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God the Highest and Its Ramifications

Our Father, Which Art In Heaven

The model prayer of Matthew 6 and Luke 11 begins with the words:  “Our Father which art in heaven.”  Very often, I will follow this model and pray something like the following:  “Dear Father, I ask that you will be praised.  You are high and far above us.”  What does this describe?

Separate from Sin

That God the Father is in heaven says that He is separate from sin.  He is far away from anything sinful, because the third heaven, the location of His heavenly throne room, is at least as far away as the furthest space, which we know is many light years away.

The Highest

That God the Father is in heaven says that He is the highest.  “Highest” is a scriptural name and description of God the Father.

Psalm 18:13, “The LORD also thundered in the heavens, and the Highest gave his voice; hail stones and coals of fire.”

Luke 1:32, “He shall be great, and shall be called the Son of the Highest: and the Lord God shall give unto him the throne of his father David.”

Authority

God the Father’s highness relates to His authority.  He is over everything.  Numbers 24:7 says,

He shall pour the water out of his buckets, and his seed shall be in many waters, and his king shall be higher than Agag, and his kingdom shall be exalted.

“His king shall be higher than Agag.”  He has greater authority than Agag.  Psalm 89:27 also states this truth:

Also I will make him my firstborn, higher than the kings of the earth.

He is better.  He has greater authority than the kings of the earth.  Highest means the highest authority.

Immutability

That God the Father is in heaven reflects James 1:17:

Every good gift and every perfect gift is from above, and cometh down from the Father of lights, with whom is no variableness, neither shadow of turning.

Nothing can effect God the Father’s perfection.  Without anything able to effect Him, He is immutable.  Everything is relative to Him, but He is absolute.  Whatever comes from Him is good.  It is untainted.

Majesty

That God the Father is in heaven reveals His majesty.  Majesty relates to His holiness.  He is separate by being the highest.  However, He is not common or profane.  God the Father is distinct.  He shows forth the perfections of all His attributes, manifesting His glory.  Everything about Him is greater.

Judgment

God is judge.  That God the Father is in heaven gives Him a vantage point.  He can see everything.  God perches above all.  If God is higher and better, than something can be judged to be so.  With things higher, better, and distinct, God requires judgment.  He will judge, but so should we.

The Ramifications of God, the Highest

When God is highest, He is higher than anything.  That is the automatic enemy of egalitarianism.  God is of the highest value.  Nothing is better than Him.  He is far above anyone and everyone.

For people to do what they want to do, it helps if no one or nothing is above them.  It is a Satanic version of utopianism.  Every man is his own god.  No one is better, greater, or higher than anyone else.  No one wears a different uniform.  Gender or sex doesn’t exist.

Karl Marx said, “Religion is the opium of the people.”  God is incompatible with communism, because He is the ultimate authority, higher than everyone.  When people judge according to God, this act overthrows communist thinking.

If one individual cannot be better than everyone, then he at least wants no one to be better than anyone else.  Everyone has his own truth, his own goodness, and his own beauty.  Every standard is relative to himself.  Nothing is absolute.  Of course, all of this is a lie.

Historic Doubts Relative to Napoleon Buonaparte by Richard Whately & Skepticism

Have you ever read Historic Doubts Relative to Napoleon Buonaparte by Richard Whately? (view the book online for free here or here; a version you can cut and paste into a document so you can listen to it  is here), or get a physical copy:

 

David Hume, the famous skeptic, employed a variety of skeptical arguments against the Bible, the Lord Jesus Christ, and against the possibility of miracles and the rationality of believing in them in Section 10, “Of Miracles,” of Hume’s Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding. Whately, an Anglican who believed in the Bible, in miracles, and in Christ and His resurrection, turned Hume’s skeptical arguments against themselves. Whately’s “satiric Historic Doubts Relative to Napoleon Bonaparte (1819), … show[ed] that the same methods used to cast doubt on [Biblical] miracles would also leave the existence of Napoleon open to question.” Whately’s book is a short and humerous demonstration that Hume’s hyper-skepticism would not only “prove” that Christ did not do any miracles or rise from the dead, but that Napoleon, who was still alive at the time, did not exist or engage in the Napoleonic wars.  Hume’s argument against miracles is still extremely influential–indeed, as the teaching sessions mentioned in my last Friday’s post indicated, the main argument today against the resurrection of Christ is not a specific alternative theory such as the stolen-body, hallucination, or swoon theory, but the argument that miracles are impossible, so, therefore, Christ did not rise–Hume’s argument lives on, although it does not deserve to do so, as the critiques of Hume’s argument on my website demonstrate. For these reasons, the quick and fun read Historic Doubts Relative to Napoleon Buonaparte is well worth a read. (As a side note, the spelling “Buonaparte” by the author, instead of Bonaparte, is deliberate–the British “used the foreign sounding ‘Buonaparte’ to undermine his legitimacy as a French ruler. … On St Helena, when the British refused to acknowledge the defeated Emperor’s imperial rights, they insisted everyone call him ‘General Buonaparte.'”

 

Contemporary Significance

Part of the contemporary significance of Richard Whately’s Historic Doubts Relative to Napoleon Buonaparte relates to how we evaluate historical data. We should avoid both the undue skepticism of David Hume and also undue credulity.  Whatever God revealed in His Word can, and must, be accepted without question.  But outside of Scripture, when evaluating historical arguments, we should employ Biblical principles such as the following:

 

Have the best arguments both for and against the matter in question been carefully examined?

Is the argument logical?

Are there conflicts of interest in those promoting the argument?

Does the argument produce extraordinary evidence for its extraordinary claims?

Does the argument require me to think more highly of myself than I ought to think?

Is looking into the argument redeeming the time?

Are Biblical patterns of authority followed by those spreading the argument?

 

(principles are reproduced from my website here, and are also discussed here.)

 

A failure to properly employ consistent criteria to the evaluation of evidence undermines the case for Scripture.  For example, Assyrian records provide as strong a confirmation as one could expect for Hezekiah’s miraculous deliverance from the hand of Assyria by Jehovah’s slaying 185,000 Assyrian soldiers (2 Kings 19). However, Assyrian annals are extremely biased ancient propaganda.  Those today who claim that any source showing bias (say, against former President Trump, or against conservative Republicans–of which there are many) should be automatically rejected out of hand would have to deny, if they were consistent, that Assyrian records provide a glorious confirmation of the Biblical miracle.  Likewise, Matthew records that the guards at Christ’s tomb claimed that the Lord’s body was stolen as they slept (Matthew 28).  Matthew, under the inspiration of the Holy Spirit, intends the reader to be able to see through this biased and false argument to recognize the fact that non-Christians were making it actually provides confirmation for the resurrection of Christ. (If you do not see how it confirms the resurrection, think about it for a while.)

 

Many claims made today, whether that the population of the USA would catastrophically decline as tens of millions would die from the COVID vaccine, that Democratic gubernatorial candidate Stacey Abrams had her election win in Georgia stolen by Republicans, that Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump had his 2020 election win in Georgia stolen by Democrats, that 9/11 was perpetrated by US intelligence agencies, that Trump colluded with Russia to win the 2016 presidential election, that the miracle cure for cancer has been discovered but is being suppressed by Big Pharma, and many other such claims are rarely advanced by those who follow the Biblical principles listed above for evaluating information. Furthermore, the (dubious) method of argumentation for such claims, if applied to the very strong archaeological evidence for the Bible, would very frequently undermine it, or, indeed, frequently undermine the possibility of any historical investigation at all and destroy the field of historical research.

 

In conclusion, I would encourage you to read Historic Doubts Relative to Napoleon Buonaparte, and, as you read it, think about what Scripture teaches about how one evaluates historical information.

 

TDR

 

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AUTHORS OF THE BLOG

  • Kent Brandenburg
  • Thomas Ross

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