of Western civilization and its effect on the church.

I imagine far less change in the formal tradition of Roman Catholic liturgy than what occurred to Western evangelicalism as an offshoot of Protestantism.  Built into the formal liturgy of Roman Catholicism is a dogma of a transcendent imagination of God.  Cavernous cathedrals, stained glass windows, robes, huge wood carved lecterns, sacraments, and pipe organs, even removed from sincerity and true spiritual reality, communicate reverence and seriousness more than evangelical practices today.  Both are false, just like Judaistic and Samaritan worship had become in Jesus’ time.

Perversions in True Worship

Stuckey could not give a coherent answer to Owen’s criticism of evangelical worship.  She doesn’t show understanding of the problem from a biblical or theological perspective.  Stuckey made some good points about seeker-sensitive church growth philosophy and its effects on worship.  It’s true that when churches become man-centered through strategies of church growth, it corrupts worship.  She didn’t seem concerned about the issue, which is normal for evangelicals.  Very few care that God isn’t worshiped by their worldly, irreverent, intemperate, lustful music and atmosphere.  This shapes a false view of God that undermines true evangelism and biblical sanctification.

God calls on us to worship Him in the beauty of His holiness (Psalm 96:9).  Beauty is objective.  It is defined by God and His nature and the perfections of His attributes.  Modernism, which includes modern evangelicalism, ejects from objective beauty and, thus, true worship of God.  This changes the true God in the imagination of the worshipers to a false God.  This corrupts worship in a significant way akin to the corruption authored by Roman Catholicism.

The Gospel

John 3:5

Allie Beth Stuckey then asks George Farmer what the gospel is.  He starts by talking about baptism and the eucharist, first quoting John 3:5.  Farmer says that this verse is explicit for baptism as a necessity for salvation.  It reads:

Jesus answered, Verily, verily, I say unto thee, Except a man be born of water and of the Spirit, he cannot enter into the kingdom of God.

Farmer points to baptismal regeneration as sola scriptura, using John 3:5 and saying he depends on scripture for his doctrine of salvation.  He argues this is salvation by grace, because the child can do nothing.  At the moment of baptism, we do nothing, so that must be grace.  He says the early church agreed with that argument, and I’m assuming he refers to the patristic testimony for it.  Farmer follows the infant sprinkling as a means of salvation by speaking of the avoidance of mortal sin to stay saved.  He doesn’t explain that, but that clarifies his view.

Ephesians 2:8-9 and James 2

Stuckey quotes Ephesians 2:8-9 from the ESV.  She says his description of salvation is grace plus works, bringing merit or works to it.  Stuckey explains the Catholic view of grace as an ability to earn the salvation.  She continues with a mention of 2 Corinthians 5:21, that we become the righteousness of God in Christ.

Farmer rebuts Stuckey by saying that the Roman Catholic Church does not believe salvation by works.  He compares infant sprinkling to irresistible grace.  The child can’t resist.  He says that as long as someone doesn’t commit a mortal sin from that point, he will go to heaven.  Then Farmer brings in James 2, that God inscribes a person with grace and through works he receives more grace.  He interprets James 2 as, you are not saved through faith alone.

Stuckey makes two arguments.  She references election, that we’re chosen before the foundation of the world.  Then she reinforces Ephesians 2:8-9 again.  When Owens pushes back, she explains James 2.  It is works that accompany faith, as seen in the context of the New Testament, all the clear passages for faith alone and grace alone.

Baptism and the Lord’s Table

The conversation comes back to baptism for Farmer.  He says the person receives grace through baptism, so it is grace by which someone is saved.  He quotes Chesterton to say that it is more than a symbol.  This was the issue for Farmer for turning Catholic from Protestant.  He sees baptism and the eucharist as more than symbols.

Stuckey had good things to say to Farmer, but it did not seem that she participated much in evangelism or apologetics with Roman Catholics.  She needed refutations for the proof texts Farmer gave her.  She also needed more verses on the contrast between grace and faith and works.  Actually, Roman Catholics will almost never argue like Farmer.  I can count with one hand out of thousands of Catholics, those who try to defend their beliefs.  However, Church of Christ, Christian Church, and others will argue like Farmer or harder.  They keep you sharp on the issues of the debate.

Farmer continued later with an explanation of the real presence of Christ in the elements.  He said this is the earliest Christian teaching, found again and again in Christian writing.  He taught baptism and the Lord’s Table as crucial to his becoming Roman Catholic.  It is important to show that Roman Catholic history is not the history of true Christianity.  False doctrine and practice already corrupted the church by earlier than the third century.

Final Comments

John 3:5

I don’t know what Stuckey thought about John 3:5.  Farmer used it first and she said nothing about it.  Many Protestants think “water” in John 3:5 is baptism.  Martin Luther and John Calvin thought so, so maybe that’s why Stuckey wouldn’t touch it.  Thomas Ross and I both believe it is natural birth, the water being amniotic fluid.  In answering Nicodemus, Jesus described the second birth, born first of water and then second of the Spirit.  He explains the new birth or being born again.  A second birth is necessary, a spiritual one after a physical one. This reads clear to me and a quick exposition of this text would have been better.

James 2 and Romans 4

Stuckey should have dealt with justification, which is a good place to answer James 2.  Abraham was justified by faith before God, as seen in Genesis 15:6 and Romans 4:1-6, the latter a good place to explain, also including Romans 3:20.  Paul doesn’t mention baptism in Romans 3 through 5.  In James 2, works justified Abraham before men, which means they “vindicated” him, another meaning of “justified.”  A man shows his faith by his works.  James explains this.

Galatians and Hebrews

I also think someone must go to Galatians and Hebrews to talk to a Roman Catholic, especially Galatians 2, 3, and 5, and then Hebrews 9 and 10.  A good question to ask a Roman Catholic is if he believes he has full forgiveness of sins throughout all eternity.  He should explicate four verses in Hebrews 9-10:  9:27-28, 10:10, 14.  Through the one offering of Christ someone is forever perfected and sanctified.  These are perfect tense verbs, completed action with ongoing results.

I like Galatians 5 to show that even adding one work to grace nullifies grace.  Stuckey could have quoted Romans 11:6, which says if it’s grace it is no more works and if it is works, it is no more grace.  Grace and works are mutually exclusive.

Preparation

This encounter between the three participants shows a need for regular evangelism.  Stuckey seemed uncomfortable with boldness.  She might not be able to be friends with the other two.  And then maybe she doesn’t get the kind of show or podcast that she has.  I don’t know.

Someone who does not in a regular way confront the lost over their false gospel or false religion may stay unprepared for a difficult occasion.  It is hard to keep good arguments in your head if you don’t use them a lot through constant practice.  Hopefully, as you listened to this conversation with these three, you were ready to give an answer for the glory of God.

Addenda

I wanted to add one more thing, which I thought about driving somewhere this afternoon.  Farmer brought in infant sprinkling as salvation by grace.  He said this was scriptural.  Stuckey also should have pushed back against infant sprinkling.  It’s not in the Bible anywhere.  She could have gone to a number of places on this.

Obviously, Farmer could just bring the authority of the Roman Catholic Church, the Pope, and tradition.  When you can make it up as you go along, you can believe anything.  Not only is infant sprinkling not in the Bible anywhere, but it is refuted by several places.  I think of the Ethiopian Eunuch in Acts 8, what doth hinder me from being baptized?  Philip said, “Believe in the Lord Jesus Christ.”  Infants can’t believe in Jesus, so they are still hindered from being baptized.  Every example of baptism is believer’s baptism.

What About Unconditional Respect?

Unconditional Respect

Men from my era grew up learning unconditional respect.  The men before me taught us to respect our parents.  Was that right?  Sure.  “Honor thy Father and thy Mother” (Exodus 20:12, Deuteronomy 5:16, Matthew 15:4, 19:19, Mark 7:10, 10:19, Luke 18:20, and Ephesians 6:2).  Did they base this respect on any prerequisites from the parents?  No.  You just did it.  And you just do it.

People today for sure hear and talk about unconditional love.  When scripture commands, Husbands love your wives (Ephesians 5:25), you love your wives.  It’s not, love your wives, depending on what they do for you.  The example for this is Jesus — “even as Christ also loved the church.”

It comes with a certain disclaimer, but I recommend the book, Love & Respect: The Love She Most Desires; The Respect He Desperately Needs by Emmerson Eggerichs.  The subtitle of the book gives away the main point of the book, “The Respect He Desperately Needs.”  Many books on marriage major on unconditional love.  I’ve not read a book that had properly represented unconditional respect.

Ephesians 5:31

Eggerichs backs his proposition with Ephesians 5:31 as a theme verse:  “Nevertheless let every one of you in particular so love his wife even as himself; and the wife see that she reverence her husband.”  Yes, Love your wives, not depending on what they do for you.  But also, respect (reverence) your husbands, not depending on what they do for you.

Without a doubt a husband helps his wife in her role of respect by loving her.  The converse is also true though.  Without a doubt a wife helps her husband in his role of love by respecting him.  I would contend as Eggerichs does in the book that most couples say they believe in unconditional love but have not considered unconditional respect.  He depends on more than Ephesians 5:31 to make this point (Consider 1 Peter 3:1-2).  There are others.  But it is a scriptural teaching.

Couples would revolutionize their marriages by taking heed to both, unconditional love and unconditional respect.  I would say, with special attention to the latter.  It’s the one most ignored and that’s patently obvious in our society today.

Men Respecting Men Too

Taking my theme for this post into another application.  Men, you won’t do well at helping other men, when you won’t show them the respect God intends either.  You should respect the position or office of other men.  Men may not show you respect if you won’t give it.

You defraud a man when you operate outside of his authority.  This is following the chain of command.  Just because you have authority over a man, it doesn’t mean you have authority in a sphere where he holds authority.  I’m talking about with his wife and children.  If you circumvent a man with his wife and children, don’t be surprised if you lose him as a leader.

You might get the like and maybe even the love of women when you disrespect a man.  Do not expect to get the respect of men though.

Sphere of Authority

As men, we also should try very hard not to embarrass a man within a sphere of his authority.  Don’t take personal conversations outside the personal without asking his permission.  You understand.  This shows him respect.  This is just a sample of what we should understand as a “man code.”

Scripture also says something about honoring, giving special respect to, older men.

Leviticus 19:32, Thou shalt rise up before the hoary head, and honour the face of the old man, and fear thy God: I am the LORD.

1 Timothy 5:1, Rebuke not an elder, but intreat him as a father; and the younger men as brethren;

Society has become more and more egalitarian.  Especially young people want respect with almost never giving respect themselves to others.

I’ve written about the general principle of respect for men.  God created men this way.  Much more can be said about how to respect a man.  First though, may we acknowledge the general principle.

The Gospel Is the Power of God Unto Salvation, pt. 6

Part One     Part Two     Part Three     Part Four     Part Five

The Apostle Paul writes that “the gospel is the power of God unto salvation” (Romans 1:16).  He uses those words to explain why in the first half of the same verse that he is “not ashamed of the gospel of Christ.”  Maybe you might think that when Paul is saying that he is not ashamed of the gospel, that there was no way he would be.  Paul ends Ephesians and Colossians asking for the churches to pray for boldness for him to preach the gospel.

Not Ashamed of the Gospel:  Worship

Paul could be ashamed, but he wasn’t, because the gospel is the power of God unto salvation.  If he was ashamed, that meant less gospel preaching and then less salvation.  What occurs when shame for the gospel brings less gospel preaching?

Earlier in Romans 1, Paul writes, “For God is my witness, whom I serve with my spirit in the gospel of his Son.”  His word “serve” translates the Greek word latreuo, which is translated “worship” elsewhere (Philippians 3:3).  As the word “serve” it is the priestly service, which enacts the offerings and the sacrifices.  The priests presented these to God as prescribed by Him in His Word.  This hearkens to the language of Paul in Romans 12:1, “present your bodies a living sacrifice, holy, acceptable unto God, which is your reasonable service.”

To “present” is to “offer.”  “Service” in Romans 12:1 is latreia, the noun form of the verb latreuo.  It is reasonable worship.  Worship is giving God what He wants.  Priests in the Old Testament sacrificial system served, but it was the priestly service of offerings.  They presented to God what He said in His ceremonial law.

Jesus made New Testament believers “priests” (Rev 1:6).  As Peter wrote, New Testament believers are a holy priesthood, offering up spiritual sacrifices unto God (1 Peter 2:5).  This equals or surpasses what Old Testament priests did.  It isn’t lesser.

In Romans 1:9 the Apostle Paul says his gospel preaching is to worship with his spirit.  Worship must be acceptable to God.  His preaching of the gospel is acceptable unto God.  Worship glorifies God.

The Missionary Psalm

The glory of God corresponds to the perfections of God’s attributes.  His attributes are revealed before men.  Glorifying God exalts those attributes by showing them.  Preaching the gospel shows forth the attributes of God.  With regard to this, I think of Psalm 67, what Spurgeon and others called and call “the missionary psalm.”

1 <To the chief Musician on Neginoth, A Psalm or Song.> God be merciful unto us, and bless us; and cause his face to shine upon us; Selah. 2 That thy way may be known upon earth, thy saving health among all nations. 3 Let the people praise thee, O God; let all the people praise thee. 4 O let the nations be glad and sing for joy: for thou shalt judge the people righteously, and govern the nations upon earth. Selah. 5 Let the people praise thee, O God; let all the people praise thee. 6 Then shall the earth yield her increase; and God, even our own God, shall bless us. 7 God shall bless us; and all the ends of the earth shall fear him.

Spurgeon writes in his Treasury:

How admirably balanced are the parts of this missionary song! The people of God long to see all the nations participating in their privileges, “visited with God’s salvation, and gladdened with the gladness of his nation” (Ps 106:5). They long to hear all the nationalities giving thanks to the Lord, and hallowing his name; to see the face of the whole earth, which sin has darkened so long, smiling with the brightness of a second Eden.

Exalting God Before the Heathen

Evangelism makes God’s way “known upon the earth,” His “saving health among all nations” (verse 2).  The point of this in the end (verse 7) is that “all the ends of the earth shall fear him.”  Worship starts with knowing Who God is, which brings reverence of Him, respect of Him, lifting Him up to His rightful place in the imagination of men.  The gospel shows who God is in all His attributes.  This is worth consideration.

Believers can talk about the gospel among themselves.  It’s worth it.  However, God wants exaltation among the heathen, among the nations, and in the world.  He made those people in His image.  He created them for His pleasure.  Even if they don’t believe the gospel, they should hear it.   When believers preach it, the true gospel, they exalt God.

To be ashamed of the gospel is to be ashamed of the power of God, which is an attribute of God.  However, salvation itself as told by the gospel also manifests attributes of God:  His holiness, His righteousness, His love, His goodness. His justice, and more.  Even if someone doesn’t receive the gospel. believers worship God by preaching it.

More to Come

Should Christians Learn Greek and Hebrew? Yes! Part 2 of 2

While not all Christians need to learn Greek and Hebrew, knowledge of the Biblical languages has historically been viewed as necessary for students in Biblical seminaries, colleges, and institutes.  Why?

Summarizing the first five pages of the study Reasons Christians Should and Can Learn Greek and Hebrew, the Biblical Languages, the answers to this question include:

 

1.) Jesus Christ learned Greek and Hebrew. if the Savior learned and honored the Greek and Hebrew languages, those who follow Him can do likewise.

2.) Learning Greek and Hebrew shows reverence for God’s inspired and preserved revelation.  Belief in verbal, plenary inspiration and verbal, plenary preservation leads to the study of Hebrew and Greek as a necessary consequence.

3.) Greek and Hebrew powerfully aid the study of God’s Word.  Many conclusive examples are supplied in the larger study which this blog post is summarizing.

4.) Greek and Hebrew help one observe more accurately and thoroughly, understand more clearly, evaluate more fairly, and interpret more confidently the inspired details of the Biblical text.

5.) Accurate translations are authoritative in their substance, and so it is proper to refer to the English Authorized Version as inspired in a derivative sense.  However, there are details of God’s inspired revelation that can only be understood by those who know Greek and Hebrew.  One can affirm not only that the KJV is inspired whenever it is accurate, but even that it is perfectly accurate and has no errors in translation, and still see tremendous value in learning Greek and Hebrew.

 

Indeed, study of the Biblical languages is a good and necessary consequence of the fact that God has revealed Himself and His will in Hebrew and Greek words.

Please read the entirety of the first five pages here, and feel free to comment on them below.  May they prove edifying, whether or not one ever learns the Biblical languages of Greek and Hebrew.

 

TDR

If the Perfectly Preserved Greek New Testament Is the Textus Receptus, Which TR Edition Is It? Pt. 1

The Bible claims that God wrote it word for word.  God also promised to preserve it word for word in the same languages in which He wrote it.  Through history, Christians believed this, even with the reality of copyist errors, what men now call textual variants.   Professing Christian leaders today challenge the assertion of the perfect preservation of scripture.

Kevin Bauder wrote, Only One Bible?, the answer to which is, “Yes.”  Of course there is only one Bible.  His assumption though is, “No, there is more than one.” To Bauder and those like him, the answer to the title of the book is obvious “No.”  In their world, within a certain percentage of variation between them, several Bibles can and do exist.  Bauder wrote:

If they are willing to accept a manuscript or a text that might omit any words (even a single word) from the originals, or that might add any words (even a single word) to the originals, then their whole position is falsified. . . . If preservation does not really have to include every word, then the whole controversy is no more than a debate over percentages.

The “Which TR?” question also deals with Bauder’s point.  Are any of the editions of the TR without error?  If so, which one?  When you say “Scrivener’s” to Bauder and others, you are admitting a type of English trajectory to the perfect Greek text.  When you say, “One of the TR editions is very, very close, but not perfect,” then you surrender on the issue of perfection.  That’s why they ask the question.

The TR never meant one printed edition.  Even Kurt and Barbara Aland the famed textual critics, the “A” in “NA” (Nestles-Aland), wrote (“The Text of the Church?” in Trinity Journal, Fall, 1987, p.131):

[I]t is undisputed that from the 16th to the 18th century orthodoxy’s doctrine of verbal inspiration assumed this Textus Receptus. It was the only Greek text they knew, and they regarded it as the ‘original text.’

He also wrote in his The Text of the New Testament (p. 11):

We can appreciate better the struggle for freedom from the dominance of the Textus Receptus when we remember that in this period it was regarded even to the last detail the inspired and infallible word of God himself.

His wife Barbara writes in her book, The Text of the New Testament (pp. 6-7):

[T]he Textus Receptus remained the basic text and its authority was regarded as canonical. . . . Every theologian of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries (and not just the exegetical scholars) worked from an edition of the Greek text of the New Testament which was regarded as the “revealed text.” This idea of verbal inspiration (i. e., of the literal and inerrant inspiration of the text) which the orthodoxy of both Protestant traditions maintained so vigorously, was applied to the Textus Receptus.

I say all that, because Aland accurately does not refer to an edition of the TR, neither does he speak of the TR like it is an edition.  It isn’t.  That is invented language used as a reverse engineering argument by critical text proponents, differing with the honest proposition of Aland, quoted above.  They very often focus on Desiderius Erasmus and his first printed edition of the Greek New Testament.  That’s not how believers viewed what the Van Kleecks call the Standard Sacred Text, others call the Ecclesiastical Text, and still others the Traditional Text.

Neither does Bruce Metzger refer to an edition of the Textus Receptus; only to the Textus Receptus (The Text of the New Testament: Its Transmission, Corruption, and Restoration, 4th ed. [Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2005], pp. 106-251):

Having secured . . . preeminence, what came to be called the Textus Receptus of the New Testament resisted for 400 years all scholarly effort to displace it. . . . [The] “Textus Receptus,” or commonly received, standard text . . . makes the boast that “[the reader has] the text now received by all, in which we give nothing changed or corrupted.” . . . [This] form of Greek text . . . succeeded in establishing itself as “the only true text” of the New Testament and was slavishly reprinted in hundreds of subsequent editions. It lies at the basis of the King James Version and of all the principal Protestant translations in the languages of Europe prior to 1881.  [T]he reverence accorded the Textus Receptus. . . [made] attempts to criticize or emend it . . . akin to sacrilege. . . . For almost two centuries . . . almost all of the editors of the New Testament during this period were content to reprint the time-honored . . . Textus Receptus. . . . In the early days of . . . determining textual groupings . . . the manuscript was collated against the Textus Receptus . . . . This procedure made sense to scholars, who understood the Textus Receptus as the original text of the New Testament, for then variations from it would be “agreements in error.”

The Textus Receptus does not refer to a single printed edition of the New Testament.  The language of a received text proceeds from true believers in a time before the printing press in hand copies and then leading to the period of its printing.  Belief in perfection of the preservation of scripture comes from promises of God in His Word.  The Critical Text advocate responds: “Yes, but we see variations between hand written copies and even the printed editions.”  What do they mean by this response?

Critical Text advocates are saying that in light of textual variants, those preservation passages must mean something other than perfect, divine preservation of scripture.  They say that they can’t be used to teach perfect preservation of scripture anymore, like historically true Christians have taught them, because textual variants show that teaching can’t be true.  What divinely inspired or supernatural scripture says is then not the truth, but apparent natural evidence is the truth.  When they talk about the truth, they aren’t talking about scripture.  They are talking about the speculation of textual criticism by textual critics, mostly unbelieving.

Bruce Metzger wrote in The Text of the New Testament (the one quoted above and here in p. 219 and p. 340):  “Textual criticism is not a branch of mathematics, nor indeed an exact science at all. . . . We must acknowledge that we simply do not know what the author originally wrote.”  He and Bart Ehrman say much more like that quotation, but this is why I called modern textual criticism, “speculation.”  Critical text advocates should not call their speculation, “truth.”

You might ask, “So are you going to answer the question in the title of this post?”  Yes.  God preserved the New Testament perfectly in the Textus Receptus, not in one printed edition.  This has always been my position.  Here is how I (and others, like Thomas Ross) would describe this.

First, Scripture promises that God will forever preserve every one of His written words, which are Hebrew, Aramaic, and Greek ones (Ps 12:6-7, 33:11, 119:152, 160; Is 30:8, 40:8; 1 Pet 1:23-25; Mt 5:18, 24:35).   God promised the preservation of words, not ink, paper, or particular printed editions.  They were specific words, and not a generalized word.

Second, Scripture promises the general availability of every one of His Words to every generation of believers (Dt 29:29; 30:11-14; Is 34:16, 59:21; Mt 4:4; 5:18-19; 2 Pet 3:2; Jude 17).  Yes, the Words are in heaven, but they are also on earth, available to believers.  This does not guarantee His Words to unbelievers, just to believers.  If the words were not available, those were not His Words.  The Words He preserved could not be unavailable for at least several hundred years, like those in the critical text.

Third, Scripture promises that God would lead His saints into all truth, and that the Word, all of His words, are truth (Jn 16:13, 17:8, 17).   True churches of Christ would receive and guard these words (Mt 28:19-20; Jn 17:8; Acts 8:14, 11:1, 17:11; 1 Thess 2:13; 1 Cor 15:3; 1 Tim 3:15). Believers called the New Testament Greek text, the textus receptus, because the churches received it and then kept it.  Churches of truly converted people with a true gospel and the indwelling Holy Spirit bore testimony to this text as perfect.  Many, many quotes evince this doctrine, including this one by John Owen from His Works:

But my present considerations being not to be extended beyond the concernment of the truth which in the foregoing discourse I have pleaded for, I shall first propose a brief abstract thereof, as to that part of it which seems to be especially concerned, and then lay down what to me appears in its prejudice in the volumes now under debate, not doubting but a fuller account of the whole will by some or other be speedily tendered unto the learned and impartial readers of them. The sum of what I am pleading for, as to the particular head to be vindicated, is, That as the Scriptures of the Old and New Testament were immediately and entirely given out by God himself, his mind being in them represented unto us without the least interveniency of such mediums and ways as were capable of giving change or alteration to the least iota or syllable; so, by his good and merciful providential dispensation, in his love to his word and church, his whole word, as first given out by him, is preserved unto us entire in the original languages; where, shining in its own beauty and lustre (as also in all translations, so far as they faithfully represent the originals), it manifests and evidences unto the consciences of men, without other foreign help or assistance, its divine original and authority.

This reflects the position of the Westminster Confession of Faith and the later London Baptist Confession.  Professor E. D. Morris for decades taught the Westminster Confession at Lane Theological Seminary in Cincinnati, Ohio. Philip Schaff consulted with him for his Creeds of Christendom. In 1893, Morris wrote for The Evangelist:

As a Professor in a Theological Seminary, it has been my duty to make a special study of the Westminster Confession of Faith, as have I done for twenty years; and I venture to affirm that no one who is qualified to give an opinion on the subject, would dare to risk his reputation on the statement that the Westminster divines ever thought the original manuscripts of the Bible were distinct from the copies in their possession.

Richard Capel represents the position well (Capel’s Remains, London, 1658, pp. 19-43):

[W]e have the Copies in both languages [Hebrew and Greek], which Copies vary not from Primitive writings in any matter which may stumble any. This concernes onely the learned, and they know that by consent of all parties, the most learned on all sides among Christians do shake hands in this, that God by his providence hath preserved them uncorrupt. . . . As God committed the Hebrew text of the Old Testament to the Jewes, and did and doth move their hearts to keep it untainted to this day: So I dare lay it on the same God, that he in his providence is so with the Church of the Gentiles, that they have and do preserve the Greek Text uncorrupt, and clear: As for some scrapes by Transcribers, that comes to no more, than to censure a book to be corrupt, because of some scrapes in the printing, and tis certain, that what mistake is in one print, is corrected in another.

Perfect preservation admitted scribal errors, but because of providential preservation, “what mistake is in one print, is corrected in another.”  Critical text advocates conflate this to textual criticism about which foremost historian Richard Muller wrote on p. 541 of the second volume of his Post Reformation Reformed Dogmatics:

All too much discussion of the Reformers’ methods has attempted to turn them into precursors of the modern critical method, when in fact, the developments of exegesis and hermeneutics in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries both precede and, frequently conflict with (as well as occasionally adumbrate) the methods of the modern era.

Muller wrote on p. 433:

By “original and authentic” text, the Protestant orthodox do not mean the autographa which no one can possess but the apographa in the original tongue which are the source of all versions. The Jews throughout history and the church in the time of Christ regarded the Hebrew of the Old Testament as authentic and for nearly six centuries after Christ, the Greek of the New Testament was viewed as authentic without dispute. It is important to note that the Reformed orthodox insistence on the identification of the Hebrew and Greek texts as alone authentic does not demand direct reference to autographa in those languages; the “original and authentic text” of Scripture means, beyond the autograph copies, the legitimate tradition of Hebrew and Greek apographa.

These biblical presuppositions are true.  For the New Testament, only the textus receptus fulfills those presuppositions.  Those words were preserved in the language in which they were written, koine Greek.  They were the only words available to the generations of believers from 1500 to 1881.  They are also the only words that believers ever agreed, received, and testified were God’s preserved Words in the language in which they were written.

To Be Continued

AUTHORS OF THE BLOG

  • Kent Brandenburg
  • Thomas Ross

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