Showing posts with label Church. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Church. Show all posts

Pentecost and the royal wedding sermon

Today is Pentecost. It's the day Christians remember among other things, that by his Spirit God works in believers what they cannot work in themselves. Coming to faith in Christ they are recreated to do good works (Eph 2v10) and made a new humanity (Eph 2v15) who can now live in true love (Eph 3v16-19) as a foreteaste of the perfect love and righteousness that Christ will bring about at his return, when he makes all things new (2 Pet 3v11-13). And so to yesterday's royal wedding sermon.

Facebook has been alive with enthusiasm. And I get that. I felt moved too. At one level I suspect this was because of the passionate talk about Jesus to offset the sleep inducing tones of the British clergy (someone please tell them how to smile and be personable). At another, I suspect it was because our expectation of these events is so low, and this guy spoke about the redemptive love of Christ! Finally, I think this enthusiasm reflects the fact that as Christians we heard what was said through Christian ears. So when we heard of the power of love, we thought of the love Christ works in those who trust him - the love of the Spirit given to all who've sought his forgiveness. But (and I really hate feeling the Eeyore) I'm certain the millions who listened in didn't hear it that way at all.

I've read the sermon online to be sure of what was said, and what it seems to proclaim is the gospel of try harder. It's hope, it's good news was that we, everyone, can bring about a new creation if only we will love one-another more powerfully. Just consider this paragraph: "Cause when love is the way, we actually treat each other, well, like we are actually family. When love is the way we know that God is the source of us all. And we are brother and sisters, children of God. Brothers and sisters, that's a new heaven, a new earth, a new world, a new human family." Think now on how the sermon ends: "Dr King was right: we must discover love – the redemptive power of love. And when we do that, we will make of this old world, a new world."

What's heard then is quite simple: "Let's try harder." What's heard is that, whoever we are, whatever we believe, we are able to do for ourselves what in truth only Christ can do.

Now it's possible Curry may not have intended that. But he is the head of a liberal denomination and this is the gospel of liberal Christianity - the gospel of our secular age. Yet this is not the true gospel. The true gospel is about Christ's remedy for the fact that we can't change the world by trying harder. The true gospel addresses the fact that no matter how hard we think we are trying, strife and poverty and racism continue because we don't (and can't) love as we should love. The gospel is therefore honest about sin. And by being honest, by speaking about the unpalatable stuff, the gospel gives true hope - real, practical hope to Harry and Megan, and to all couples who find in marriage that they can't love as they have promised to love. It proclaims that Christ alone can and will change the world, that he is returning to make it new, and wonderfully, generously, graciously calls us to share in that. The gospel is about God the Son in love pacifying his Father's right outrage at how unloving we are, and then transforming those who come to him so they can start to love with his love as children of God. That's the gospel.

Michael Curry's sermon was great rhetoric. And because those of our age are drawn more by the medium than the message, God may well use it to draw people towards Christ. But to my mind his message was at best unclear on the gospel, and at worst intentionally so.

A middle way on spiritual gifts

This year the publication of Sam Storms book "Practicing the Power" seems to have reignited debates over spiritual gifts. And this remains a live issue in churches. Ours is a day in which Christians experience a variety of church fellowships and this naturally leads to questions about the practices churches may differ on. What expectation should we have of the more supernatural gifts such as receiving prophetic revelations or insights called words of wisdom or knowledge, being used in healing or other miracles, praying in a supernatural language known as “tongues,” or discerning whether someone is influenced by demons or the Holy Spirit? Although this is not the place for detailed examination of what these gifts actually are, two views seem prevalent in considering the extent to which they should be expected.

Cessationism
The majority historic view is known as “cessationism.” It holds that the more miraculous gifts seen during the time of the New Testament ceased with the ending of the apostolic age. They point out that the New Testament tells us that such things were “marks of a true apostle” (2 Cor 12v12), intended to bear witness that their message was from God (Heb 2v3-4) as the “foundation” on which the church would be built (Eph 2v20, 3v5). Because the foundation is now laid and Paul was the last apostle (1 Cor 15v8), cessationists argue, such things have now ceased.

Continuationism
Since the beginning of the twentieth century a view known as “continuationism” has became increasingly dominant. It is the view of Christians who call themselves “charismatics” after the Greek “charismata” (meaning "gifts"). They hold that the more miraculous gifts of the New Testament should be sought and expected to the same extent today as they were then. They point out that the New Testament tells us that the entire “last days” between Jesus’ ascension and return is to be marked by “prophecy” and “signs and wonders” (Acts 2v17-21), and that “prophecy” and “tongues” will only cease when the Christians sees God “face to face” (1 Cor 13v8-12) which is when Christ returns. Because such things continue, continuists argue, we should expect them as much today as people did then.

Problems
To our mind there are two problems with both views. First, neither does justice to the compelling arguments of the other. The fact is that scripture does seem to teach that the miraculous gifts were marks of apostleship and in some sense foundational, but also that they characterise the last days in which the Spirit is poured out and so can be expected to continue to some extent.

Second, neither acknowledges the realities of the church’s experience. Cessationists accept that God might grant revelations or performs miracles or impress something on a believer, but stress that we cannot expect such things as the norm. But what makes something normative? If these things are taking place regularly, surely it is more honest to accept that to at least some extent the gifts do continue. Not doing so, not only fails to do justice to the nuances of the Bible’s teaching but can keep Christians from praying for or acknowledging genuine works of the Spirit. However, that is not to say continuists have it. Their problem is that contemporary experience just doesn’t fit what we read of in the New Testament. It is certainly not the norm to see limbs grow and the dead raised. And this needs acknowledgement too. Otherwise Christians and churches assume they are somehow failing when they don’t see such things. Moreover, it can lead them to claim the gifts are in evidence when they are not because of the desire to feel God is at work as he was in the first century. For example, whereas the model for NT prophecy is that of the OT (Num 12v6, Acts 2v17) meaning that it comes predominantly by vision or dream and with accuracy, continuists claim anything God spontaneously brings to mind for others is prophecy. And whereas “words of wisdom” or “knowledge” (1 Cor 12v8) in the wider context are most likely the ability to speak out the wisdom of the gospel or knowledge about God and his moral will (1 Cor 2v6-7, 8v1-7), these are now said to be the speaking out of whatever is impressed upon you about others. Again, whereas biblical healings are almost always definite, immediate, physical and total, today slow, partial and inner healings are all celebrated as miraculous, and the vast majority who are not healed are rarely acknowledged.  

Contractionism
All this leads our view to be midway between the two. It might be titled “contractionism” because it argues that the gifts do continue beyond the time of the apostles but in a more limited sense. It seeks to do justice to the fact that the age of the apostles was unique and so marked by a powerful outpouring of the miraculous in order to authenticate these men and the message they carried as the foundation for the church. But it also seeks to do justice to the fact that the wider need of the gifts has not ceased. Although no Christian expects God to be revealing the gospel or its implications by prophecy now we have the New Testament, there may still be famines the church needs a prophecy for in order to prepare (Acts 11v28). Likewise, there are still sick people in need of healing, prayers that might be said in tongues, and unbelievers who by witnessing the miraculous will consider the gospel the church proclaims. This view protects us against a failure to seeking such things from God, but also against assuming failure unless the book of Acts is in evidence today.

From principle to practice
What then for the way ahead? Quite simply, it is to get on with the priorities of church life with a longing prayerfulness for God to grant by his Spirit whatever gifts are most needed for the upbuilding and witness of the church – but to do this with a clear understanding from scripture as to what these gifts actually entail, and an eye out for how the Lord might be giving them. If someone has a vision-like experience or vivid dream in which they are convinced God is revealing something, they should talk to their elders as it may be a prophecy for the church. If someone is sick, the elders should pray expectantly for healing (James 5v14-15), but any who sense a particular compelling to pray should also do so, but communicating that although healing may be given it is not actually promised. If someone feels moved to pray out in an unknown language at home, they should freely do so, and if in church, only with a conviction that someone has been given an interpretation of it (1 Cor 14v27-28). If someone is convinced the Holy Spirit has given them an impression, compelling or picture as guidance or insight for themselves or for others, they should not describe it as a word from God as this is not how scripture portrays it – rather they should consider it as no more than God’s possible leading.

The key objection cessationists could make to this is that claiming prophecy continues to be accurate and authoritative undermines the sufficiency of scripture. But this is not so. Scripture claims to be sufficient for making us wise to salvation and training us in righteousness. All agree that prophecy revealing these sort of truths was foundational and has ceased. The sorts of prophecies that can be expected are therefore more circumstantial. If, for example, a prophecy is given that warns of a coming famine, there is no challenge to scripture in saying this is accurate and authoritative. But it would certainly need to be if the church is to take it into account in the decisions it makes.

The objection continuists might make is that in practice the contractionist view will simply allow churches to continue without promoting spiritual gifts. The response here is simply that bad practice doesn't negate the truthfulness of a matter. All churches are responsible for understanding the Bible's teaching correctly and acting accordingly as they consider is best.

Basic booklist for those serving in the local church

These are intended to be middle-level introductory books rather than more academic ones - and so for church workers, trainees and elders rather than the minister who should be reading to a greater depth too. They are not provided to put pressure that they must all be read within a couple of years, but more to highlight key books it would be good to read at some time and that can be accessed when needed to help in ministry.

Conviction:
1 Reformed theology - What is reformed theology - Sproul
2 Biblical theology - God's big picture, Roberts
3 OT theology book by book - The Faith of Israel, Dumbrell
4 NT theology book by book - New Testament Theology, Morris
5 Systematic theology – Systematic theology, Grudem
6 Church - Centre Church, Keller
7 Culture - Mission of God, Boot
8 Ethics - New Issues facing Christians today, Stott
9 Work - Every good endeavour, Keller
10 Suffering - How long O Lord, Carson
11 Independency - Independency, ed. Stevens
12 Church history - Church history in plain language, Shelley

Character:
13 Commitment - Don't waste your life, Piper
14 Disciplines - Spiritual disciplines of the Christian life, Whitney
15 Prayer - A praying life, Miller
16 Godliness - The practice of Godliness, Bridges
17 Bonhoeffer (biography), Eric Metaxas
18 A chance to die (a biography of Amy Charmichael), Elizabeth Elliot

Competence:
19 Time management - Time for everything, Fuller
20 Eldership – The shepherd leader, Witmer
21 Ministry - The trellis and the vine, Marshall and Payne
22 Preaching - Speaking God's words, Adam
23 Leading worship - Worship in Spirit and Truth, Frame
24 Pastoral Care - Instruments in the redeemer hands, Tripp
25 Tackling sin - You can change, Chester
26 Leadership - Wisdom in leadership, Hamilton
27 Evangelism - Everyday church, Timmis and Chester
28 Apologetics - The reason for God, Keller
29 Bible study - Growth Groups, Marshall
30 One to one - One to one, DeWitt
31 Youth - Gospel centred youth ministry, Cole and Nelson
32 Women - Word-Filled Women's Ministry, Furman and Nielson
33 Parenting - Parenting against the tide, Benton
34 Family - Gospel centred family, Chester and Moll
35 Marriage - Married for God, Ash

Computer software:
1 The one I use is Logos bible software. You can have it on your PC, tablet and phone, and the amount of resources it can access means you can do a lot of cross-referencing within it. You can download the basic software for free and then pay to add modern Bible translations (I predominantly use the NIV and the NASB as a more literal version – Greek too if you are up to it), and reference books (there are an innumerable amount and the various IVP dictionaries in particular are worth looking at, but key would be the New Bible Commentary and the New Bible Dictionary).

2 E-Sword is an extremely good and free Bible software package that you can have on your PC or as an app on tablet or phone.

Some more historical reading:
A theology reader, Ed. Alistair McGrath
Early Christian writings: The apostolic fathers, ed. Louth
Confessions (autobiography), Augustine
Ecclesiastical history of the English People, Bede
Calvin's Institutes, John Calvin
Precious Remedies Against Satan’s Devices, Brooks
Concerning the end for which God created the World, Jonathan Edwards
Lectures to my students, CH Spurgeon
The inspiration and authority of the Bible, BB Warfield
The cost of discipleship, Dietrich Bonhoeffer
Essentials: A liberal-evangelical dialogue, Edwards and Stott
Three Views on Eastern Orthodoxy and Evangelicalism, ed. Packer and Stamoolis
Roman Catholic Theology and Practice, Gregg Allison
The kingdom of the cults, Walter Martin
Amazing Grace (a biography of William Wilberforce), Eric Metaxas
Susanna Wesley (biography), Arnold Dallimore
The Apocrypha


Am I being called to full time word ministry?

We live in a day when almost anyone can decide to plant a church and with sufficient ability set themselves up as its minister. However the key questions to be asked are these: As Christ is the one who holds "all authority," has he actually called and appointed a person to this role? Do their bear their authority as given to them by God's king?

When reading John Owen's "True nature of a gospel Church" some years ago I was particularly struck at his concern for this if a church is to be truly established by Christ.

Chatting with a student on the training course last week, I suggested there are four key things to consider in discerning whether Christ is calling them to this role:

(1) Has Christ given me the qualifications he asks for (Titus 1v5-9)?
He will not call any he hasn't qualified. So I must ask whether I fulfil the qualifications Paul outlines to Titus. Am I considered as "blameless" in the sense of not being charged with fault by those around me? Am I proved as sufficiently able to "manage" a church, especially by my ability to manage my family? And am I able to teach, not just by knowing sound doctrine and being able to encourage people in it, but by having the courage and readiness to confront error too? A prayerfulness of life is another qualification we might add as it should accompany the ministry of the word (Act 6v4). And we must note that if one considers the role or elder/overseer is reserved only for men, being male would be another qualification that is necessary.

(2) Has Christ given me the affirmation of his church (Acts 6v5-6)?
Elders in Israel were put forward by the people for appointment by the authorities, and in replacing Judas two candidates were nominated from which one was to be chosen. The sense is that the church is assumed to reflect the mind of the Spirit when it agrees that someone is fit for the role of elder/overseer - although this is generally subject to the agreement of others in authority, such as the apostles in Acts 6 or Titus in Titus 1. What this means is that the affirmation of the congregation any individual belongs to is paramount in discerning whether they are called to church ministry, as is giving the potential receiving church sufficient opportunity to get to know respective candidates for a role. Of course this presumes that the members of the church are truly converted, filled with the Spirit and so seeking to weigh someone's calling according to Christ's priorities. So churches that don't in some sense try to ensure a believing membership would need to look for affirmation only from those it sees signs of conversion within.

(3) Has Christ given me the desire to serve (1 Tim 3v1)?
This is a more subjective aspect of calling. And we should be cautious of it. We are not told Jesus only calls those who are eager, nor that an inner peace about a role is necessary if we are to conclude the Lord wants us to take it. Moses was quite reluctant and certainly without peace with respect to his calling. Nevertheless, Paul acknowledges the place for desire and was "compelled" by the Spirit to go to Jerusalem. Moreover, Nehemiah set out on his great city-building task because the Lord placed it on his heart. And he kept to it because of that. In the same way, the elder/overseer is unlikely to persevere in building up the new Jerusalem of the church amidst all the pressures of the role, unless he has a deep desire to take on that role for the glory of God no matter it might entail.

(4) Has Christ given me the opportunity to serve (2 Cor 2v12)?
Given the above, if on applying for roles and praying for the Lord's guidance, an opportunity consistently fails to arise there may be a time for concluding that Christ may not be calling me to the role of elder/overseer after all - or at least not now.

In what ways can church ministry and worship be infected by rationalism or relativism?

[A brief answer to a question posed after a couple of seminars on rationalism and relativism]

First, there is a danger of labelling churches or ministries that are word-centred as rationalistic. Here we must ask whether God himself is word-centred. John 1 tells us he is, as does the existence of the Bible itself. The first Christians devoted themselves to the apostles teaching (Acts 2v42). Paul preached through the night even after one hearer fell out of the window asleep, died and was raised! The book of Hebrews ends describing itself as just a “short” letter.

Second, there is an equal danger of labelling churches or ministries that make much of emotion or music as relativistic. Here we must ask whether God makes much of these things. The picture of the saints praising God in the book of revelation, and the existence of 150 psalms tell us he does. The first Christians were marked by joy, praising God day by day (Acts 2v43f). Paul taught that song was a particular mark of being filled with the Spirit. And even in the Old Testament temple, choirs were employed just to sing the psalms, with the whole range of emotion they portray.

The point is this: In all cultures it should be a both-and to the above, not an either-or. It is not that word-centred churches better reach rationalistic modernist people, and those stressing emotion and music the relativistic postmoderns. No, the worship God looks for is one that worships him in spirit and in truth (Jn 4).

Consider a biblical anthropology: We reject God as our hearts desire what is sinful, and so we refuse to accept his word with our minds. Conversely, when converted the Spirit of God uses the word of the gospel to change our hearts so that they desire God and so will accept his truth (1 Peter 1v23). And from that point, the means by which we engage with him is as his truth informs our mind and, by that means, enflames our hearts so that we love and want to obey him (Eph 4v17-24, Rom 12v1-2).

It is striking that in some churches, it is either the sheer quantity of Bible teaching that is assumed to prove God’s presence with the church, or the atmosphere evoked by a certain style of music or an inner sense of God those at the church claim to have. But a cursory look through the early chapters of Acts reveals that the post-Pentecost feelings that mark the presence of God the Holy Spirit are not so vague. They were certainly related to the tireless preaching the apostles gave themselves to. But they were the feelings that came in response, when the heart was gripped by their teaching: deep conviction when grasping the seriousness of sin (Acts 2v37, Jn 16v8), reverent fear when grasping God’s holiness (Acts 5v11), and joyful thanks when grasping his grace (Acts 2v46-47, Col 3v16-17). First and foremost, the primary feeling the Spirit evokes in the New Testament, is one of deep love towards God as our creator and redeemer (Gal 5v22).

Given all this, we can start to ask what a church infected with rationalism or relativism might look like.

We have seen that rationalism is not about engaging reason per se. All our teaching and wider ministry should do that. No, it describes those who rely on reason for knowledge rather than God. So a church is infected with rationalism when the teaching of the Bible is rejected because people think they know better – rejecting certain truths because they don’t understand them or can’t rationally accept them. Rationalism may also be seen in the preacher who presumes that just by teaching scripture people will understand, rather than by combining this with fervent prayer for God to enlighten them. It is seen in the preacher who simply preaches to the mind, rather than to the heart through the mind; ie. the preacher who fails to emphasize the appropriate emotional response, focusing simply on what should be believed or done. It would also be seen in the church that doesn’t help the congregational to respond from the heart by giving adequate time to pray home what is said, or express conviction of sin in confession or joy and thanksgiving in song.

Similarly, relativism is not about expressing feelings per se. We have seen that all our teaching and wider ministry move us to that too. No, relativism describes those who see all truth relative to what the individual establishes it to be, often grounding this in their subjective sense of what is right or wrong rather than the objective revelation of God. So a church is infected with relativism when the teaching of the Bible is rejected because it just doesn’t feel right and makes people uncomfortable. It is seen in the preacher who simply appeals to people’s hearts with exhortation and anecdote, rather than actually explaining the scriptures so they understand. It is seen in songs and music that seek to elicit emotions that are not in response to God’s truth. It is seen when it is assumed that a certain atmosphere or inner sense reflects the presence of God, rather than locating his certain presence in feelings of conviction, reverence, joy and love fanned into flame by the gospel.

Of course a final question is over how best to teach congregations that inevitably contain those who lean towards rationalism or relativism. The answer must be, by teaching the whole Bible - by making much of its internal logic and argument, and much of its images and emotion; by teaching not just Paul’s letters, but the poetry of the prophets, not just the law, but the gospels etc etc.
 

Lent

Lent begins tomorrow. Understanding something of it may be helpful if friends ask us about it, but also so that we can assess it ourselves.

What is Lent?
Lent refers to the 40 day period (not including Sundays) leading up to Easter in which, historically, the church has remembered the 40 days Jesus prepared for his ministry by fasting in the desert. So it’s been seen as a time of:
1) spiritual preparation for Easter
2) self denial in order to devote one-self to God

Shrove Tuesday (Pancake Day) is the day before lent as it was the day Christians would use up whatever foods they were going to give up. The word “shrove” comes from “shrive” meaning “confess” sin. Ash Wednesday is the day lent begins, and is a day some Christians are marked in services with ash from burnt palm crosses as a sign of repentance – just as the Hebrews used to put ash on their heads in mourning.

Why do some make so little of Lent?
Like many other Protestant Christians, we don’t make much of Lent at Grace Church for the following reasons:
  1. Lent can be unhelpful: The Bible specifically challenges those who make much of “human traditions” that are not commanded by God, and especially the tendency to look down on fellow Christians for not keeping certain religious days or for not fasting (Col 2v8, 16-18, 20-23). The danger in keeping Lent is that it makes the Christian feel proud for keeping it and condemning of those who don’t.
  2. Lent can be powerless: We’re told that such regulations “have an appearance of wisdom, with their self-imposed worship, their false humility and their harsh treatment of the body, but they lack any value in restraining sensual indulgence” (Col 2v23). The point is that they make us feel religious but won’t really help us become more godly. Ironically, they can actually lead us from the true way to godliness, which is to focus on: (1) our hearts being devoted to Christ and the life of his coming kingdom, (2) our minds being set on those things because we understand that through Christ's death and resurrection our old self has died and we have a new self that is alive to God, (3) our wills seeking to put off the old self and put on the new as we follow the desires of the Spirit (Col 3v1-14).
  3. Lent can be distracting: The reality is that in the light of this every Christian is called "daily" to “deny himself” and “take up his cross” in order to “follow” Christ (Lk 9v23). A focus on these things over a 40 day period can very easily diminish our awareness that we should be wholehearted in our devotion to Christ every day of every year.
  4. Lent can be trivialising: Often what Lent boils down to is giving up something relatively insignificant such as chocolate or wine, and often more out of a concern for calories or health than for Jesus.

Can we observe Lent?
Having said all this, the Bible is clear that Christians are free to observe religious days and feasts if they feel they should. And those who don’t should not look down on those who do, nor urge them not to observe such things if it would go against their conscience (Rom 14v1-8).
            Moreover, provided the above concerns are acknowledged, there seems no reason why a Christian might not use Lent for their spiritual benefit just as they might use the New Year to recommit to prayer, or allocate a week in May for a Christian conference, or a month to help in some sphere of service. The point is that we are free before God to do such things within the boundaries of his word.

So here are some suggestions on how you might use Lent this year if you would like to:
1)     Give some time each day to a spiritual MOT, assessing where you are at with the Lord in terms of prayer, Bible reading, church attendance, financial giving, struggle with sin, evangelism etc – and most importantly with respect to your heart, mind and will. Then pray through all this, asking God to help you in these areas not just during Lent but beyond it.
2)     Although you may not be able to give more time to prayer, Bible reading or Christian service in the long term, consider whether you might be able to for this forty days.
3)     Similarly, why not make time to reading a good Christian book, perhaps on the cross, or to listening to some good sermons online.
4)     Consider abstaining from something that is permissible for you, but that you think is genuinely detrimental to your walk with Christ. It might be TV, facebook, video games, clothes shopping, etc. This could free up time for the points above. But the point in abstaining from such things is to display to the Lord how much more you desire him, and ask him to break the power these things have over you or over your time.

And finally
Don’t tell anyone how you are observing Lent unless you have to – to keep yourself from pride and to keep them from looking down on you. Also, if a non-Christian friend asks you what Lent is all about, tell them it’s about Jesus being more important than anything else in the world. And then tell them why!

Resources
·     The “youversion” Bible App has all sorts of Bible reading plans. You could choose a forty day one.
·     You could read the book “Unbreakable” by Andrew Wilson that David Lowries has been selling, Contact him for a copy.
·     “The forgotten cross” by Lee Gatiss is great book on the cross to buy, read and absorb.
·     Access to online sermons and talks elsewhere can be found here: www.gracesussex.com/2007/06/mp3s.html
·     40acts.org.uk is a website emailing Christians with ways they can do good each day of Lent. I don’t know whether these will be helpful or not. But if you do it, see whether you can keep doing some after Lent too.

Four attitudes of a healthy church

Preaching on the Holy Spirit recently I've been struck how much theheart should define true Christianity. It set me thinking as I was drafting 'aims' for our churches, that 'attitudes' to aim for are perhaps needed more than goals. So here are my four. If you have read Rick Warren you will notice his influence on the 'M's:

A craving for God's glory... that leads to magnification
A commitment to God's church...
that leads to ministry
A confidence in God's word... that leads to maturity
A concern for God's world...
that leads to mission

What we believe

Just written this to discuss when visiting congregation members...

People often wonder what the core of Christian belief is. You can think of the denominations rather like a series of windows. Some are clearer than others. But it is the same gospel that we look at through them. The word gospel refers to an announcement of good news. Again and again in the New Testament, when the essence of the gospel is stated, the same three things are to the fore:
1) Believing in Christ’s person and work; and so…
2) Responding to Christ’s call to repentance
3) Trusting in Christ’s promise of forgiveness

This is perhaps most clear in Luke 24v46-47. Just before ascending to heaven Jesus explained the Old Testament to his followers. He then said:
“This is what is written: The Christ will suffer and rise from the dead on the third day, and repentance and forgiveness of sins will be preached in his name to all nations.”
There we have it from Jesus himself. The core message of both testaments is this. In what follows we are going to look a little more closely at what this entails. My hope is that it will bring greater clarity to what we say in church and greater confidence of all we have in Christ.

1) Believing in Christ’s person and work
This is summarized in the Apostles’ Creed which we affirm in our services almost every Sunday. We can trace this creed back to the middle of the second century. It is accepted by all major streams of the church: Protestant, Roman Catholic and Eastern Orthodox. It is therefore a good basis from which to clarify the basics of Christian belief—not least because we so regularly say we believe it.

The Bible: In affirming the creed the worldwide church affirms that its truths stem from the apostolic writings of the New Testament. Jesus commissioned the apostles as the foundational teachers for his church. As we affirm the creed, we stand in the long line of Christians who accept that their own ideas of God and his ways should confirm to what the apostles taught.

The Trinity: We hold that God has revealed himself to be the only God, and that he eternally exists as three distinct persons: the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit. They structure the creed. In all being the one God, each person is equal, sharing the same nature, power, character and wisdom. But their three titles show that they relate to one-another in different ways. ‘Father’ stresses primacy, whilst ‘Son’ suggests that he represents and obeys the Father. ‘Spirit’ implies the active presence of both Father and Son.

God, the Father almighty, creator of heaven and earth: This is the context for all we learn of Jesus. The most basic definition of God is that he is the one who made everything. The creed doesn’t spell out how he did this, but only that he did. It states he is almighty, meaning that he can do anything—given that it is logically possible. ‘Heaven and earth’ was a way of describing the entire universe. It was all made by God’s power.

Holding to this keeps us humble. We may struggle to understand the trinity, or how suffering, hell or some of God’s commands are consistent with his love and justice. But this should not surprise us. We are mere creatures. When such struggles come, we must remember that God is the one who made the universe. So much of him will therefore be beyond us. But we can trust what he reveals in scripture, because he has the power to have ensured its accuracy. More than that, we can trust him, because his goodness is so clearly seen in Jesus.

Jesus Christ, his only Son our Lord: There is much here. The title ‘Christ’ means ‘anointed.’ It referred to the King the Jews were waiting for God to send them. He was to establish an everlasting Kingdom of righteousness and peace. The title ‘God’s Son’ was given to Israel’s kings, but Jesus hinted there was more to it. God the Son had come in person. The creed affirms Jesus is fully God in being conceived by the Holy Spirit, and fully man in being born of the Virgin Mary. ‘Lord’ was the title Jews gave God. So it also affirms Jesus’ deity, whilst stressing he rules all things and so is to be served and obeyed.

He suffered under Pontius Pilate, was crucified, dead and buried. He descended to the dead. The third day he rose again: Here we affirm that Jesus’ death is central to our faith. “He bore our sins in his body upon the tree,” and “the punishment that brought us peace was laid upon him.” On the cross Jesus satisfied the demands of God’s justice so that God could remain just whilst pardoning us for all we’ve done. (1 Pet 2v24; Is 53v5; Rom 3v25-26).

So we affirm that Jesus experienced the fullness of death both physically and spiritually. Then he came back to life proving sin’s penalty had been paid and that Jesus is Lord of all. There is no doubt the creed intends us to accept a physical resurrection. No other idea was known to its authors or has ever been accepted in the church.

He ascended into heaven, he is seated at the right hand of the Father, and he will come to judge the living and the dead: In his resurrection body the man Jesus was seen to rise up from the earth into heaven, which can be best described as a spiritual dimension to our universe. The idea of sitting at God’s right hand stresses that he is now ruling over all things with his Father’s authority and power. There is nothing he is therefore unable to do. So when our prayers are not answered there really must be a reason.

Christ’s rule also means that he will return in person to judge everyone. This presumes all people sin and that this deserves punishment, for a perfect judge does not call innocent people to the dock. We all struggle with the idea of hell, but we cannot duck it. It is a major theme of Jesus’ teaching. As our Judge he warned that it is real and it is terrible, and it is avoided by repentance and faith in him. (Matt 10v28-32; Mk 9v43-49; Lk 13v23-30; 16v19-31; Jn 3v16-18).

The Holy Spirit: The Spirit’s full divinity is implied in the structure of the creed and in ascribing him the title ‘Holy.’ Holiness describes the supremacy and purity of God’s nature. The Holy Spirit brings people to faith and transforms them into God’s own holy image.

The holy catholic church, the communion of saints: ‘Catholic’ simply means universal, and ‘saints’ refers to those who are set-apart as holy. So we affirm that when we believe we are spiritually united with all other Christians. This means that being active members of a local church is not an option. It is part of what it means to be a Christian, and essential if we are to continue in our faith. Only there does God provide the encouragement and teaching we need.

The forgiveness of sins: This is the door to all God’s blessings. Again we affirm the reality of sin, but with it God’s grace. Some are reluctant to accept that God could be angry or punish people. But even children know these things are implied in the need for forgiveness. However the wonder is that those who believe no longer face this anger. They are pardoned in God’s court. They are rescued from his punishment. They are therefore reconciled to him. More than that, they are adopted as his children and so loved as his very own.

The resurrection of the body and the life everlasting: As with Jesus, so with those who believe in him. Our resurrection is not of a disembodied spirit. It is to be given a new body when Jesus returns, fit for a new heaven and earth that God will create. Our everlasting life begins now as we start to live the life of that new creation inwardly. But it will be fully experienced when we are raised. Together, all who believe will then inhabit a perfect world, free from evil, pain and death. But our greatest joy will be to perfectly know and serve the Lord.

2) Responding to Christ’s call to repentance
Now to the second of our three points. Throughout the creed we affirm ‘I believe.’ Repentance gets to the heart of what this means. To believe is not just to accept all we have outlined about Jesus. It is to trust him. To repent is to ‘change our minds in such a way that we change our lives.’ Jesus confronted those who said “Lord, Lord” but did not do what he said (Lk 6v43-49). If someone truly comes to believe that Jesus is Lord, then they will treat him as Lord. So they will strive to follow his teaching in every respect.

Here we must note that throughout his ministry Jesus implied that we should reject all ideas that contradict not only the teaching of his apostles, but of the Old Testament too—when understood in the light of his coming (Jn 14v25-26; 16v13-14; Matt 5v17-47; Mk 7v5-13).

In modelling this he reaffirmed the moral aspects of the Old Testament law. So the great lifestyle lists of the New Testament teach that the Christian must turn from all other religions or occult practices, from blasphemy, hatred, bitterness, violence, adultery, extra-marital and homosexual sex, pornography, crudity, dishonesty, slander, greed and drunkenness. We have been called to a new life, inwardly re-created “to be like God in true righteousness and holiness.” So, though imperfectly, we will seek to be free from even a hint of sin, striving in our hearts to be kind, compassionate, humble, gentle, patient, forgiving,
pure, generous, faithful to others and at peace with all (Ephesians 3-6).

We repent when we say our confession prayer each Sunday in church. It is these things that we are committing ourselves to as we do. Above all, love for God and others is the essence of the repentant life. This is to cherish and so honour the Lord Jesus, living a life of prayer and study of the scriptures as members of his church, whilst seeking to serve and bring his gospel to the world, and raising any children we may have to do the same.

3) Trusting in Christ’s promise of forgiveness
This is the final mark of true faith. It is also assumed when we confess our sin. In doing so we acknowledge that we will always get things wrong, and so the Christian lives each day holding firmly to Christ’s promise of forgiveness.

It is this promise that assures us of God’s acceptance if we believe as we have outlined. It is this promise that gives us confidence in prayer before our God. It is this promise that guarantees his care and help throughout life, and it is this same promise that we cling to when facing death.

Christianity is therefore about grace. It is about God’s favour being given freely to all who follow his Son. Like the thief on the cross, we do not need to serve Christ for a number of years to earn our salvation, and we do not need to worry about whether we merit God’s acceptance. These things are a gift of his glorious grace. As is said in our services: God “forgives all who truly repent.” It is on this promise that our confidence stands, and from this promise that our joy comes, even when life is hard.

Two forms of unity

Reflections on how to practically work out the call to unity between Christians and churches in an age where the faithfulness of church fellowships is very varied:

The New Testament commands overseers to protect their flock from false teaching. Due to the current doctrinal diversity within the Church of England it has therefore become necessary to clarify the grounds for Christian unity and outline some means of ensuring the teaching of biblical truth.

Relational unity.

“Be completely humble and gentle; be patient, bearing with one another in love. Make every effort to keep the unity of the Spirit through the bond of peace. There is one body and one Spirit-- just as you were called to one hope when you were called--one Lord, one faith, one baptism; one God and Father of all, who is over all and through all and in all.”
Ephesians 4:2-6
All true Christians are united in Christ simply on the grounds of their common faith in him. The New Testament teaches the bare rudiments of that faith to be as follows:
  • Admitting our need of God’s forgiveness to escape his judgement and receive everlasting life (Luke 18:9-14, 1 John 1:8-10).
  • Believing that Jesus was and is fully God and fully man, and that he enabled us to receive this forgiveness and life through his death and bodily resurrection from the dead (John 5:23b, 1 John 2:22-23, Romans 11:9).
  • Calling on Jesus as our Saviour for these things, recognising that we receive them by no moral or religious merit of our own, but only by his free gift of them to us (Acts 4:12, Romans 10:1-4, 11:9-12).
  • Devoting ourselves to live in obedience to Jesus as Lord and so shaping our lives to that end (1 Corinthians 6:9-11, 1 John 2:3-6, Hebrews 10:26-27).
Undoubtedly, certain churches that teach these things may veer from scripture on other matters in quite serious ways. Yet we are not at liberty to assume such churches are void of the life of God: For where they comprise true believers, they comprise those bought with the blood of Christ and renewed by the power of his Spirit.

Likewise, we will certainly differ from other believers in all manner of things, and where feasible are to help one-another toward greater conformity to scripture. But we are not at liberty to cease loving and respecting one-another as we do so, nor question one-another’s salvation over less central matters.

There is no place for ridicule, slander, or partisanism amongst God’s people. All believers are Christ’s body; and so as we treat one-another, so we treat Christ.

Operational unity.
“In the presence of God and of Christ Jesus, who will judge the living and the dead, and in view of his appearing and his kingdom, I give you this charge: Preach the Word; be prepared in season and out of season; correct, rebuke and encourage--with great patience and careful instruction. For the time will come when men will not put up with sound doctrine. Instead, to suit their own desires, they will gather around them a great number of teachers to say what their itching ears want to hear. They will turn their ears away from the truth and turn aside to myths.”
2 Timothy 4:1-4
Having noted our relational unity in Christ, we must also note the need of good bible teaching if churches are to protect and develop the faith of their members. It seems only responsible then to ensure that those we unite with operationally - i.e. churches and missionary organisations that we commend or work alongside - are those that better conform to scripture.

Here a distinction between essentials and distinctives is important. The former comprises primary issues which must either be believed for salvation, or that if denied, are likely to undermine salvation. It seems wise that these should provide boundaries to operational unity. The latter comprises those secondary issues which, though important, should never prohibit operational unity, and should be gracefully tolerated by those who differ from them.

Essentials.
The following summarises the bible’s essentials:
  1. There is one God, absolutely good, pure, loving, and just, who eternally exists in three distinct persons: The Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit.
  2. God is the supreme ruler of the universe, governing all matters of creation, revelation, redemption and final judgement according to the faultless purpose of his will.
  3. The Bible, as originally given, is the inspired and so infallible word of God. It is entirely trustworthy in all it asserts for salvation and righteousness, and so the supreme authority in all matters of belief and behaviour.
  4. The Law of God is the eternal and unchangeable rule of his moral government, it is binding on all, yet to be obeyed not to merit salvation, but as the fruit of true faith. The essence of the law is love for God and neighbour, including a rejection of all false religion, blasphemy, hatred, extra-marital or homosexual sex, dishonesty, slander, greed, and drunkenness.
  5. Since the fall, all humankind has disobeyed God’s law and is sinful and guilty, so that everyone is subject to God's wrath and condemnation.
  6. The Lord Jesus Christ is God’s incarnate Son, fully God yet born of a virgin, fully man yet without sin. He died on the cross, was raised bodily from death, and is now reigning over heaven and earth.
  7. Sinful human beings are forgiven and freed from the guilt, penalty and power of sin only through the sacrificial death once and for all time of Jesus Christ, the only mediator between humanity and God. On the cross Jesus bore sin’s punishment as a substitute for all who would turn from their sin and trust in him.
  8. Those who repent and believe in Jesus are pardoned all their sins and accepted in God’s sight because the righteousness of Christ is then counted as their own. This justification is God’s act of undeserved mercy, or grace, received solely by trusting him for it, and not on the grounds of moral or religious effort.
  9. The Holy Spirit alone applies the work of Christ to individual sinners, enabling them to understand and accept God’s word, turn to him from their sin, and trust in his Son Jesus.
  10. The Holy Spirit lives in all those he regenerates in this way, writing the law on their hearts, making them increasingly Christ-like in character and behaviour, and giving them power and gifts for witness in the world and service of the church.
  11. The one holy universal church is the Body of Christ comprising all true believers. Its local expression is the primary means by which God matures his people and extends his kingdom.
  12. The Lord Jesus will return in person, to raise and judge all humanity, justly sentencing those who have not repented and believed in him to everlasting destruction in hell, and mercifully receiving the redeemed to everlasting glory in a new heaven and earth.
The above doctrinal basis is to be assented to by:
  • Those regularly teaching in our church.
It is also preferable that the beliefs of the following are in general conformity to it:
  1. The overall pastor of any church we are to encourage attendance at.
  2. The overall pastor of any church we are to engage in mission with.
  3. The overall pastor of any church we might financially support.
  4. Any missionary organisation we might encourage involvement in.
  5. Any missionary organisation we might financially support
We must be clear that being united in Christ with all believers doesn’t mean that we should be blind to the merits of some churches or organisations over others, nor that we should seek to bring all believers together under one denominational umbrella or even work together in all we do. Unity is expressed by warmth between Christians and similarity in conviction, not co-ordination of activity.

Distinctives.
Just as any organisation achieves much more as each department does its own work, so very often does God’s family. As we all seek a clearer understanding of scripture, each denomination or church is likely not just to own different errors, but also different strengths that can be promoted for the good of the whole.

The following is a list of distinctives, which we believe are scriptural, and that we hope under God we can gracefully offer to the richness of his universal church. These should never be a barrier to relational or operational unity. Nevertheless, we would ask all our members to respect our convictions about them, raising any uncertainties with the leadership, and conforming to them if teaching or leading others within this church.

Position papers on each should be available to be downloaded from the church website.
  1. The baptism of children on the grounds of their parents’ repentance and faith.
  2. The use of responsive liturgy within services.
  3. A focus on expository preaching through books of the bible.
  4. An open but cautious perspective on contemporary charismatic theology.
  5. Remarriage only of those divorced through another’s adultery or after desertion.

Reaffirming ordination vows

Have decided to reaffirm my ordination vows at our coming Annual Church Meetings. My reasons are: (1) It keeps me accountable to them in a day when many drift from theirs as the years go on; (2) it makes the church aware of what I am called to do (and by implication not called to); (3) it establishes a tradition that will hopefully keep the next minister accountable to.

The original vows within the Book of Common Prayer are better in my view. But those used today are still good and rightly sober. Click for more below, to see them, adapted for our meeting.


Recommitment to ordination vows for the APCM

The following is taken from the official ordination service. Where text has been changed it is shown in italics. Titles have also been inserted. Otherwise, all that has been changed is the fact that whereas the Bishop read the liturgy and asked the questions at the ordination service, the Minister now reads the introduction with a Warden reading the rest.

THE MINISTER ADDRESSES THE CONGREGATION

The ministries of the word

Presbyters are called to be servants and shepherds among the people to whom they are sent. With their Bishop and fellow ministers, they are to proclaim the word of the Lord and to watch for the signs of God’s new creation. They are to be messengers, watchmen and stewards of the Lord; they are to teach and to admonish, to feed and provide for his family, to search for his children in the wilderness of this world’s temptations, and to guide them through its confusions, that they may be saved through Christ for ever. Formed by the word, they are to call their hearers to repentance and to declare in Christ's name the absolution and forgiveness of their sins.

With all God’s people, they are to tell the story of God’s love. They are to baptize new disciples in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit, and to walk with them in the way of Christ, nurturing them in the faith. They are to unfold the Scriptures, to preach the word in season and out of season, and to declare the mighty acts of God. They are to preside at the Lord's table and lead his people in worship, offering with them a spiritual sacrifice of praise and thanksgiving. They are to bless the people in God’s name.

Other ministries

They are to resist evil, support the weak, defend the poor, and intercede for all in need. They are to minister to the sick and prepare the dying for their death. Guided by the Spirit, they are to discern and foster the gifts of all God’s people, that the whole Church may be built up in unity and faith.

A WARDEN NOW ADDRESSES THE MINISTER

We trust that long ago you began to weigh and ponder all this, and that you are fully determined, by the grace of God, to devote yourself wholly to his service, so that as you daily follow the rule and teaching of our Lord and grow into his likeness, God may sanctify the lives of all with whom you have to do.

And now, in order that we may know your mind and purpose, we ask you to reaffirm the declarations put to you at your ordination.

Do you accept the Holy Scriptures as revealing all things necessary for eternal salvation through faith in Jesus Christ?

I do so accept them.

Will you be diligent in prayer, in reading Holy Scripture, and in all studies that will deepen your faith and fit you to bear witness to the truth of the gospel?

By the help of God, I will.

Will you lead Christ’s people in proclaiming his glorious gospel, so that the good news of salvation may be heard in every place?

By the help of God, I will.

Will you faithfully minister the doctrine and sacraments of Christ as the Church of England has received them, so that the people committed to your charge may be defended against error and flourish in the faith?

By the help of God, I will.

Will you, knowing yourself to be reconciled to God in Christ, strive to be an instrument of God’s peace in the Church and in the world?

By the help of God, I will.

Will you endeavour to fashion your own life and that of your household according to the way of Christ, that you may be a pattern and example to Christ’s people?

By the help of God, I will.

Will you work with your fellow servants in the gospel for the sake of the kingdom of God?

By the help of God, I will.

Will you accept and minister the discipline of this Church, and respect authority duly exercised within it?

By the help of God, I will.

Will you then, in the strength of the Holy Spirit, continually stir up the gift of God that is in you, to make Christ known among all whom you serve?

By the help of God, I will.

The WARDEN ADDRESSES THE CONGREGATION.

Brothers and sisters, you have heard how great is the charge that Jon has undertaken.

Will you continually pray for him?

We will.

Will you uphold and encourage him in his ministry?

We will.

THE WARDEN ADDRESSES THE MINISTER

In the name of our Lord we bid you remember the greatness of the trust that is now to be committed to your charge. Remember always with thanksgiving that the treasure now to be entrusted to you is Christ’s own flock, bought by the shedding of his blood on the cross. It is to him that you will render account for your stewardship of his people.

You cannot bear the weight of this calling in your own strength, but only by the grace and power of God. Pray therefore that your heart may daily be enlarged and your understanding of the Scriptures enlightened. Pray earnestly for the gift of the Holy Spirit.

Nazir-Ali resigns

This was a surprise, and a sad one. Michael Nazir-Ali is one of the very few English Bishops who are courageous enough to stand up for the gospel, and speak out on ethical and social matters. His resignation is a loss to the C of E, and will mean even greater pressure on the few other Bishops who are bold and orthodox.

Newspapers and blogs are speculating about his reasons for going, but one can't help assume that the incredible pressure he must have endured from within the C of E and the house of Bishops, as well as from society (apparently he received death threats over his comments about the rise of Islam) were key. Yet I wonder whether, in the end, after much striving, he just felt he was fighting a loosing battle in terms of English Anglicanism. It is true to say that the Anglican hierachy in general are fiddling as Rome burns around them. And someone of Nazir-Ali's passion and integrity, would only persevere in seeking to reverse this, to the extent that he felt (humanely speaking) this may have some impact. Increasingly realising it doesn't, perhaps he just felt before God that he should spend his gifts elsewhere, where greater good could be done for the Kingdom. And so his apparent desire to work with the persecuted church.

In short, his resignation asks the question: "To what extent is it worth fighting to save the Church of England or reverse the meltdown in our society?" or "Whould our time and efforts be better poured out in greater evangelism or other noble work?" In truth, it is evangelism that has historically been the only real changer of society, as hearts have been regenerated and lives transformed by the living God. Consider the 18th century revivals.

Making the most of the Sunday message

Seven top tips:

(1) Be expectant. To the extent that the preacher explains and applies the Bible correctly, you are actually hearing God’s word. Reflecting on this before sermons should certainly cause us to sit up. And we should therefore come expecting to be encouraged, stretched, challenged, strengthened or even rebuked, just as the disciples were by Jesus.

(2) Open the Bible and follow what is said. This is most important and keeps your mind interacting. It also enables you to remember what you’ve heard when you later re-read the passage. In Acts 17v11 we read: “Now the Bereans were of more noble character than the Thessalonians, for they received the message with great eagerness and examined the Scriptures every day to see if what Paul said was true.” Their eagerness and studiousness is clearly intended as a “noble” model for the reader. And note the assumption that the Bible was the determiner of whether what was said was actually true.

(3) Pray through what you hear as you hear it.
Arrow prayers such as: “Lord help me remember that” or “help us do that” or “I praise you for that,” acknowledge that listening to a sermon is a spiritual activity, but also apply the sermon on the spot and aid attentiveness.

(4) Memorise the main points.
I do want to be clear that I do not expect everyone to understand everything in every sermon. The preacher hopes that the most knowledgeable and mature will grasp everything, but assumes others will just get the main gist and be left with questions to think about further, and others may just take the primary point away. This is the inevitable consequence of teaching a mixed group. And it is surely unwise to pitch the sermon at the level of the newest in faith, because it then leaves the more mature bereft. At the very least, repeating the main points to yourself as the sermon progresses helps to ensure you grasp and apply the general gist. And those who study memory tell us that when recalling those main points, much of the content that went with them will come to mind too.

(5) Take notes.
This is an obvious point and is the norm in some churches. I was deeply encouraged a few months ago when an 11 year old girl had stayed in the main service and took notes on a twenty minute sermon on Psalm 55. Her Mum gave them to me, and the girl had got the sense of every major point made.

(6) Re-read and pray through the passage.
This is a good discipline to get into, and could be done just before bed on Sunday night. As you do it, you will normally find points from the sermon coming to mind again and becoming more a part of your general understanding. It is also a great way of ensuring we are “not just hearers of the word, but doers also” (James 1v22).

(7) Ask the preacher your questions.
We have noted this was often part of first century teaching. The preacher expects people to be left with uncertainties as not everything can be covered, and no preacher is every crystal clear! So please please do ask your questions over coffee, or by way of a phone call or email. The onus is certainly on the preacher to try to be make things understandable, but it is also on the hearer to ensure they have rightly understood.

Beholding God's glory

Listened to John Piper's (right) superb sermon: "Why expository preaching is particularly glorifying to God" (see link on sidebar).

Simple but revolutionary truth from 2 Cor 3v18, 4v6:
"But we all, with unveiled face, beholding as in a mirror the glory of the Lord, are being transformed into the same image from glory to glory, just as from the Lord, the Spirit."

"For God, who said, 'Light shall shine out of darkness,' is the one who has shone in our hearts to give the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Christ.
"
  • Question: How might we and our fellow Christians become more godly?
  • Answer: By beholding the glory of the Lord.
  • Question: How might we more fully behold it?
  • Answer: By absorbing the truth about Christ in the gospel?
Implications:
  1. If we want to grow in our Christian lives, we must not just know the Bible better, but ask throughout, "How do I see here God's glory displayed in Christ?"
  2. If we want our church to grow in maturity, we must not just preach the Bible, but preach it in a way that stresses God's glory as it is displayed in Christ. This is what Piper terms 'expositional exultation' - the two wings to the same plane; ie. preaching is lacking without both: It is to expound the scriptures, but in such a way that in manner and content we raise up Jesus over all and set forth the excellences of God seen most clearly in him.
It's obvious when we hear it, but I confess to having failed to see it with such clarity. Pray now that your life, my life, and that of God's church would grasp and implement this truth. Beyond this, buy anything written by John Piper and absorb it.


Kent Hughes recommends preachers

Just heard enlightening interview with renowned US pastor and writer R Kent Hughes - here.

In it, he mentions some of those he most respects for their expositional preaching. Of course there are many others, but these are those which came most immediately to his mind.

Why not click below and benefit from some of their preaching. Do let me know if you can find links for the other two:

Leyland Ryken
Bryan Chapell
John McArthur
Ajith Fernando
Mark Dever
Alistair Begg

A response to Gene Robinson on homosexuality

Introduction

To the inexperienced mind many icebergs look quite safe. Seeing only the small tip above water, it is perfectly understandable to ask what the fuss is all about in seeking to give them a wide berth. However the fuss is quite justified, for although the presenting issue may seem trivial, underneath it exists a mountain of ice sufficient to sink one’s ship.

The illustration surely stands for the current crisis over sexuality within the Anglican Communion. Many a church member seems to wonder what the fuss is all about. Shouldn’t the church be giving its energies to more pressing issues? The fact is however, that although homosexuality is the current presenting issue, beneath (or behind it) lie very serious issues indeed - the authority of scripture and the nature of repentance to name only two. The question cannot therefore be ignored. For scripture is nothing less than the foundation on which Christianity itself is built, and repentance is nothing less than the means by which we receive salvation.

Having said this, we must also question the assumption that homosexuality in and of itself is a trivial issue. Most important for Christians is that ignoring it is to permit or even encourage an activity that the Bible deems sinful. And sin is never trivial. Yet in terms of the impact of homosexuality on others too, it is far from a minor issue. Consider here the following quote from the American College of Pediatricians which as far as I am aware is not a religious body, but one that is simply concerned to promote policy on the basis of scientific evidence. Support for these assertions can be found in the footnotes on the website:

Violence among homosexual partners is two to three times more common than among married heterosexual couples. Homosexual partnerships are significantly more prone to dissolution than heterosexual marriages with the average homosexual relationship lasting only two to three years. Homosexual men and women are reported to be inordinately promiscuous involving serial sex partners, even within what are loosely-termed "committed relationships." Individuals who practice a homosexual lifestyle are more likely than heterosexuals to experience mental illness, substance abuse, suicidal tendencies, and shortened life spans. Although some would claim that these dysfunctions are a result of societal pressures in America, the same dysfunctions exist at inordinately high levels among homosexuals in cultures were the practice is more widely accepted. Children reared in homosexual households are more likely to experience sexual confusion, practice homosexual behavior, and engage in sexual experimentation. Adolescents and young adults who adopt the homosexual lifestyle, like their adult counterparts, are at increased risk of mental health problems, including major depression, anxiety disorder, conduct disorder, substance dependence, and especially suicidal ideation and suicide attempts.

The facts seem quite clear. To allow the promotion of homosexuality as a valid form of sexual experience is to encourage what is damaging to those who practice it. The quote above doesn’t even mention the physical damage that results from homosexual sex. We might respond that this is the individual’s choice. But we should realise that affirming that choice has already opened the door to the promotion of homosexuality in schools and of course by parental example to those adopted by gay parents. In the light of the quote above, we have to acknowledge that this is to encourage children into destructive lifestyles – something that has become a taboo to suggest, and that the media refuse to acknowledge.

Context

The crisis in the Anglican church has actually been bubbling under the surface for some years. Many hoped the agreed resolution of the Lambeth Conference in 1998 might quell this. However despite its statement that: “this conference…believes that abstinence is right for those who are not called to marriage” and “cannot advise the legitimising or blessing of same sex unions nor ordaining those involved in same gender unions,” a Canadian Episcopal synod officially approved same-sex blessings in 2002 and a year later a number of US Bishops consecrated an actively gay man (Gene Robinson) as Bishop. So it was that eruptions began. And since then the acceptance of the homosexual lifestyle has been consistently and openly pushed by those who are considered liberals, including Gene Robinson himself who took the opportunity last month to promote his views in the Guardian.

No matter how much we might wish for this issue to go away, it will not therefore do so. Moreover, because our press is evidently reluctant to give space to alternate sides of the debate, Robinson’s very public assertion of his views requires public response. It is for this reason that I have used Robinson’s brief article as a platform for commenting on the issue. Do please read it (here) before reading my reflections. It is important to properly hear his views, and they are in many ways representative.

Response

Robinson writes (and speaks) in a gentle way. His article reads as if it is asking questions rather than making bold assertions. In this sense it of course appeals to the reader who seeks to be caring and tolerant as we all should. However in recognising we are creatures of a culture that places tolerance above truth in the list of virtues, we must be careful not to assent to what is written just because we like its manner. For upon a closer look, the article is making very bold assertions indeed.

Robinson’s view of revelation and the church

A lifeless God

The historic position of all Christian churches has been that God has indeed given the Bible as a final and complete revelation. It is therefore ungracious and deeply disrespectful to the thoughtful Christian witness of two millennia to dismiss this with unjustified assertions that it makes God “static,” “lifeless,” “enclosed” in a “box” and “locked up in scripture.” Moreover, with phrases like “for me there is something static and lifeless” and “in my life God seems infinitely more engaged,” Robinson hints that he has little more to back up this view than his own intuition and experience.

The irony here, is that the historic position is that it is specifically because our own intuition, experience and cultural bias is so limited, untrustworthy and impacted by sin, that God in his wisdom has revealed his will in a book. For this alone can be preserved across cultures, discussed and studied in a way that enables the Christian to have their own thoughts and feelings challenged and brought into submission to it (if we can use that word – see 2 Cor 10v5).

Robinson says that his “conservative brothers and sisters seem to argue that God revealed everything to us in scripture. Ever since, it has simply been our difficult but straightforward task to conform ourselves to God's will revealed there and to repent when we are unable or unwilling to do so.” The way this is put is something of a caricature. Of course this process is not always “straightforward,” and requires prayerfulness, humility and subtlety, an awareness of the culture of Jesus’ day and of our own bias. But having said that, only a brief read of the gospels shows how often Jesus declares his message “repent for the kingdom of heaven is near,” and how often he appeals to scriptures written hundreds of years before he lived in critiquing the moral and religious assumptions of his day.[1]

Robinson must therefore be honest. He is actually saying that Jesus’ portrayal of God is “static,” “lifeless” and one that encourages us to “enclose” God in a “box” etc. We must see that in reality his argument is with Christ himself (and the apostles). The truth is that it is God who has deemed it appropriate, adequate and possible to accurately reveal something of his nature and will in a book. Jesus himself taught this, and we affirm it every Sunday when we respond to the assertion: “This is the word of the Lord” with our agreement “Thanks be to God.” (John 5v36-47)

The irony this time is that it is in the very things Robinson rejects, that we genuinely experience the dynamism and life of God just as the disciples experienced the dynamism and life of Jesus; we experience him through the Bible convict us of our failure and sin, challenge the accepted morality or religion of our day as “traditions of men”, and then encourage us with wonderful grace that is willing to forgive and transform all who (in Jesus’ words remember) “repent.”

At this point may I gently suggest that it is the liberal view that in reality “encloses God in a box.” For how does the liberal know God’s will? If it is by what feels or seems right to us, surely this is far more limiting, because our personal or at most cultural convictions become the boundary markers on what God can be like and what his will is allowed to be. Such a view means that conscience, culture or consensus can never be challenged by God because it assumed that these things reflect his mind and spirit. A century after the consensus of the German people was to support Hitler, this view is naïve indeed.

Discerning God’s will

In fairness, Robinson is more subtle here, suggesting that “in the community of the church, together we are able to discern God's will for us - and sometimes that may mean reinterpreting and even changing old understandings of things thought settled long ago.”

It would be nice to assume that what this advocates is nothing more than an acceptance of the trustworthiness of scripture, but with the wisdom to listen to the church universal in its understanding of the meaning of scripture and how it should rightly apply today. However by later commending the idea that the church can choose to over-ride Christ’s teaching that some remarriage is adultery, Robinson reveals his actual presupposition (apparently stated in his book) that scripture is at times in error, and that the modern mind is sufficient to ascertaining what God really wills.

But again, the historic position (and as noted, that of Jesus himself) is that the church is to seek to understand and apply the actual teaching of the Bible, not decide which parts are right or wrong.

Moreover an appeal to the community of the church for authority is astonishing when coming from Gene Robinson of all people, as many pleaded with him and the US Bishops not to proceed with his consecration precisely because it went directly against the consensus of the church. And note how large that consensus was and is: It includes the resolution of the previous Lambeth conference, the mind of every major denomination throughout the world, and that of the entire 2000 years of church history. Yet proceed these Bishops did. And if we are to turn Robinson’s words back on him, we must surely say they proceeded because they “locked God up” in the box of the common mind of only x amount of liberal bishops in one province of the Anglican Communion in one particular decade of church history.

Robinson’s use of scripture

The apostles

Turning now to Robinson’s use of the Bible in support of his views, he writes: “Jesus says a remarkable thing to his disciples at his last supper with them: "There is more that I would teach you, but you cannot bear it right now. So I will send the Holy Spirit who will lead you into all truth."” Robinson then comments: “Could it be that God revealed in Jesus Christ everything possible in a first-century Palestine setting to a ragtag band of fishermen and working men? Could it have been God's plan all along to reveal more and more of himself and his will as the church grew and matured?”

What Robinson fails to see here, is that these verses actually make the very point he is trying to counter. They were spoken to the twelve. They were therefore a promise to them not us. Read the context in John 14-16. Jesus here promises that the Holy Spirit would “remind” his apostles “of everything” Jesus had taught them (John 14v26), and not only “lead them into all truth,” but “teach them what is yet to come” (16v13). Now if we want to apply the “leading into all truth” to the church, then we must apply the other points too. But who would claim that we all have perfect memory of Jesus’ words or prophetic insight into the future? These chapters are a promise to Jesus’ disciples, the night before his death, that they would be supernaturally inspired to the extent that they could accurately record his teaching and even know “all” truth. It is precisely because of this teaching that the early church regarded the apostolic letters and gospels as divinely inspired and entirely trustworthy.

So we must answer Robinson in the affirmative to one of Robinson’s questions, but with a slight qualification to his wording: “Yes, God did reveal in Jesus Christ everything necessary in a first-century Palestine setting to a ragtag band of fishermen and working men.” In other words he gave sufficient revelation for the church from then on to study and apply to whatever situations they might face. It is not that he reveals more of himself as the church progresses through history, it is that we have the potential to better understand and apply his revelation given in the Bible as we stand on the shoulders of the interpreters that have gone before us.

Changing views

In making his case that the church is able to “reinterpret” scripture. Robinson goes on to write: “Through the leading of the Holy Spirit, the church was led to permit eating things proscribed by Leviticus, to oppose slavery (after centuries of using scripture to defend it), and to permit and bless remarriage after divorce (despite Jesus' calling it adultery).”

I do want to read Robinson sympathetically, but although this argument is common amongst liberals, it is a desperately weak one. Surely every attentive Bible reader can notice that the Holy Spirit didn’t lead the church to accept unclean foods in the way Robinson wants the church to decide to accept homosexuality. No, the Holy Spirit clearly revealed his will within the New Testament of the Bible – in the teaching of Jesus and through a revelation made to one of his apostles (Mark 7v19; Acts 10v9-23)! Moreover, this was not to contradict what was previously written in the Old Testament, which all along had hinted that the food laws were a temporary requirement intended to set Israel apart from other nations and teach the utter purity required by God’s special people (Lev 20v25-26).

Again, the church didn’t oppose slavery by negating or updating the teaching of scripture, rather it was scripture that inspired the likes of Wilberforce to do exactly what they did! Certainly the Bible encourages slaves to be hard working if their slavery is inevitable, but it also urges them to seek their freedom if possible (Col 3v22-25; 1 Cor 7v21). Moreover, it encourages slave masters to be kind to their slaves, and treat them instead as brothers (Col 4v1, Philemon 15-16). We must understand that slavery in the ancient world wasn't like that of 18th and 19th centuries. Slaves were often respected servants, well provided for and looked after. Moreover, the entire Roman system was built upon them. If Paul had urged slaves to revolt and disobey their masters, the slaves would have undoubtedly suffered.[2]

As for remarriage after divorce; is Robinson really wanting to say that the church’s view of remarriage displays a readiness to sanction something the one they follow taught was adultery? Absolutely not. Those who reject the view that remarriage is always wrong do so (or should do so) because they are convinced by the teaching of Jesus and scripture that it is sometimes permissible (Matt 19v9; 1 Cor 7v15).

I every case Robinson cites, it is in fact by an appeal to the clear teaching scripture that the church has come to the conclusions it has, not by a willingness to contradict, or in his terms “reinterpret” it. In other words, the abuses of the church in the past actually stemmed from being not faithful enough to the Bible’s teaching. And we might add that this is the case with homosexuality too. Of course some Christians and churches have been (and may still be) guilty of inexcusable hostility to homosexuals. But the answer to this is not to say that the Bible encourages this and reject its teaching. It is to show that the Bible not only teaches homosexual sex to be sin that must be repented of, but also teaches the Christian to offer friendship and love to every sinner whilst humbly recognising that every one of us is in need of repentance too.

Sexuality

So it is by the full examination of scripture that the church must come to its conclusions on sexuality. And it is here that Robinson faces a dilemma. For whereas the Bible explicitly abrogates the food laws, implicitly challenges slavery and seems to permit remarriage, it consistently condemns homosexual practice and never, never gives any sense that it might be acceptable.

The liberal lobby love to pretend the issue is just an Old Testament one and equate it with the temporary laws on food. However, they conveniently ignore the fact that OT is very clear that whereas God was concerned only with Israel when it came to food laws, he condemned homosexuality amongst other nations and cultures too (Lev 18v3, 28-20). This law was not therefore culturally bound. And the NT reaffirms this. In a Greco-Roman culture where homosexuality was common we see Jesus clearly stating that the only alternative to heterosexual marriage is celibacy (Matt 19v4-12), and to churches existing amongst a diversity of cultures Paul mentions and prohibits homosexuality itself (Rom 1v24-27; 1 Cor 6v9). Furthermore, the entire NT condemns 'porneia' on (at my count) 24 separate occasions; and it is commonly agreed that 'porneia' refers to all sexual practices forbidden by the OT, including homosexuality.[3]

One oft heard response to the weight of this evidence is to sidestep it entirely by saying that the particular sort of exclusively committed homosexuality some want to affirm just isn’t dealt with by the NT teaching, or that when Paul condemns homosexual acts as “unnatural” (Rom 1v26-27) he is referring not to those who we understand today are gay by orientation, but those who are “naturally” heterosexual but engage in homosexual acts. A number of simple points can be made in response:

1. This implicitly acknowledges that the NT teaching does prohibit the majority of homosexual acts.

2. This is effectively to say that any expression of sin not explicitly mentioned in scripture is justifiable. But this is pedantic to the extreme and opens the door to pretty much anything. The discipline of interpreting scripture has always meant applying its principles to similar though not identical circumstances today.

3. One must ask how we can be so sure the NT writers were not forbidding all forms of homosexual sex including that which is engaged in according to “orientation” and within a committed relationship? Such relationships were not unknown in the ancient world. Indeed, in Leviticus 18v22 it is “lying with a man as one lies with a woman” that is forbidden. And in Israelite society then one was only ever to lie with a woman in the context of lifelong marriage.[4] For a man to lie with a man in this way was effectively to treat them like a wife.

4. Most conclusively, we should note that the teaching of both testaments cited above is directed not to the type of relationship but to the sexual act itself, irrespective of its context. And we just cannot impose our 21st century assumption (that is still unproved) of homosexual orientation being “natural” onto Paul in Romans 1 or Jesus in Matthew 19. Jesus explicitly grounds his teaching in the fact that God “said” at the creation that marriage and sex was to be heterosexual (Matt 19v4; Gen 2v23-24). And it is without doubt that as a Hebrew, Paul’s definition of what is “natural” would be defined on the same basis, ie. by this same creation account.[5] As an aside, I don’t think Paul would be to surprised even if it was proved that homosexual orientation had a genetic basis. For as a Hebrew he also held to the fact that the fall has fractured the entire created order - even down to the genetic level (Rom 8v20).

In the light of this substantial testimony, we must say as firmly as possible, that the issue at stake in the debate over homosexuality is not merely differences in interpretation as is often said. It is whether or not the consistent, substantial and plain meaning of the Bible is to be taken seriously. And here we should also say, again with great irony, that because Robinson’s argument for permitting homosexual sex ignores the Bible's plain teaching, at this point it actually has more in common with the justification of slavery, because this was allowed by sidelining and distorting scripture too.

Conclusion

We started by noting the gentle and tolerant tone of Gene Robinson’s article, and that in our current culture tolerance is the supreme virtue. However, honesty is surely still prized too. And I have to say that I really do struggle to see how Robinson could have written an article that so misrepresents the teaching of the Bible and the historical understanding of the church. We must give the benefit of the doubt and assume this misrepresentation is not wilful. Yet this still leaves us deeply concerned that a senior church leader could make such schoolboy errors. Indeed, we can only conclude that this stems from a prior commitment to affirming homosexuality that is obscuring all objectivity.

Authority

Returning to the iceberg, we must also see the implications of what Robinson (and others) are advocating. He seems to suggest at the very least that the common mind of the church has authority to contradict scriptural teaching. However every Sunday school child knows that Jesus taught that the wise man builds his house upon the rock, and that to build in this way is to listen to and obey what Jesus taught. We must be clear that his teaching, including that propounded by the apostles, is intended to be the foundation of the church (Eph 2v20). To accept the grounds on which Robinson seeks to justify homosexuality is to do the very thing Jesus taught would lead to disaster – build our lives and church upon sand.

Repentance

The other major background issue is that of what it means to repent. When cut to the heart at rejecting Christ, the Jews on the day of Pentecost cried: “What shall we do?” Peter replied: “Repent and be baptised, every one of you, in the name of Jesus Christ for the forgiveness of your sins. And you will receive the gift of the Holy Spirit.”

So repentance is necessary to salvation. And we need only read Mark 9v42-49 to see how serious it is when someone teaches that there is an area of sin the Bible forbids that we need not repent of. Rather Christian discipleship has always required a readiness to change one’s mind and life in accordance with the teaching of scripture. Of course this means that some have to make more painful changes than others when coming to follow Christ, but this has never been otherwise.

The seriousness of those who claim to be Christians failing to repent is outlined by Paul in 1 Corinthians 6v9-10: “Do not be deceived. Neither the sexually immoral (porneia) nor idolaters nor adulterers nor male prostitutes nor homosexual offenders nor thieves nor the greedy nor drunkards nor slanderers nor swindlers will inherit the kingdom of God. And that is what some of you were. But you were washed, you were sanctified, you were justified in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ and by the Spirit of our God.”

Now it is no surprise that the exact meaning of the term translated “homosexual offenders” is hotly debated. But we might note again that homosexuality is also included in the catch-all term translated “sexually immoral,” and because this term denotes the practices forbidden by the OT it more straightforwardly forbids all forms of homosexuality. Having said this, we should not assume that Paul has in mind those who may fall in one of these areas on occasion. His point seems rather to be that those who persist unrepentantly in such sins (even that of slander or greed) will not inherit the kingdom.

In summary

Clearly then, a refusal to turn from homosexual sex is of the utmost importance, as is the decision by Christian leaders to justify it or the refusal by Christian leaders to lovingly oppose it. It not only propagates what science suggests is destructive behaviour, it not only encourages people in sin against God, but it takes an axe to the foundation of the church and is in danger of closing the door to salvation itself. If you disagree with this, then please do so on scriptural grounds. And if you do, please understand nevertheless, that it is for these reasons, out of loving concern and not out of bigotry, that so many Bishops and clergy throughout the Anglican Communion are opposing Robinson’s views and taking a stand on what may at first seem a minor issue.


[1] I count 20 times where Jesus begins “it is written” before justifying his view from the Old Testament. On tope of this we have a huge number of other quotes, including an equating of Genesis 2’s teaching on marriage with God speaking (Matt 19v4-5)

[2] Another issue mentioned by some as akin to the repression of homosexuality is the oppression of women. Yet here too, the Bible is actually radically pro-women when we consider its cultural context. Jesus teaches women, whereas this was considered a waste of time in Judaism. He chooses them as witnesses to the resurrection whereas they were not considered suitable witnesses in his day. And Paul teaches husbands to love their wives as Christ did the church – which would mean a daily dying for their good. Yes he also teaches that wives should submit to their husbands, but it is clear from his teaching to husbands that he intended no license for oppression in this.

[3] O’Brien, Peter. The letter to the Ephesians, (Leicester, Apollos, 1999), p.359, f.n.2; Hauck and Schultz “porne” in the Theological dictionary of the New Testament: Vol VI, ed. Gerhard Kittel, translated and edited by Geoffrey W Bromiley (Grand Rapids, Eerdmans, 1964), p.590

[4] Wenham, Gordon J. The book o Leviticus: The New International Commentary on the Old Testament, (grand Rapids, Eerdmans, p.253

[5] This is probably why he speaks of homosexuality as worshipping and serving “created things” rather than the creator (v25). It is to devote oneself to the act of sex rather than prioritising obedience to the one who has defined how it should be expressed.