The Sunday Reader, VOL. 1, ISSUE #11

This week's insightful and interesting links.

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The Burning of the Wooden Shoe

Rev. Chris Gordon, pastor at our sister church, Escondido URC, has written this clarion article on what he believes are current trends within Reformed churches that reflect the CRC's history. “The CRC may have rightly burned the wooden shoes of a parochial, ethnic, and cultural identity but made the mistake of leaving in those shoes the very Reformed confessions that gave her a theological identity. In our attempts to accommodate the culture, to address social injustice, some of which may certainly need to happen, we run the risk of burning the Reformed confessions. This is no small matter and, in the end, it has everything to do with what the Reformation helped us recover: the gospel of Jesus as a Savior from sin.”

Can You Make Your Election Sure?

Rev. Spotts answers a question about the Apostle Peter's admonition to “make your calling and election sure,” in light of sovereign grace.

Doing Church Biblically Can Be Messy

How might members and leaders at PURC respond if a homosexual couple became regular attenders? God, grant us wisdom to point all people to Christ, as Savior and Lord, in a faithful way, regardless of the their response. 

 

 

 

Can You Make Your Election Sure?

Lately, our evening service has been going through the biblical doctrines of grace confessed in the Canons of Dort. This topic lends itself to many questions and opportunities to dig into the Word. For instance, a member wrote to ask how we should understand 2 Pet 1:1-10:

At the beginning of this passage, Peter makes it clear that all good things come from God's "divine power" and that "through them you may become partakers of the divine nature..."  He then lists a set of qualities that make us productive and fruitful members of God's kingdom.  It is clear that these things come only from God.  Later he says that we must "...be all the more diligent to make your calling and election sure..."  What does it mean to  make our calling and election sure? The wording seems to assume that we can take action on our own that affects our election which would contradict the rest of scripture... Can you shed some light on that for me?

THE DIVINE NATURE

First, let's sort out what is meant by, “you may become partakers of the divine nature." As mere creatures, we can never grasp, let alone partake in God's essential being. The “partaking” which Peter has in mind is the Spirit's impartation to us of God's communicable attributes, such as virtue, brotherly affection, self-control, etc.  Over time, the divine image comes to be reflected in us.

Unlike sin which results in spiritual bondage, this godly nature produces true freedom. “Where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is liberty” (2 Cor 3:17). Sanctification can therefore be described as a process of liberation from corrupt desires unto holy preferences. We are no longer simply depraved but are “being renewed in the spirit of your mind” (Eph 4:23). In this way, partaking in the divine nature means that believers can begin to sincerely will the good, albeit imperfectly.

MAKING YOUR ELECTION SURE

Now that we've been set free from sin unto godliness, one might wonder whether good works determine our final destination? Perhaps God's election is based on foreknowledge of how different people would use or abuse their liberty. Not at all! Growth, however vital as evidence of spiritual life, does not itself serve as the ground of God's eternal decision to elect and call certain people to salvation. Otherwise salvation would not be entirely of grace:

“For by grace you have been saved through faith. And this is not your own doing; it is the gift of God, 9 not a result of works, so that no one may boast. 10 For we are his workmanship, created in Christ Jesus for good works, which God prepared beforehand, that we should walk in them.” (Eph 2:8-10, ESV)

So what might Peter have in mind when he tells us to “be all the more diligent to make your calling and election sure” (NKJV)? This is one instance where confusion is largely resolved by comparing translations. The ESV, for instance, renders the text, “brothers, be all the more diligent to confirm your calling and election, for if you practice these qualities you will never fall.” 

First, the word translated “fall” (πταίσητέ) here means “to stumble or loose one's footing.” Elsewhere, we find this term descrbing believers in the midst of doubt or sin. James 3:3, for instance, admits “we all stumble in many ways.” When discussing apostasy, however, a different term is used for permanently “falling away” from the visible church (ἀποστῆναι). It is reasonable to presume the kind of descent Peter has in mind is not from profession of faith to denial, but from confidence in one's salvation to doubt.  The preceding verse highlights this by noting a person who has “forgotten that he was cleansed from his former sins.” Clearly, he is elect and called, or else he would not be cleansed, yet he has become uncertain of his status.

Second, observe the phrase “confirm your calling.” Confirming doesn't have to mean earning or establishing the ground of something. Suppose a car accident leaves me and several passengers stranded. Geico assures me a tow truck is on the way. After fifteen minutes, I become impatient and doubtful. ‘Are they coming or not?’ So I contact the rental company to confirm. The operator assures me, “the driver left ten minutes ago. He will be there shortly.” In this case, my call to confirm did not initiate the tow truck's coming. He was already headed my way. What confirming did, however, is put me and my passengers at ease concerning the status of our situation. 

Even so, confirming one's election by growing in virtue does not influence God's objective and eternal choice. The Lord is already on the way to salvage his wrecked elect! Ongoing spiritual growth, however, settles doubts within ourselves and others concerning the reality of grace at work in us.

Peter's argument relates to the so-called Practical Syllogism common among Reformed theologians. Basically, the syllogism shows how one's election and calling, known directly by God, can be logically inferred by individuals. It goes like this:

1. Only elect people receive the Spirit through calling (regeneration). 
2. All those who receive the Spirit walk in newness of life (ongoing faith and repentance)
3. I walk in a way that evidences newness of life
4. Therefore, I have strong reason to believe I have been elected and called.

Conversely,

3. I am NOT walking in a way that evidences newness of life
4. Therefore, I have weak reason to believe I am elect and called.

While this argument does not replace faith in Christ's objective work as the primary basis of assurance, it can serve a secondary role in strengthening our hope. 

CONCLUSION

In light of all this, 2 Pet 1:10 can be understood as saying, “diligently pursue abundant fruits of the Spirit which prove the reality of your election and calling.” Essentially, Paul says the same thing in Rom 8:1-4, “there is therefore now no condemnation... to those who walk not according to the flesh but according to the Spirit...” Walking after the Spirit is not why we are no longer condemned, but is proof we are forgiven. Becoming virtuous is not the ground of God's election, but a comforting confirmation of it.

PS: I'm glad to hear our members are pondering God's riches in the Word.

The Sunday Reader, VOL. 1, ISSUE #10

This week's insightful and interesting links.

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Is Hospitality Your Mentality?

"Rather than opening and sharing our homes, the current American Dream is that each family member has his or her own room, their own screen, and their own bathroom. The typical American home built in the 1950s was 1,700 square feet, while in 2017 it was 2,600 square feet. Our homes are larger and nicer—but there is less life within." Highly recommended. 

Does 2 Cor 3:17 Teach the Deity of the Spirit

Rev. Spotts interacts with accusations raised against this text.

Homeschool Will Not Save Them

An important if perhaps heavy article. "An idea had taken root, sprouted, and grown over the years, and it was this: By giving my child a distinctively Christian education, I was ensuring she would turn out Christian. It had been like a private insurance policy I had taken out with God. I thought he had agreed to my terms

 

 

 

The Sunday Reader, VOL. 1, ISSUE #9

This week's insightful and interesting links.

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Yes, Doctrine Divides

Rev. Spotts reflects on how sometimes sharp distinctions must be made for the sake of the Body.

The Peculiarity of Early Christian Worship

Michael Kruger observes how early “Christian worship managed to irritate just about everyone,” and what we can learn from it.

I Have Forgotten How to Read

“For a long time, I convinced myself that a childhood spent immersed in old-fashioned books would insulate me somehow from our new media climate—that I could keep on reading and writing in the old way because my mind was formed in pre-internet days. But the mind is plastic—and I have changed. I'm not the reader I was.” Highly recommended.

 

 

 

Yes, Doctrine Divides

Now and then, I hear people say something to the effect of “doctrine divides, and therefore should not be emphasized.” To such, I wish gently to draw attention to the great division God himself made in Genesis. In the beginning, the Lord set an expanse between day and night, light and dark, sea and sky. Division is something God makes in order to distinguish that which is good, true, and beautiful, from that which is evil, false, and unformed. 

There is a difference between godly division and sinful divisiveness. A divisive spirit is lead by proud and selfish motives to rend the fellowship of saints. It is a disease within the Body of Christ. Sharp division of truth from error, however, is needed at times to preserve spiritual life, just as scalpels are sometimes required to separate what is infected and gangrenous from that which is alive. However unpleasant, failure to make such necessary divisions amounts to ministerial malpractice. It is a physician withholding the means of healing. 

Fix your gaze on the unbridgeable chasm between heaven and hell, and remember what separates those on either side. When the Lord Jesus returns, he is “revealed from heaven with his mighty angels in flaming fire, inflicting vengeance on those who do not know God and on those who do not obey the gospel of our Lord Jesus” (2 Thess 1:8, ESV). True and saving faith entails an embrace of revelation, especially concerning the gospel. For that reason, knowledge marks the difference between life and death. Whereas destruction falls on “everyone who loves a lie,” those whom “the truth has set free” are guaranteed escape (Rev 22:15Jn 8:32).

On the last day, doctrine, whether true or false, will distinguish between final destinations and divide souls forever. To the one who says doctrine divides, I reply, “yes, and it is precisely because doctrine divides that it must be emphasized.”

Further Reading (Offsite):

Why do Some Pastors Deliberately Avoid Teaching Doctrine?

 

Does 2 Cor 3:17 teach the Deity of the Spirit?

This week, a member wrote to ask whether 2 Cor 3:17 clearly teaches the deity of the Holy Spirit, or if the original Greek text can be translated other ways. The passage reads, "Now the Lord is the Spirit" (ESV). Her question arose from conversations with Mormons and Jehovah's witnesses who accuse Christians of mistranslating the verse.

It might be more than she bargained for, but here is the text of 2 Cor 3:17:

ὁ δὲ κύριος τὸ πνεῦμά ἐστιν·

Roughly pronounced: "ha deh KOO-ri-os tah NOO-ma ES-teen"

Now, I'm going to break this down word by word:

  • δὲ ("deh") = conjunction, "now, however, but"
  •  ("ha") = masculine demonstrative article. "the, this, that"
  • κύριος ("KOO-ri-os") =  "Lord" 
  • πνεῦμά ("NOO-ma") = "Spirit" (grammatically neuter)
  • ἐστιν ("ES-teen") = Present-tense verb of being or equivalence. Basically like our English word "is" 
  • τὸ ("tah") = neuter demonstrative article "the, this, that"

The first thing to note is that because the neuter article (τὸ) occurs as second in a series of demonstrative pronouns with “the" (ὁ) Lord,” it functions much like our English phrase, “that thing is this.” Moreover, the “Lord” and “Spirit” are joined by the simple verb of being (ἐστιν, “is”). This arrangement, again like English, serves to signify the equivalence of two things.

For these reasons, it seems perfectly clear that the author intended to identify the Lord God as one and the same with his Spirit. “Now, the Lord is that/the Spirit.” In other words, the Holy Spirit is one in being and essence with the Lord. The Belgic Confession, Art. 11, puts it this way:

We believe and confess also that the Holy Spirit from eternity proceeds from the Father and the Son. He is neither made, created, nor begotten, but He can only be said to proceed from both.   [1]   In order He is the third Person of the Holy Trinity, of one and the same essence, majesty, and glory with the Father and the Son, true and eternal God, as the Holy Scriptures teach us.  [2] 

1. John 14:15-26; John 15:26; Rom 8:9. 

2. Gen 1:2; Mat 28:19; Acts 5:3-4; 1 Cor 2:10; 1 Cor 3:16; 1 Cor 6:11; 1 John 5:7.

There is an underlying problem which the questioner might run into, however.  Mormons and Jehovah's Witnesses typically base their disputes not on how Christians interpret the Bible, but on whether the biblical texts themselves have been preserved accurately. Their real beef is with God's providential preservation of his Word.

When Mormons come to my door, I try to ask something like, “given that you believe God allowed the Word to be fatally corrupted and lost until the time of Joseph Smith, how do you know he won't do that again?” It is not something they have usually given thought to. This provides an opportunity to express our hope in God's kindness. For although the Bible is sometimes misunderstood, we believe God preserved the Scriptures throughout time just as he promised. “The grass withers and the flowers fall, but the word of our God stands forever” (Isaiah 40:8).

Thanks for asking!

PS: Here's an article from Ligonier on the deity of the Spirit.

The Sunday Reader, VOL. 1, ISSUE #8

This week's insightful and interesting links.

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My Protestant Oscar Predictions

Classic Carl Trueman commenting and critiquing aspects of North American culture. “We should not allow what is morally vile to monopolize the language of beauty. In a world where taste is truth, the church’s task is to cultivate taste.”

A Generation Emerging from the Wreckage

This New York Times article provides a thoughtful perspective on millions of young Americans reared to feel ashamed, isolated, and angry over their nationality. If you attended the recent WHI event, you'll notice connections. Certainly, the Church has an opportunity to speak truth and love into this moment.

Two Services on Sunday? Really!

Since only half our members attend both services regularly, I'm not totally preaching to the choir. Seriously, challenge yourself by reading this uplifting and compelling description of why churches (and most Christians) should celebrate two services on Sunday.

This video gives you a feel for the mission work being done in Scotland by a network of church planters. May God stir us up to do similarly in Arizona!

 

 

 

The Sunday Reader, VOL. 1, ISSUE #7

This week's insightful and interesting links.

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The Ministry of Spiritual Grandparenting

A good and heartwarming exhortation to be intentional in passing the faith on to the next generation.

What Should We Make of the Massive Repetition of Tabernacle Details in Exodus?

This will help you appreciate what's going on in sections of Scripture that can feel more tedious.

How to Honor Your Parents as a Young Adult

On the opposite end of the age spectrum, this article may prove useful for tweens and teens.

18 Questions about Faith and Mental Illness

While not providing all the answers we want, this article helps expand our thinking about spirituality in a fallen world.