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Embracing An Unstoppable Advantage For Guaranteed Longstanding Victory (Part Three)

Part One     Part Two

War Against the Soul

A non-stop, real war exists through the history of the world between light and darkness.  As a part of that war, Peter expresses an unstoppable advantage for guaranteed longstanding victory.  He says in 1 Peter 2:11:

Dearly beloved, I beseech you as strangers and pilgrims, abstain from fleshly lusts, which war against the soul.

The appropriate part of the verse to declare an aspect of war and victory is at the end:  “which war against the soul.”  What wars against the soul?  “Fleshly lusts” do.  Abstinence from fleshly lusts eliminates a crucial component for losing this war with darkness.  .

A question might and should arise, “How do fleshly lusts war against the soul of a person?”  Fleshly lusts cause spiritual and psychological disadvantages in the war against the soul.  You need your soul and spirit operating in an optimal way and fleshly lusts wound them.

Confidence in Christ

Confidence in Christ functions within the soul and spirit, not the flesh.  Six different thoughts come to my mind on this, not necessarily in this order.

Persuasion

First, confidence is persuasion (peitho).  You can behave with strength, because you have confidence, confidence in the Lord (2 Thess 3:4) and not in the flesh (Philip 3:3-4).  Jesus said, “Lo, I am with you alway” (Matt 28:20).  Jesus is sanctified in your heart, so you’re ready to give an answer of the hope within you (1 Pet 3:15).  Readiness comes by fortifying the soul.

Uppermost Affections

Second, you can please God by faith because God abides in the uppermost of your affections (Heb 11:6).  You live like He’s your Judge and He does not lie.  This rest in Him provides a settled peace that isn’t moved.

Thinking on These Things

Third, anxiety comes not from victimhood, but from not thinking on what is true, honest, just, etc. (Philip 4:8).  You’ll remain anxious if you adopt victim status.  You’re not one.  The peace of God keeps you through Christ Jesus, but only by thinking on it.  That’s in your soul.

Sidelining Deflation

Fourth, Satan wants you a casualty, someone out of the fight.  He uses those fiery darts that penetrate the heart, not in a deadly manner, but in an injurious or incapacitating way.  The Apostle Paul had an open door in Troas, but because he had no rest in his spirit (2 Corinthians 2:13), he missed an opportunity.  People become incapable of fulfilling God’s will because they subject themselves to fear and discouragement.  Their deflation keeps them sidelined.

Boldness

Fifth, Paul twice asked church saints, once of Ephesus and once of Colossi, to pray that he would have boldness.  Boldness comes when the Spirit fills a believer in his inner man.  He speaks the truth in love and the Spirit encourages him.

Filled with the Knowledge of God’s Will

Sixth, Paul prayed that the knowledge of God’s will would fill the saints of the church in Colossi (Col 1:9).  Furthermore, he says this knowledge of God’s will is in all wisdom and spiritual understanding.  God’s will is not arbitrary.  It is based on wisdom and understanding and not a feeling proceeding from the flesh.

Fleshly lusts debilitate everyone, both believers and unbelievers.  It is a very sad tale when they strafe the souls of believers.  They bring this on themselves.  Believers have all the resources in the grace of God to abstain.  They just won’t.  The worst thing very often that you can do to one of these professing believers is exhort or admonish them about it.  They are quick to speak, slow to hear, and quick to wrath.

Beach Heads or Gates

John Bunyan clued true believers to the methodology of fleshly lusts.  Before him in Pilgrim’s Progress, it was James 1:13-16.  The gates through which fleshly lusts pass are akin to the allies taking the beaches in the South Pacific and at Normandy.  The flesh forms a beach head through the eye gate, the ear gate, and the three other lesser senses:  touch, taste, and smell.  Abstaining from fleshly lusts means guarding those gates, stewarding them.

The Nazis had deadly holds on the Beaches of Northern France.  Those required removing for victory to occur.  Allied soldiers eliminated them at great cost.  Professing believers instead contribute to the fleshly strongholds in many different ways.  They talk like God gives them liberty to keep those deadly beach heads.

More to Come

The Uncertainty of the “Textual Confidence” View of Preservation of Scripture

For those reading, next week either Monday or Wednesday, I will provide as concise an answer as possible to the question, “Which TR?”  I’ve answered this question before several times, but it’s usually just ignored, never answered.  I’ve never had it answered.  It’s asked as a gotcha question, then I give the answer, followed by silence.  I’m going to try to do the best I’ve ever done at the answer.

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A group of four men calling themselves The Textual Confidence Collective recorded seven podcasts for youtube.  These men posted their first on Monday, July 11, 2022.  The purpose of their gathering in Texas for these recordings was to persuade people of a new position on preservation of scripture.  They call it “textual confidence.”  They’ve given their own new position an enticing or attractive label, but it is still new.

Confidence sounds very good.  Confidence in Collective parlance is akin to the word “trust.”  I believe that’s what they mean by “confidence.”  Placing confidence in someone or something is trusting it or trusting in it.  In the scriptural use of the word “trust,” God does not call for confidence or trust in the uncertain.  Uncertainty also does not bring biblical trust. Confidence relates to God, Who is always certain.

As a label, “Textual Confidence” definitely sounds superior to “Textual Doubt.”  The four men testify they want to help Christians have confidence in the underlying text of their English translation of the Bible.   They say it’s not a sure, settled text, and unlike their opponents, they’re honest.  This admission of less than one hundred percent surety, they argue, engenders confidence.  The text of scripture is something pure like Tide detergent, not 100%, but still good.

The Collective Confidence falls short of certainty.  Three of the men replaced certainty with what they call confidence. The discovery of textual variants, that is, variations in hand copies, destroyed their certainty.  This shows they do not stand on biblical presuppositions.  They also listened to men who contradicted certainty.  Now they are confident in the text without certainty about the words.  They reject certainty and also want to push their uncertainty on others, bringing every church in the world to the same position, what they call “unity.”

The Collective also says they’re just telling the truth in contrast to people with differing positions, deceived or lying.  Those who take their view — according to them — are very nice, super balanced, great with their rhetorical tone compared to the others.  Part of this, they say about themselves, is their focus on Jesus and the gospel rather than on the text of scripture.  This implies that supporters of other positions than theirs elevate the Bible above Jesus in an unbalanced and perverted way.  The latter is an example of their tone.

Jesus said, “Thy Word is truth” (John 17:17).  Delivering the teaching of scripture is truth.  What the Bible says about itself is true.  The existence of textual variants does not change the biblical doctrine of the preservation of scripture.

Many people have suffered for believing something different than they once did, including from family.  No one will invite me to the same functions as Mark Ward.  Certain doors close depending on what you believe.  If you believe an error, the same thing will occur.  I don’t condone a kind of mean or vicious form of separation that just cuts people off.  I don’t practice that kind of separation either.  Many evangelicals practice like this, even though they don’t even believe in biblical separation.  Facing exclusion though doesn’t make a position right.

Two of the Collective testified to suffering from parents and siblings for changing positions on the Bible.  I don’t think someone should hang on to a false position because they don’t want to lose their family.  The Collective, however, treats this suffering as proof their new position is true and right.  It doesn’t prove either position.  No one should come to a conclusion for what’s right by comparing who suffers the most.  This is common, however, among modern version proponents.

The Collective distinguishes their view from what they present as two false extremes, “textual skepticism” and “textual absolutism.”   The men used Bart Ehrman as an example of the former.  They weren’t clear who was the former, but I’m confident they’re talking about a wide range of King James Version and textus receptus advocates, anyone who is certain about the text of scripture.

A strong statement of the first podcast is that skepticism and absolutism come from the same place or are closer than what the audience may expect.  The Collective says that an absolutist perspective turns people into skeptics more than skeptics do because of their defense of “every iota across the board.”  I’m skeptical about this point, because the certainty that brings trust in scripture comes from what the Bible says about itself.  Jesus defended every iota across the board.

Should people belief in the words of scripture as absolute, what someone might say is without variableness or shadow of turning?  In other words, does the Word of God reflect the nature of God and its immutability?  That is what scripture says about itself and it is what our spiritual forefathers passed down to us.

Modern textual criticism does not and has not increased trust in the inerrancy and authority of the Word of God.  Since I’ve been alive, as the prominence of textual criticism grows, trust in scripture diminishes.  Scriptural presuppositions on the other hand provide increasing spiritual strength through believing what God said, trusting in the Word of God as absolute authority.  Greater faith proceeds from certainty, not uncertainty.

AUTHORS OF THE BLOG

  • Kent Brandenburg
  • Thomas Ross

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