Monthly Archives: February 2011

The impossible faith v. faithfulness scenario

It goes something like this:

God sitting on his judgment seat: “Have you been faithful to the covenant conditions?”

Believer before the throne of God: “No! Never!”

God sitting on his judgment seat: “So why should I not condemn you?”

Believer before the throne of God: “Because Jesus has fulfilled the conditions of the covenant.”

God sitting on his judgment seat: “But what has that to do with you?”

Believer before the throne of God: “I have accepted Christ as he is offered in the Gospel. I have received his imputed righteousness by faith alone.”

God sitting on his judgment seat: “Then I welcome you into everlasting glory!”

But if we assume for the sake of argument that the Westminster Confession of Faith is an accurate summary of the system of teaching found in Scripture, then this scenario is impossible and incoherent. If we try it it works out like this:

God sitting on his judgment seat: “Have you been faithful to the covenant conditions?”

Believer before the throne of God: “No! Never!”

God sitting on his judgment seat: “So why should I not condemn you?”

Believer before the throne of God: “Because Jesus has fulfilled the conditions of the covenant.”

God sitting on his judgment seat: “But what has that to do with you?”

Believer before the throne of God: “I have accepted Christ as he is offered in the Gospel. I have received his imputed righteousness by faith alone.”

God sitting on his judgment seat: “What? You just said you hadn’t been faithful to the covenant conditions.”

Believer before the throne of God: “No, I haven’t. I can’t stand before you except only by faith in Christ.”<

God sitting on his judgment seat: “There you go again. Stop contradicting yourself.”

Believer before the throne of God: “I don’t understand, Lord.”

God sitting on his judgment seat: “Well I didn’t think this was such a hard concept to grasp. I admit it would help if you came from the Presbyterian tradition.”

Believer before the throne of God: “But I am a Presbyterian, God.”

God sitting on his judgment seat: “This gets stranger and stranger. Have you never read in the Westminster Confession?:

Man, by his fall, having made himself incapable of life by that covenant, the Lord was pleased to make a second, commonly called the covenant of grace; wherein he freely offereth unto sinners life and salvation by Jesus Christ; requiring of them faith in him, that they may be saved, and promising to give unto all those that are ordained unto eternal life his Holy Spirit, to make them willing, and able to believe.

Or the Larger Catechism?:

Q. 32. How is the grace of God manifested in the second covenant?

A. The grace of God is manifested in the second covenant, in that he freely provideth and offereth to sinners a mediator, and life and salvation by him; and requiring faith as the condition to interest them in him, promiseth and giveth his Holy Spirit to all his elect, to work in them that faith, with all other saving graces; and to enable them unto all holy obedience, as the evidence of the truth of their faith and thankfulness to God, and as the way which he hath appointed them to salvation.

The condition of the covenant is faith. So have you been faithful to the covenant? Are you a believer?

Believer before the throne of God: “But Lord I have sinned many times. How can you call me faithful?

God sitting on his judgment seat: “Did I ever say that living a sinless life was a condition of the covenant of grace? Obviously if that were the condition then you have been very unfaithful. But that would defeat the whole point of the covenant of grace, right? I made a covenant to save sinners not damn them. So I don’t require sinless perfection of people I save by My Son. And sinless perfection, or even a greater quantity of good deeds than bad deeds for that matter, has never been the condition of the covenant of grace. I sent Jesus to live a perfect life and die a sacrificial death that could be imputed to all who believe. Faith is the condition of the covenant of grace as it is the means by which you receive Christ and his righteousness. So again: Have you been faithful to the covenant? Are you a believer?

So there you go.

A pastor preaches the Gospel in a Pella, Iowa newspaper

Pella — What is your only comfort in life and death? A. That I am not my own, but belong with body and soul, both in life and in death, to my faithful Saviour Jesus Christ. He has fully paid for all my sins with His precious blood, and has set me free from all the power of the devil. He also preserves me in such a way that without the will of my heavenly Father not a hair can fall from my head; indeed, all things must work together for my salvation. Therefore, by His Holy Spirit He also assures me of eternal life and makes me heartily willing and ready from now on to live for Him.

Since many of you who read this will be part of the Reformed stream of Protestant Christianity, you probably are pretty familiar with this question and answer. It’s the first question of the Heidelberg Catechism, a teaching tool that Reformed churches have been using for almost 450 years.

Read the rest: Our Only Comfort » Religion » Pella Chronicle.

When laziness and ignorance are re-named “Preaching Christ from the OT”

Chief of sinners speaking here but consider just one chapter:

The Lord called Moses and spoke to him from the tent of meeting, saying, “Speak to the people of Israel and say to them, When any one of you brings an offering to the Lord, you shall bring your offering of livestock from the herd or from the flock.

“If his offering is a burnt offering from the herd,

  1. he shall offer a male without blemish.
  2. He shall bring it to the entrance of the tent of meeting, that he may be accepted before the Lord.
  3. He shall lay his hand on the head of the burnt offering, and it shall be accepted for him to make atonement for him.
  4. Then he shall kill the bull before the Lord,
  5. and Aaron’s sons the priests shall bring the blood and throw the blood against the sides of the altar that is at the entrance of the tent of meeting.
  6. Then he shall flay the burnt offering
  7. and cut it into pieces,
  8. and the sons of Aaron the priest shall put fire on the altar
  9. and arrange wood on the fire.
  10. And Aaron’s sons the priests shall arrange the pieces, the head, and the fat, on the wood that is on the fire on the altar;
  11. but its entrails and its legs he shall wash with water.
  12. And the priest shall burn all of it on the altar, as a burnt offering, a food offering with a pleasing aroma to the Lord.

“If his gift for a burnt offering is from the flock, from the sheep or goats,

  1. he shall bring a male without blemish,
  2. and he shall kill it on the north side of the altar before the Lord,
  3. and Aaron’s sons the priests shall throw its blood against the sides of the altar.
  4. And he shall cut it into pieces, with its head and its fat,
  5. and the priest shall arrange them on the wood that is on the fire on the altar,
  6. but the entrails and the legs he shall wash with water.
  7. And the priest shall offer all of it and burn it on the altar; it is a burnt offering, a food offering with a pleasing aroma to the Lord.

“If his offering to the Lord is a burnt offering of birds,

  1. then he shall bring his offering of turtledoves or pigeons.
  2. And the priest shall bring it to the altar
  3. and wring off its head
  4. and burn it on the altar.
  5. Its blood shall be drained out on the side of the altar.
  6. He shall remove its crop with its contents
  7. and cast it beside the altar on the east side, in the place for ashes.
  8. He shall tear it open by its wings,
  9. but shall not sever it completely.
  10. And the priest shall burn it on the altar, on the wood that is on the fire. It is a burnt offering, a food offering with a pleasing aroma to the Lord.

So that is one chapter in the Bible. It is true that the Old Testament sacrifices prefigure Christ. It is also true that God could have left out all these details unless he wanted us to study them, understand them, and explain them in the preaching of the Word.

“The Old Testament sacrifices prefigure Christ” is no excuse for not bothering to care or preach how Christ is prefigured in these sacrifices that are portrayed to us in such detail in a book (or collection of books) that is known for not giving as much detail as we would expect.

Why, to just name one example, does the priest kill the bird but not the sheep or goat? Was the Holy Spirit wasting words or is it worth figuring out?

Overspending on mandated boredom

There’s no way I can cheer for a bunch of government workers protesting against some of their perks being taken away. I’d like to see their jobs ended. But I can’t cheer on a Governor who doesn’t show the slightest clue that he understands that public education makes education a bureaucratic monstrosity that turns curious by nature children into bored stiffs

via EconomicPolicyJournal.com: Wisconsin in Perspective on the Protest-Revolution Scale.

Enthroned, we rule: Ephesians 1.1-2 finished

Paul, an apostle of Christ Jesus by the will of God, to the saints who are in Ephesus, and are faithful in Christ Jesus: Grace to you and peace from God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ (Ephesians 1.1-2).

and are faithful in Christ Jesus

Paul knows that Christians sin.  Nevertheless, he also knows that God considers those who follow Jesus by trusting in him and relying on him for the forgiveness of their sins and all other blessings to be faithful.  What is odd about this statement is not that Paul calls them “faithful,” but that he says they exhibit this behavior “in Christ Jesus.”

In the time before Jesus came, Israelites were to be faithful in the land of Israel.  When David became king of Israel, the people saw themselves as connected to him in a way that they described as if he himself were there land.  When an argument broke out among the twelve tribes of Israel over who should be King David’s escort, the ten northern tribes said to the tribe of Judah, “We have ten shares in the king, and in David also we have more than you” (2 Samuel 19.43).  Soon afterward, many in those then tribes were led to try to revolt against David by a rebel leader who called for independence this way: “We have no portion in David, and we have no inheritance in the son of Jesse; every man to his tents, O Israel!” (2 Samuel 20.1). Normally, one would speak of having a portion, share, or inheritance in the land of Israel. That is the place in which one was faithful. Because they see themselves as in some way connected to their king (or disconnected from him), these Israelites spoke of David as if he was a place in which they lived and had a home. He represented and incorporated the people in his kingdom.

Now the blessings of God are going out in a new way to all the earth. Rather than describing Christians as faithful in Israel or in Ephesus, Paul describes them as living their lives “in Christ.”  They are faithful to God in a new home that is provided by their new king, Jesus.

Grace to you and peace from God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ.

When Aaron and his sons were established as a priesthood for Israel, they were given blessing to say at the close of worship:

Speak to Aaron and his sons, saying, “Thus you shall bless the people of Israel: you shall say to them,

The Lord bless you and keep you;

the Lord make his face to shine upon you and be gracious to you;

the Lord lift up his countenance upon you and give you peace.

So shall they put my name upon the people of Israel, and I will bless them” (Numbers 6.23-27).

Paul regularly begins his letters with the essence of this blessing.  The second two lines describe how God is to bless and protect (“keep”) his people—by being gracious to them and thus giving them peace.  “Grace” describes God’s attitude and posture of favor on us.  “Peace” describes the gift we receive as the result of God’s grace.  In keeping with the message of the Gospel, God’s name here has changed from “Lord”—or YHWH in the Hebrew. God is now defined as the Father and Jesus.  Paul sometimes also explicitly mentions the Holy Spirit but here he is mentioned implicitly as the bond of peace (see Ephesians 4.1-5).

God is now “our Father.” When God saved Israel from Egypt he identified them as his firstborn son (Exodus 4.22).  Now that God has brought deliverance and glory to the human race through Jesus his son, all who entrust themselves to the Lord Jesus are given a share in his status as children of God and are adopted by him.

With God, Paul invokes “the Lord Jesus Christ.” Paul often quotes passages which translates the Hebrew name for the God of Israel as “Lord” in Greek and applies them to Jesus.  So the title “Lord” does include an implication that Jesus is God incarnate—God become man.  However, it is clear from the Paul’s preaching and writing that Jesus also acquired the title “Lord” by virtue of being raised from the dead.  In Jesus, God joined with humanity and suffered the worst of the curse on sin, passing through death to new life.  He is now Lord not simply as God but as the glorified and transfigured man who has been exalted by the Father to rule the cosmos with Him.

Why did Obama decide to stop defending the DOMA now?

What Obama always believed about the DOMA is not an issue to me. The question is: Why not wait until his second term?

One answer is that he doesn’t believe he will have a second term and wants to make the most of his time.

I doubt that.

I think a better answer is how “religious right” issues keep being used to obscure Tea Party concerns about the economy–the budget deficit, the national debt, and the coming financial depression which has not hit us yet. If someone opposes abortion or doesn’t believe in evolution, we are far more likely to see the media give time to those issues when the person in question is worried about and taking action about an entirely different issue.

As I see it right now, the most likely reason to change course on DOMA at this time is to distract from the fact that no one in power wants to face up to our economic situation.

When you think about it, It gives the GOP an out as well.

But I’m just guessing. What do you think?

Repost: The New Perspective on Moses

[Source, sort of]

Listening to an interview by Mark Dever with Thabiti Anyabwile, I heard Mark use an illustration that I found tremendously helpful. It relates to the question whether Muslims and Christians worship the same God under different names.

He said that we should picture two old classmates from college discussing a common friend from thirty years ago. They begin to wonder if they are talking about the same person. One of them is convinced they are, and the other keeps thinking this is not quite the way he remembers the friend. Finally, they decide to dig out an old yearbook and settle the issue. They open the book, and as soon as they see the picture of their classmate, one says, “No, that’s not who I am talking about.” So it was not the same person after all.

Mark said that Jesus, as he is revealed in the Bible, is the picture in the yearbook. When a Muslim and a Christian, who have been discussing whether they are worshiping the same God, look at God in the yearbook, it settles the matter: “No,” says the Muslim, “that’s not who I am talking about.”

But that is who the Christian is talking about. John 1:18 says, “No one has ever seen God; the only God, who is at the Father’s side, he has made him known.” Jesus makes known the invisible God for us to see. In John 14:8, Philip said, “Lord, show us the Father, and it is enough for us.” To this Jesus responded, “Have I been with you so long, and you still do not know me, Philip? Whoever has seen me has seen the Father. How can you say, ‘Show us the Father’” And Paul said in 2 Corinthians 4:6, “God, who said, ‘Let light shine out of darkness,’ has shone in our hearts to give the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ.”

In other words, Jesus is the yearbook picture that settles the issue of who is worshiping the true God and who is not. If a worshiper of God does not see in Jesus Christ the person of his God, he does not worship God. This is the resounding testimony of Jesus and the apostles as we see in the following texts.

  • Mark 9:37, “Whoever receives me, receives not me but him who sent me.” (See also Matthew 10: 40; Luke 9:48; John 13:20.)

  • John 5:23, “Whoever does not honor the Son does not honor the Father who sent him.”

  • 1 John 2:23, “No one who denies the Son has the Father. Whoever confesses the Son has the Father also.”

  • Luke 12:9, “The one who denies me before men will be denied before the angels of God.”

  • John 15:23, “Whoever hates me hates my Father also.”

  • 2 John 1:9, “Everyone who goes on ahead and does not abide in the teaching of Christ, does not have God. Whoever abides in the teaching has both the Father and the Son.”

Now, if we take this question back several thousand years and turn a Muslim-Christian question into a Pharaoh-Moses-follower question, the same thing emerges. Was Pharoah worshiping the same God that the followers of Moses were worshiping? I don’t mean to imply that every Egyptian was the same. For example, the mixed multitude that followed Israel out of Egypt (John 3:1ff.) did not seem to be of the same spirit with most (though even they show no evidence of understanding the place of regeneration in the ordo salutis). In asking this question, I am simply referring to the group of Pharaoh-followers in general as Moses saw them. Did Pharaoh worship the same God as the followers of Moses?

This question is even more striking than the Muslim-Christian question, because Pharaoh and followers of Moses had the same heritage of past salvation in Joseph. Why would the question even come up about whether Pharaoh and the followers of Moses worshiped the same God?

Because Moses brought it up. And the way he brought it up and talked about it, makes it hard to believe some of the things that the New Perspective on Moses (NPM) says about the Egyptian leaders of Moses’ day. E. P. Sanders is the main spokesman for the way Pharaoh is reinterpreted by the New Perspective. Here is the way N. T. Wright summarizes it:

[Sanders’] major point, to which all else is subservient, can be quite simply stated. Egyptianism in Paul’s day was not, as has regularly been supposed, a religion of legalistic works-righteousness.

Wright agrees with this main thesis of the New Perspective: “Sanders . . . dominates the landscape, and, until a major refutation of his central thesis is produced, honesty compels one to do business with him. I do not myself believe such a refutation can or will be offered; serious modifications are required, but I regard his basic point as established” (Ibid, p. 20).

For example, Wright says that the boasting which Moses opposed was not what we usually think it is.

This boasting which Moses opposed is not the boasting of the successful moralist; it is the racial boast of the pagan Egyptian royalty, which claimed that Pharaoh had the right of life and death over all people because of the powerful gods backing him. Moses has no thought of warding off a proto-Pelagianism, of which in any case his contemporaries were not guilty.

Wright’s statements are baffling in several ways. One way is that the Pharaoh is accused of boasting in his status as an Egyptian while doing things Egyptians out not do. How Wright can use this paragraph to distinguish moral boasting from racial boasting escapes me (as does the distinction itself).

Then, there is Wright’s affirmation of Sanders’ claim that the religion of Pharaoh was not the “religion of legalistic works-righteousness,” and that the “The Egyptian [of Moses’ day] obeys false gods out of gratitude, as the proper response to their favor.” The only explanation I can find for such amazing statements is that the testimony of Moses is denied or obscured. It is my impression that evangelicals enamored by the NPP have not reckoned seriously enough with the fact that the origination of the NPP seems to have taken place in the halls of such denial or obscuring.

When Moses addressed the Egyptian leaders of his day his resounding conclusion was they do not even know God. And, not knowing God, their lived-out religion (the kind Jesus is concerned with) is not “out of gratitude,” to their gods, nor is it a “proper response to grace.”

Okay, I’ll stop the hokiness. Hopefully, though, this demonstrates the problem: just because Pharaoh and the Egyptians who sided with him were strangers to the true God and died in their sins as unbelievers, doesn’t mean that their unbelief was a form of merit theology. The Bible talks about the true religion v. false religion many times in the Bible without making that the key issue.

Whether or not that is the key issue between Jesus and Paul and the Pharisees is logically a distinct question from whether or not the Pharisees were wonderful people. If Pharaoh believed he had the authority and right to enslave and kill the Hebrews because the sun god graciously chose him, forgave his sins, and justified him before the court of the gods, he is no less a monstrous killer and a hell-bound pagan. It doesn’t matter if Egyptian paganism is a religion of grace or not.

Likewise, if the Pharisees are living in sin and teaching others to do so, and are enslaving people with rules that God hated, then the question as to whether they believe God graciously gave them this moral crusade is not in danger of getting them off the hook. Granted, a liberal like Sanders might think so, but that has nothing to do with what Evangelicals think who find the “New Perspective” compelling. On the contrary, they side with Jesus against the Pharisees and want to be sure that there is no Pharisaism in the Evangelical Church.

I will reiterate a few things that I have reiterated often.

First, Jesus and Paul would preach salvation only by God’s grace even if the Pharisees weren’t teaching the opposite error. I think it is denigrating to salvation by grace to insist that, if the Pharisees weren’t semi-Pelagians, then Paul wouldn’t teach Augustinianism. He would and in fact he did (if you will forgive the anachronistic labeling).

Second, John Piper has written some extremely helpful and solid works. If you haven’t read (and this is off the top of my head, not exhaustive) Desiring God, The Pleasures of God, or Future Grace, then you are missing something important. In fact, The Pleasures of God toppled J. I. Packer’s Knowing God from my personal category of Best Calvinistic Devotional Book Ever (though, if you haven’t read Knowing God you are missing a real great books as well!). My disappointment of Piper’s recent communications is so powerful because of his well-deserved reputation.

Third, I am still willing to consider a more “traditional” interpretation of the Pharisees. The only argument I see anywhere in this latest essay is his interpretation of the parable of the Pharisee and the Tax Collector. But I don’t see his understanding of the Pharisee’s theology as arising from the parable itself. If we already knew that the Pharisees held to a theory of meriting salvation on the ground of their own righteous (though graciously brought about through monergism) works (which, ironically, would vindicate the Pharisees as Augustinians), then the passage would be amenable to that interpretation. But it isn’t sufficient as proof by itself. In my view, simply reading Dr. Piper’s summary of what Jesus said about the Pharisees is weighty evidence against his understanding of their soteriology. Are we really to believe that merit legalism was so unimportant to Jesus that, when he pronounced his woes (Matt 23) on them that he forgot to mention this as a reason for their condemnation?

But if there is some future argument that can be brought forward, I’m willing to hear it. What I object to is being told that “It is my impression that evangelicals enamored by the NPP have not reckoned seriously enough with the fact that the origination of the NPP seems to have taken place in the halls of such denial or obscuring.” Piper knows what he is doing to the reputations of men by saying this kind of thing. His “impressions” would be better off left to his private discussions with his friend. In public he should try supporting his opinion about the Pharisees with some actual evidence.

Enthroned, we rule: Ephesians 1.1-2 continued

CONTINUING FROM HERE

Paul, an apostle of Christ Jesus by the will of God, to the saints who are in Ephesus, and are faithful in Christ Jesus: Grace to you and peace from God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ (Ephesians 1.1-2).

by the will of God

Obeying God is obviously important to Paul.  He will later exhort some of his readers, or those listening to his letter read out loud, that they do “the will of God from the heart” (Ephesians 6.6).  So it would be natural, in reading this phrase, to think that Paul is simply pointing out that his commission as King Jesus’ ambassador is backed by divine authority.

However, Paul seems to be saying something more here.  Consider what Paul says in the next few sentences,

he predestined us for adoption through Jesus Christ, according to the purpose of his will, to the praise of his glorious grace, with which he has blessed us in the Beloved. In him we have redemption through his blood, the forgiveness of our trespasses, according to the riches of his grace, which he lavished upon us, in all wisdom and insight making known to us the mystery of his will, according to his purpose, which he set forth in Christ as a plan for the fullness of time, to unite all things in him, things in heaven and things on earth.  In him we have obtained an inheritance, having been predestined according to the purpose of him who works all things according to the counsel of his will, so that we who were the first to hope in Christ might be to the praise of his glory (1.5- 12; emphasis added).

So when Paul announces his Apostleship “through the will of God,” he is saying that God appointed him to the office in order to fulfill His plan to save the world.  Jesus’ accomplishments alone are not enough.  It was and is essential to God’s purpose that the message of Jesus be announced to the entire world.  As he later states, Paul views Jesus himself to be traveling, working, and speaking through his servants (Ephesians 2.17).

to the saints

who are in Ephesus,

The phrase “who are in Ephesus,” is missing from some manuscripts.  This was probably a circular letter that went to several different destinations.  But whether in Ephesus or in any other Gentile location, all Christians are in God’s presence.  There is no longer an exclusive Holy Land with an exclusive central sanctuary.

TO BE CONTINUED

More Great Gospel Preaching and Reformed Orthodoxy from the First Jackson PCA Pulpit: on the Decalogue = “Grace Before Law”

If you have your Bibles, I’d invite you to turn with me to Exodus 20. Today we are beginning an exposition of what has been called in the English language for the last 500 years, the Ten Commandments. In the Hebrew Bible this section is known as the Ten Words or the Ten Pronouncements, but as begin to study them together it’s important for us to remember that we live in a day and time that doesn’t like law. We are very suspicious of law. We have an anti-authority spirit about us. We live in a day and time where the law is regarded as something impersonal, abstract, distant, tyrannical, restrictive and threatening and we need to realize how the mindset of the age impacts us in our thinking about biblical law. That’s one reason why we chose to study chapter 19 prior to our study of God’s law as it’s set forth in chapter 20, because chapter 19, and frankly the two verses we’re going to look at today, are devoted to setting the table, to giving the context, to explaining the situation and circumstance and relationship in which God’s law is being given and propounded. That context is a context of grace; it is a gospel context; it’s a context of redemption; it is a context of covenant relationship and realizing things will help you lose those suspicions about law and authority and rule and rights and wrongs which pervade the mindset and the psyche of those in our generation.

There’s nothing more relevant or more timely or more practical for us to recover now than a biblical understanding of the biblical description of infleshed love and righteousness. You could really define the law that way. The law is infleshed love and righteousness. It shows you what righteousness looks like in a specific circumstance. It shows you what love looks like in a specific circumstance. That’s what the law is. It is a reflection of the character of God and an authoritative expression of what it means to love and to be righteous.

And the subject of God’s law is vital. If you have carefully and prayerfully pondered the subject, the way that God’s law relates to the Christian you have done well, because a proper understanding of God’s law is essential for a healthy Christian life and experience. And we’ve been trying to give a background in order that we might understand the role of the law as we study it in Exodus 20. The law of God is founded in grace and is the expression of love both to God and man. The law of God is founded in grace. That’s a lesson that we learned very clearly in Exodus 19 and it is the expression of love. We learn that from the way Jesus Himself summarizes the law in the New Testament.

What does it mean to love? To keep his commandments he would say and yet we live in a day and time where there is a great deal of suspicion of that even in the church. If you are found in your prayer closet mumbling the words ‘how I love your law, O Lord,’ your wife may report you to the ecclesiastical authorities as a closet legalist. I mean, that’s not how evangelicals talk. Aren’t you a legalist if you talk about loving the law? And yet the Old Testament saint’s highest expression of his devotion to, and loyalty to, and love of God was, ‘how I love Your law, O Lord’ and you say, ‘yes, but that was the Old Testament.’ Well, think about that for a minute. On the night before His crucifixion, in the upper room to the only core of disciples He had left on planet earth, Jesus said to them, “If you love Me, keep My commandments.” The expression of love that He wanted to see from His disciples to Him was obedience to His commandments. In fact, if you sneak a peek at the last verse that Brister Ware read in Mark 3:35 today, you will see Jesus define His disciples as those who do the will of His Father. That’s a New Testament description of a disciple, of a believer, of a follower of the one true God, not just an Old Testament description but a New Testament description and therefore the subject of the law, the subject of obedience and how they relate to God’s call of grace and the gift of faith is vital for us to understand. So let’s look to God’s word in Exodus 20:1,2 and hear it attentively:

“Then God spoke all these words, saying, “I am the Lord your God, who brought you out of the land of Egypt, out of the house of slavery.” Amen….

The whole sermon is great. Please read it. True “sonship” is spelled out in a way that reminds me of my reading in Proverbs. And it is totally confessional:

3. Man, by his fall, having made himself incapable of life by that covenant [of works], the Lord was pleased to make a second, commonly called the covenant of grace; wherein he freely offereth unto sinners life and salvation by Jesus Christ; requiring of them faith in him, that they may be saved, and promising to give unto all those that are ordained unto eternal life his Holy Spirit, to make them willing, and able to believe.

5. This covenant was differently administered in the time of the law, and in the time of the gospel: under the law, it was administered by promises, prophecies, sacrifices, circumcision, the paschal lamb, and other types and ordinances delivered to the people of the Jews, all foresignifying Christ to come; which were, for that time, sufficient and efficacious, through the operation of the Spirit, to instruct and build up the elect in faith in the promised Messiah, by whom they had full remission of sins, and eternal salvation; and is called the old testament.

6. Under the gospel, when Christ, the substance, was exhibited, the ordinances in which this covenant is dispensed are the preaching of the Word, and the administration of the sacraments of baptism and the Lord’s Supper: which, though fewer in number, and administered with more simplicity, and less outward glory, yet, in them, it is held forth in more fullness, evidence and spiritual efficacy, to all nations, both Jews and Gentiles; and is called the new testament. There are not therefore two covenants of grace, differing in substance, but one and the same, under various dispensations.

Q. 100. What special things are we to consider in the Ten Commandments?
A. We are to consider, in the Ten Commandments, the preface, the substance of the commandments themselves, and several reasons annexed to some of them, the more to enforce them.

Q. 101. What is the preface to the Ten Commandments?
A. The preface to the Ten Commandments is contained in these words, I am the LORD thy God, which have brought thee out of the land of Egypt, out of the house of bondage. Wherein God manifesteth his sovereignty, as being JEHOVAH, the eternal, immutable, and almighty God; having his being in and of himself, and giving being to all his words and works: and that he is a God in covenant, as with Israel of old, so with all his people; who, as he brought them out of their bondage in Egypt, so he delivereth us from our spiritual thraldom; and that therefore we are bound to take him for our God alone, and to keep all his commandments.

Q. 102. What is the sum of the four commandments which contain our duty to God?
A. The sum of the four commandments containing our duty to God, is, to love the Lord our God with all our heart, and with all our soul, and with all our strength, and with all our mind.

Q. 103. Which is the first commandment?
A. The first commandment is, Thou shalt have no other gods before me.

Q. 104. What are the duties required in the first commandment?
A. The duties required in the first commandment are, the knowing and acknowledging of God to be the only true God, and our God; and to worship and glorify him accordingly, by thinking, meditating, remembering, highly esteeming, honoring, adoring, choosing, loving, desiring, fearing of him; believing him; trusting, hoping, delighting, rejoicing in him; being zealous for him; calling upon him, giving all praise and thanks, and yielding all obedience and submission to him with the whole man; being careful in all things to please him, and sorrowful when in anything he is offended; and walking humbly with him.

Grace and faith: the Preface and the First Commandment.

As one wise pastor once said defending the Reformed Faith from its detractors:

It seems pretty clear to me that the first word of the decalogue (not commandments) has to do with trusting Yahweh alone. The language of “having” or “possessing” no other god is marriage language. Israel, the bride, is to cling to Yahweh, her Husband and Lord, in faithfulness. What is this but salvation by faith? How is that wrong?

Just ask the preacher at First Presbyterian in Jackson, Mississippi. It is not wrong. It is the Biblical message.

For more on this, see my: “Obedient faith is not threat to Protestant Doctrine; it IS Protestant doctrine.”

Keeping Faith

Christian life and ministry as an athletic contest, race, and exercise of trust.There’s a third thing I want you to see here.  Look at verse 7.  Here’s Paul’s assessment of his service.  A lot of people would have looked at Paul and said, ‘You know, Paul, you’re a brilliant man.  You’re an educated man.  You’re a tremendous orator, you’re a great writer. You had so much potential.  You have wasted your life.  You have just thrown your life down the tubes, because look at you:  you started these churches, and…let’s see…let’s look at the church in Corinth.  (Yeah, that’s a great success!)  And let’s look at all the squabbling going on in the Christian churches, and let’s look at all the pagan opposition and persecution against your teaching.  Why, you’ve just wasted your life!’

And the Apostle Paul says, ‘Oh, no!  I have fought the good fight. I have finished the course.  I have kept the faith.’  That’s his three-fold assessment of his service, and we see his picturing again the Christian life and ministry as an athletic contest, a race, an exercise of trust.  He’s been engaged in this good fight, this good contest, this good match against Satan and against the powers and principalities; against the world, and the flesh, and the devil; and against Jewish and pagan opposition and violence; against religious error and persecution; and he has been faithful to keep fighting that fight.  Paul sees that as a life that was worth it.

And then he says that he’s been running the race. It’s the picture of a long-distance run, and in that race he has had one holy passion.  He has had his eye on crossing the line, and the prize of the glory of God through the salvation of sinners.

And he says, “I have kept the faith.” In the ancient games, you remember, those who participated in the games had to vow, they had to pledge that they would play by the rules. There was an oath of loyalty, and it’s as if Paul is saying, ‘I’ve fought the fight, I ran the race, and I was faithful to my pledge of loyalty.  I kept the faith.  I defended and proclaimed the true gospel. I continued to live in trust of the promises of God. [I added this emphasis -MH]

Now, why does Paul say that to Timothy?  Because he knows that the world is going to say to Timothy that Timothy’s labors are in vain. And the Apostle Paul wants to say back to Timothy, ‘Living life like I have lived it is not a wasted life.  This is what you ought to aspire to.  You ought to aspire to fighting the good fight, and finish the course, and keeping the faith.  That’s what you ought to aspire to.

Another great sermon (except that I think Paul was a pretty lousy orator, at least compared to other public leaders)