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How to Kill a Wolf

How attentive are we to our entertainment choices, and how they effect us? Are we allowing the Holy Spirit to be our teacher and shepherd in this area?

…Or, does our culture, and the currents of our day, just carry us along?

A friend sent me this the other day–it’s got some real warnings for us:

The unavoidable truth is that many are becoming desensitized to murder, molestation, violence and lust. When the Holy Spirit no longer fills hearts and minds with a passion for purity and holiness, there is a general lack of conviction. Compromise in this area can be well-illustrated through a story I heard years ago.

Eskimos in the barren North often kill wolves by taking a razor sharp knife and dipping it in blood. They allow the blood to freeze to the blade. Then they bury the handle of the knife in the snow with the blade exposed. As the wolf begins to lick the blade, his tongue becomes numb and desensitized due to the cold. As he continues, his tongue begins to bleed, and he licks even faster—unaware that he is consuming his own blood and slowly killing himself.

Within time, the Eskimos return and bring the dead animal home. In the same way, the enemy numbs us through compromise. Within time, we, like the wolves, don’t realize that we are dying—dying spiritually.

The enemy desensitizes us until we are numb to the things of God.

(Shane Edelman)

 

Standing exposed before God’s sharp word.

Last night we continued our study through the letter to the Hebrews, looking at chapter 3 and most of chapter 4. Here it is:

One of the things you realize as you read Hebrews is that the author is dealing with certain categopries, which, if we don’t have them in our mind, make it difficult to understand his point. So, here are some categories you need to have in your mind to really begin to understand Hebrews, and Jesus:

  1. Revelation: Our need for Divine Speech
  2. Priest: Needing a Priest, you need someone to represent you to God
  3. Sacrifice: Needing a sacrifice to worship God
  4. Human Significance: The significance of your actions – what you do has meaning
  5. Human accountability: We will answer to God for everything we do
  6. Eternity: there’s a whole life to live after death. It’s actually more important than this current life—this life is preparation for it.

The letter to the Hebrews is an exercise in this kind of category creation.

3:1-6

The point of this paragraph is in verse 1–Consider Jesus: He’s greater than Moses, who was only a servant (3:5) but Christ is Son over the house of God (aka God’s family – 3:6), and we’re that house, if we hold fast.

Now notice 3:14, where you have almost an identical thought. These two ideas, with the two exhortations to “hold fast” frame the quotation of Psalm 95 in verses 7-11, and help us understand why the writer gives us this big quotation from the Psalm here. So what do these two verses say? They work with the idea that those who’ve believed in Jesus Christ have joined the household of God, or to say it another way, we’ve become partakers of Christ (the idea here is that those who trust and follow Christ share in everything Christ is, and everything he brings). But the writer says that both things are true if in fact we “hold fast” till the end. Another way to say this is to “stick to” to what we’ve come to know and believe about Christ—by holding it in our minds, by relying on God’s promises, and by living out the teachings of Christ faithfully. To help us get practical here, we get a negative example in the next few verses—and that example is the Israelites in the Old Testament (in other words, the very people Moses served).

3:7-19

So here, with the example of the early history of the nation of Israel, we get a bunch of details showing what it looks like to not “hold fast.” First, in verse 8—It looks like hardening your heart. This verse in the Psalm points back to Numbers chapter 14, where the people Israel come out of Egypt, God leads them up to the border of the land he’s promised them, and then they get scared, refuse go forward, decide to elect a leader to take them back to Egypt, and threaten to stone Moses. So “hardening your heart” means refusing to listen to God, believe his promises, or go where he leads you. This is all sort of summed up in the word “rebellion” in verse 8. Next, in verse 9 it looks like “testing” God. You could call this “trying to see how long God’s patience will last” while you sin.” In verse 10 we see that not holding fast looks like constantly “going astray in your heart”, and “not knowing God’s ways.” This accusation that they didn’t know God’s ways is pretty hard hitting—because, like it says in verse 9, they saw God work for 40 years, they were getting God’s law from straight from Moses. But I think the idea is that they didn’t let all that affect their minds so that they could really know God or understand how he wanted them to live.

In verse 16 to verse 19 we get three ideas that sum up the issue the Israelites had: they sinned (v.17) they did not obey (v.18) and they did not believe (v.19). Maybe we could say the process was that this heart hardening and refusal to move forward led to refusal to believe God, which led them to not actually carry out what he commanded.

In verse 12 the author stops quoting the Psalm and addresses his audience directly. He says, “watch out for this same kind of heart”—just because it’s ancient history doesn’t mean it can’t happen to you. Now—when this was written, the story of the Israelites was already ancient history. So we’re in the same place as the first people who heard this. Any of us here tonight could have the same internal issues that the people of Israel had, and it could lead any of us into the same kind of refusal to listen to God and obey him. What’s awesome is that right in verse 13 he tells us how this can happen—it happens when we let sin deceive us, and that leads to a hardened heart. So we’re told what to watch out for. Watch out for sin, specifically sin in the heart. That’s where it all starts.

The antidote for all this pretty cool—it’s to be part of a Christian community where we encourage each other daily (3:13)—so we can help each other avoid being deceived and hardened by sin.

So if we take this whole section together, we get some marching orders from the Holy Spirit—Watch out! There’s always a danger that sin will trick us, and we could end up with jaded, hard hearts. We start out going astray on the inside, and wind up refusing to obey God with our lives. The end game of a hardened heart is in verse 12—departing from the living God. Avoid all that by cultivating real Christian relationships and being people who speak into the lives of other Christians, and have other Christians able to speak into our lives too. We should all be caring about each other—is everyone we know demonstrating the perseverance that shows that they are truly part of God’s family?

4:1-11

 Now, in verse 1 the writer picks up on a phrase from Psalm 95 he mentioned in 3:11, and also in 3:18 and 19, this idea of “entering God’s rest.” What you gotta realize is, the event the Psalm references (which was recorded in Numbers 14) happened a long time before the Psalm was written (hundreds and hundreds of years) …and Psalm 95 was written hundreds of years before Christ and this letter.

But the writer here is going to show that the correct understanding of Psalm 95 is to see that it’s speaking about a time period which stretches from when the Psalm was written, includes this letter, and goes all the way up through our day, and on till this time when “God’s rest” actually happens.

In verse 2 he points out that the situation of the people of Israel coming out of Egypt was really comparable to our situation today—because like us they had a promise from God of a full deliverance and rest. So that’s the same as us—We stand in this position of hearing the promise of God for a full deliverance and rest from everything that plagues our world.

And in verse 3 he gives a simple reminder—who gets to enter that rest? Those who believe. But of course, this is like so many other places in scripture, where God knows we need this idea of trust or faith or belief defined for us; because we have this tendency of gutting it of any real meaning and making the word “faith” into something much smaller and weaker than what the bible means when it talks about trusting God.

So if you look at verse 3 to verse 9—Here we get an explanation for why we’re being told that these ancient scriptures still apply to us today. In verse 4 he goes all the way back to Genesis 2, to the beginning of creation, and shows that God’s rest was a much older thing than Israel going into the land of Canaan. It stretches back to God himself resting from his creative labors. What God’s inviting us into is his own peace—his own peaceful existence. Like everything in Hebrews—this is big.

And this is the point of verse 7 through 10. When David was inspired by the Holy Spirit to write “today” even though he was writing about things that happened so long ago in the past, he showed that the promise of God’s rest stands for all time, until God wraps up history and actually ushers in the rest. The fact that the people of Israel didn’t actually experience God’s rest, even when they made it into the land, proves this beyond all doubt. ‘Cause when David wrote Psalm 95, he wrote it while he was king over the land, and he wrote it for the people who were living in the land, but they still needed to hear that they could harden their hearts and miss out on God’s rest.

Or…to say it more positively (like he does in verse 9), David’s people needed to hear that even the best things in life they had experienced were not fulfilling the promise of God’s rest, they still had that to look forward to. In fact in verse 9 he changes the word he’s using for “rest” and uses the word for “Sabbath celebration” instead. It was like he was saying “don’t let the one day a week you get to stop working fool you—you only think you know what Sabbath is—you haven’t seen anything yet.”

And so in verse 11 we get the Holy Spirit’s application and direction. What should all of this mean to us? …or what should all of this inspire us to do? He says “be diligent.” ESV says is “make every effort” and NIV translates it “strive.” The idea of “diligence” points to focused, sustained effort. This almost seems a little contradictory—it’s like he’s saying “work to rest.” But we have to see that the idea isn’t “work to please God,” or “work your way to heaven” or even, like, “Ha ha—God said ‘rest’ but he really meant ‘work’!” No, I think we get a sense for this whole thing if we go back and look at all six points of direction we get in this passage.

In 3:1 we’re told to “consider Jesus.” Then, almost in response, in 3:7 we’re told not to harden our hearts, and then in 3:12 to watch out for an evil heart of unbelief like the people of Israel had. That’s followed right up in 3:13 with a command to be helping each other out in these things, and in 4:1 with the command to be dead serious about everyone we know in our Christian community making it all the way to God’s promised rest. What does it require to really be able to live all five of these commands out? It requires careful thoughtful, attention and effort that doesn’t give up—in other words, like it says in verse 11, it requires diligence. And when you take all these things together you see why verse 11 doesn’t just say “watch out that you don’t fall” but “we don’t want anyone—within the whole circle of our Christian community—to end up not entering God’s rest.”

So it’s like, let’s do life together, and let’s keep encouraging each other and watching out for each other, so that everyone of us holds on till the end, and none of us falls short and fails to enter God’s rest.

Another way to say it might be…look around the room—there’s always a possibility that not everyone sitting here will actually enter God’s rest in the end. Whether, like in 3:6 and 3:14, their lack of holding fast shows they’re not part of God’s family, or whether they end up refusing to obey God because of sin and refusal to believe and obey God’s promises—We should all care about that. We should watch ourselves really closely, and always be lining ourselves up next to scripture to check ourselves, and we should watch our church closely, especially those closest to us, and we should always be wanting everyone we know who’s part of our community to make it to God’s eternal rest with us. The Christian motto should be “no one left behind.”

This leads us to the final two things that are said in this chapter. The first thing (in verses 12 and 13) is designed to leave us totally sort of stripped bare and without excuse, and the second thing in verses 14-16 is designed to show us where our comfort and help is. I’m going to read the first one with you and sort of leave it there, because when Chris and Chris and Tony and Jake and I were studying through we really decided the verses at the end of chapter 4 actually were more about launching the next thing the letter’s going to say than about summing up what we read tonight. So Chris is gonna get into that with you, but let’s see how this section ends up in verses 12 and 13.

4:12-13

These verses are kind of famous in Christian circles. They’re pretty inspiring thoughts about God’s word. In verse 12 the idea is that the word of God totally penetrates us, psychologically, spiritually, even physically—and it exposes our deepest motivations, even things that are subconscious. God’s word shows us that God knows us better than we know ourselves. We can’t hide behind words or even our own skin. And that’s the point of verse 13—God sees everything, and he’s the one we must ultimately explain ourselves to. No one escapes this.

But I remember one time reading these verses and then being kind of confused at why they were written here. It almost seems out of joint with the rest of the passage.

The way to figure this out is to notice all the other times “God’s word” is mentioned in chapter 3 and 4. Notice in 3:7 when he starts to quote Psalm 95, he says “the Holy Spirit says.” So Psalm 95 is God talking. In fact right in the next verse, what God says in Psalm 95 is that we need to hear God’s voice.

I think it’s pretty clear we’re being told to hear God’s voice right in the Psalm. Then in 4:4, when he quotes from Genesis 2, he says “He has spoken” those words too, and when he returns to Psalm 95 in 4:7 he calls it God speaking again. In other words, when he quotes all these things, and tells us to be diligent to listen to what is written, and then says “For the word of God is sharper…” he’s saying—“listen, the Bible is God talking to us.” Maybe you didn’t know it before you walked in here tonight, but Psalm 95 addresses you directly. In fact, Hebrews addresses us directly.

And what’s it saying? —it’s telling us to remember that there have always been groups of people who hung around and who followed people and situations where God was working. God was doing things—delivering people, showing himself, speaking—and that attracts lots and lots of people. But there are always people in that mix who aren’t really letting it all get to them in any real way so that they trust God and begin to be serious about knowing him and obeying him. And one of the things the bible does is challenge us by exposing us before God—so that in the end, we have no excuses and we stand before him to be judged—not by people who only know part of the story—but on the basis of the whole reality of who we truly are down to the core of our being. Tonight, you are being addressed by the words of this scripture. The bible is talking to you. It’s telling you that you’re in the presence of the God who sees and knows all. And all of us are being addressed this way—our whole group here is being addressed, together.

God has promised a full deliverance through Jesus. He’s gathering a people to join him in an eternal festival of rest and celebration. The word of God lays us bare tonight—where are you on that promise? Maybe you’ve never counted yourself among those who claim to believe in Jesus. Talk to us about that tonight—God is offering you eternal rest on the basis of something Jesus himself did for you. And for everyone who’s familiar with God’s promise—Is it inspiring you to diligence in your response to what God is saying? Or can you think about what is written here about the nation of Israel and actually…you’re kind of like them? Do you have friends who are like them? Are you the kind of person who’s willing and able to do anything about that? God is using his scripture to expose us tonight. He’s here. He’s speaking. He’s inviting. He’s warning.

Now, if that freaks you out, then I invite you to seek God yourself. And I recommend that you go home tonight, or some time this week (really, don’t wait for this to wear off!) and I recommend you sit with this passage and pray about it, and especially, that you end up in verses 14 through 16. If you let God talk to you about these things, he’ll show you that what you really need when you feel weak and exposed and helpless before a perfect God who sees and knows everything, is you need a priest. You need someone to represent you and advocate for you to this perfect, all powerful, all seeing God. And the next six chapters of Hebrews are all dedicated to get you to see one thing—we have a priest, and His name’s Jesus. Remember how we started the night off in 3:1—think about Jesus, our high priest. And in verses 14 to 16 we see that Jesus loves to help weak people.

Why not appear to everyone?

Why didn’t Jesus appear to everyone when he was raised, so everyone could, you know, know, it happened? Thomas Oden explains:

Jesus appeared to numerous witnesses (Acts 10:40-41). But why not to everyone, instead of some?

The resurrection in the sense is more rather than less like other historical events – seen only by some. What other historical event was ever seen by all?

Peter preached that “God raised him from the dead on the third day and caused him to be seen. He was not seen by all the people, but by witnesses whom God had already chosen – by us who ate and drank with him after he rose the dead” (Acts 10:40-41).

That this event was attested only by some, not all, humanity qualifies rather than disqualifies it as a historical event, for ironically an event alleged to be seen by all could hardly have been an event in ordinary history. When the decisive event comes, it comes quietly, personally, in low key, and like ordinary events it happens in the presence of some and not others.

 

The End has begun.

Following on yesterday’s post…How huge is what we’re about to remember on Sunday?

If true, the resurrection would have meant to beholders that God is finally revealed in his chosen Son. The promised kingdom is already appearing! It is a tenet of Hebraic historical logic that if the Messiah is risen, then God is unstoppably revealed, for only at the end of history is the meaning of history knowable.

The end of history is in a sense already present in Jesus’ rising from the dead. The general resurrection is foretasted in Jesus’ resurrection. In this way, Jesus’ divinity is implied from his resurrection (Romans 1:4). If risen, then Son of Man, Son of God.

All who shared the expectation of a general resurrection felt themselves grasped by the end time in the living presence of the risen Jesus. They acquired an incredibly confident and otherwise implausibly courageous attitude toward history, suffering, and life’s ambiguities. Why was the New Testament community so confident about the historical process? Because in Jesus’ resurrection, the end was already beheld. The resurrection is thus the clue to the whole of history, through which God is finally made known.

–Thomas Oden, Classic Christianity

The Meaning of History

For Thursday, Friday and Saturday of this week, I’ll post short thoughts from Thomas Oden’s book Classic Christianity on maybe the most incredible, earth-changing thing to happen in all of history: the resurrection of Jesus of Nazareth.  Here’s the first one:

By rising from the grave the Lord raised up a new human nature and honored humanity in an unparalleled way.

By the resurrection, the drama of God’s plan of salvation.

To understand the resurrection is to understand the meaning of history from its end.

(…see Romans 5:15-19; Acts 2:24; 1 Cor 15:20-23)

God is talking. Will you listen?

Last night we began a 9-week study through the letter to the Hebrews, studying through the first two chapters. If you missed it, you’ve still got plenty of time to catch up and join us for the rest of the letter. Here are the notes:

Introduction:
Hebrews is a letter written within the first few decades of Christianity, to a group of people who were Jewish in background. Originally it seems like it was meant to be read aloud. So in that sense it is part letter and part sermon. Its main themes have to do with showing how much better Jesus is than those that came before him as God was working out his plan with the people of Israel. To do this it goes into a lot of discussion about things that most people today would find really obscure and unfamiliar. The author knows this. In fact, it was this way even when he first wrote the letter—for instance check out 13:22 and 11:32, 9:5, 5:9-12.

A great way to understand what Hebrews is doing is to think about visiting a Doctor. Doctors are people who tell you things you’ve never heard before—things didn’t know about or even care about before you went, but even though you didn’t know it when you walked into the office, those things are really important for you to understand.

So, Hebrews is for you if…

  1. You want to be closer to God
  2. You struggle to feel forgiven or accepted by God
  3. You want more faith
  4. You feel like walking away from Jesus
  5. You want to be stronger and bolder
  6. You want to know how the Old Testament helps you as a Christian
  7. You want to resist temptation

…but it helps in God’s way, not ours. If we really want to grow, and we really want help from God, we need to learn to stop dictating terms to God, and just listen, receive and obey.

This goes back to the doctor illustration—Hebrews is all about helping people overcome spiritual weakness or sickness so they can grow in practical spiritual ways. But the writer knows that the only way to grow in these areas is to mature, and the only way to mature is first to grow in understanding about who Jesus Christ is and why it matters to us, so that we can learn how to trust him and come to him to get the help we really need. And we need to develop the right ways of thinking so that we can even begin to understand what we need.

So imagine going to the doctor, but imagine that you’ve never heard of the idea of medicine. You just know you have some sort of problem, and people tell you these “doctor” people can help. So you get an appointment with the doctor, and after he examines you he says, “You’ve got a serious infection, I’m going to start you on a Z-Pack.” And you reply, “A what?” And he says: “Zythromax. Azithromycin?” And at this point your eyes start to glaze over. You came to him with a problem and he just threw two words at you that sound like they’re from Star Wars or something. What is he talking about? Doesn’t he see you have real problems that have to do with the real world? He sees you’re getting impatient, so he says, “It’s an antibiotic.” And now you just start to get up to leave. This guy is so insensitive that he thinks his jargon, which has nothing to do with your life, is a good thing to discuss at a time like this.

Now, what would need to happen? The doctor would need to slow you down long enough to explain the whole concept of modern medicine, that we can actually ingest substances that fight sickness. Those crazy words he was using? They refer to exactly what you need, and you need to know those words so you can find out how to get the drugs they name and learn how to take them.

So first, imagine any of the list items I just mentioned are an issue you have. You come to God, and tell him your issue, and he answers you! And what he does is begin to talk. And what he says when he starts to talk…is Hebrews 1:1-4. Go ahead and read those verses.

Now… stop. He just said “Z-Pack.” He hasn’t even gotten to the actual brand name or the chemical compound. He hasn’t even begun to explain what it is or what it does…

1:1-4   God’s Word in the Son is Superior and Final

1  
In many ways and all different times God spoke through a long line of men called “prophets.” This may also refer to the body of writings called “the prophets”—which is a way of referring to what Christians call “the Old Testament.” This would mean that this verse is explicitly saying God speaks by the Old Testament scriptures.


But we live in the time when God has done something new—he spoke one final time in someone who was not just a prophet, but instead was called “Son.”

2-4
A list of seven things that show the greatness of this “Son”…

  1. He’s the heir of all things
  2. He was God’s agent in Creation (the creator of everything)
  3. He’s the brightness of God’s glory & the exact representation of who God is
  4. He’s the one who holds everything together and keeps the universe running
  5. He’s the one who purged our sins
  6. He’s seated at the right hand of God’s throne
  7. He’s so much better than angels

The point? So the first thing we humans need to know is that God is there, and he is not silent. That’s the starting point for every solution to every human problem. He’s always been speaking, and he specifically chose to speak to and through many human agents for many, many years. But now, we can know that the last days have begun—because he’s spoken in a new, final way. He’s sent someone called “Son” and this Son is completely identified with God and totally reveals who he is. This means that we have a totally authoritative word from God about everything in the universe. In other words, everything in this letter, which is all about this Son, is massively important for every human being. God has spoken. Everyone needs to know what God said when he spoke in this Son.

Important: I’ve been speaking like Hebrews is all about us—our problems and what God says to us to fix our problems. But really, right off the bat, we should see that that’s actually a wrong way to look at things. Actually, all true healing and sanity starts when we move ourselves out of the center of our thoughts and let God’s word through His Son be central. Staring at the Son, hearing the Son, and contemplating these seven things are a way to start getting the order of things right—my deepest sickness is the self-centered-ness of my thoughts. If I’m willing to listen to God, He’ll use the letter to the Hebrews to deal with that issue by putting the Son in the center of my thoughts. I’ll stop obsessing over myself, and start healing by contemplating Him.

1:4-14 Seven OT quotations to show that the Son is better than the Angels

5   
(Psalm 2:7 & 2 Sam 7:14) – The son is greater, because God never called an angel his son. And in these passages “Son” means king on the throne, which is not true of any angels.

6   
(Duet 32:43) – The son is greater, because angels are told to worship Him.

7-12
(Ps 104:4, 45:6-7, 102:25-27 ) – Angels are created “ministers” (servants), the Son is God enthroned

13 
(Psalm 110:1) – Only the Son is told to sit at the right hand of God,

14 
Angels don’t only serve God, they serve humans.

The Point?  It’s not only prophets and their writings that the Son is superior to, it’s also Angels—even though they are pretty amazing spiritual beings, and they had a role in bringing some of the old revelation to God’s people. But they are only servants, whereas this Son is the royal one who shares all of God’s power—in fact, he’s always shared God’s power.

2:1-4    The Exhortation: Make sure you listen to what God spoke in the Son

We must listen to what God has communicated by sending Jesus. We’ll come back to this at the end.

2:5-18  What the Son was doing by being made lower than the Angels

Here we continue thinking about this Son by moving from the fact that he’s a greater figure than Angels, to thinking about a crazily profound part of that—he’s not just better than them because he’s divine, he’s better as a human. This Son is a specific human person. The implications of this are staggering.

5-9 
The beginning of verse 5 sounds like sort of an off-handed point, but it’s important—Angels won’t rule in the “World to come,” the Son will. But it’s even crazier than that—the quote from Psalm 8 shows that Humanity is God’s chosen ruler of the world. What’s the point of saying this when we’ve been saying the Son is the ruler? For that you’ve got to look at verse 9, where we get the human name of the Son mentioned for the first time. It’s Jesus of Nazareth. It’s the Jesus who many people overlooked and even despised when he was walking around in Israel during the time of the Roman Empire, and who even today many people find unimpressive.

So if Jesus is able to be despised and ignored, and it doesn’t really look like he’s running the world today, why all this language about ruling and glory? Here’s what’s so cool–The answer to that question is connected to the answer to another question—which is why does Psalm 8 say that all things are under the feet of humanity when clearly we aren’t ruling God’s creation right now? The experience you and I have of physical evil—sickness, injury, physical danger, natural disasters—this is all tied up in the fact that right now we’re not ruling creation like Psalm 8 says we are. And the reason for that is hinted at back in 1:3—it’s our sin. Sin (and its consequence, death) accounts for all the problems humans face. Every problem you and I face in our lives can be traced back to the presence of sin in the world—all the way back to the first sin of the first two humans.

If I am going to find any solutions for my problems in life, I have to find a solution to the big problem of sin and death. So Hebrews 2 takes the problem of humanity’s lack of rule over nature and shows that the answer is in the fact that the Son became a human named Jesus, or, as it says in 2:9, he was made human by being made “a little lower than the angels.” When the Son became Jesus, and did what he did, we get God’s solution.

This section points out (v.8) that we don’t actually see humans ruling over creation, even though the scriptures speak of it as though it were already true. Instead, what do we see? Well it says (v.9) “we see Jesus,” who became a man, and because of his death has now been crowned and exalted. Why did he become a man and have to die? So he could experience death on behalf of every member of the human race. It was precisely this death which led to the exaltation as the glorified man, or the “Son” from King David’s family who was prophesied to rule all things (1:5 – Ps 2, 1:13 – Ps 110).

10-15
The reason he had to die was so he could actually lead men and women out of the bondage to the fear of death, and destroy the power of death over them.

God respects the process, and the rules of the creation he made. He wants everything to be real. So when humans mess up the creation God made, he doesn’t just change the rules or fudge it to fix things. He does the hard work of getting inside our world and actually leading humans out of the bondage they were in.

So, in v.10 it says that “it was fitting” Jesus for Jesus to go through suffering (including death), because that’s how he needed to be made “perfect.” The idea here is like the Father looked at our situation and said, “what those humans need is a leader, and the only way to truly rescue them is for one of them to be the solution.” So, the Son was chosen to be the one who would actually do this work of becoming one of us in order to save us. Since that was what was needed, he wasn’t that high priest or that leader till he actually did all these things. And once he became a person, suffered and died, then he was completely able to be what and who we needed.

11-13
The idea here is solidarity. Our captain, our high priest, our word from God, Jesus, totally identifies with us, to the point that he became one of us…forever.

16-18
This closes out our section. Jesus did all this so that he could become a high priest who could help us escape death by providing atonement for our sins in the past and by helping us when we’re tempted to sin in the present.

So to sum up Chapter 1&2—Jesus is greater than angels, and all the prophets who came before, because he is the eternal divine Son who rules all creation, and because as a man he became what God always meant humanity to be: ruler of the earth. He won salvation for all humans, and saved the human race in the process.

The Parting Challenge: 2:1-4
“Therefore”—because these things are true… (notice “we” throughout)

Our Message to the world: Everyone should listen to what God has told us in Jesus because:

  • He’s the king of the universe, with all of God’s power. (1:5-13)
  • He continues the story of the OT (1:1, 2:2), and in those days those who disobeyed God were judged
  • The authenticity of Jesus was witnessed to by all the amazing things he did and that happened around him (2:4)
  • Jesus earned our allegiance: he forged a path for us to God (forerunner – 2:10), he took on our humanity in order to save us, he did what was necessary for him to be able to purge away our sins (1:3, 2:17), and he became a merciful and faithful high priest for us, so we could have a representative before God.
  • The salvation he accomplished was huge (2:2)—he fully established and restored humanity to its originally intended place: ruling over all of God’s creation.

Of course, the point of the letter is not so much about non-believers and people who are ignorant of Jesus, but that those who are familiar with these things should be listening.

The dangers?
1. “Drifting away”
2. “Neglecting” what God has done

The solution?   “Pay careful attention” (hold the ship on course). I’m either paying careful attention to what God has said to us in Jesus or I’m drifting away and in danger of neglecting the great salvation God accomplished for me. The same can be said of a church…

Christians: Does this work for you? Do you ever find that you grow impatient with God and the way he operates in your life? Are you willing to let him be the doctor, and simply follow his directions so you can heal?

The Point?  God did an amazing thing in sending Jesus. It was exactly what everyone needed. Everyone should listen to what God communicated when Jesus came. God is speaking. Will you listen?

Learn to Study 1 Peter For Yourself

1PeterBookletA few weekends ago a bunch of us took a weekend away to study the entire letter of 1 Peter. Today I wanted to share the booklet we used for the weekend. Below is the original booklet, as well as a new “general” format which erases most references to our group and the weekend specifically, and is useful for any individual or group study.

Here’s some description from the front of the booklet:

This guide is created on the premise that one of the best things you can do is to learn the tools necessary to read the bible for yourself, without (any, or at least too much reliance on) outside helps. Other books about the bible are great, and have their place, but they are no substitute for the life-skill of knowing how to dig and pray and find meaning (and God’s voice) for yourself in the pages of Holy Scripture.

 

 

Some helpful apologetic videos

These are great:

Could the universe have been caused by nothing?
Cosmological evidence points to the fact that the material universe is not eternal–in other words, that it had a beginning. And a truth that should be acknowledged by all is this: Whatever began to exist has a cause. Consider…

Is there no evidence for God?
What can we say when people say “there’s no evidence for God”? This one’s fast moving and pretty useful. (It also includes the Kalam idea.)

Does “faith” mean believing in things that aren’t true?
The short answer is “no.” The three-minute answer is nicely put in this video.

 

The Bible and what it means to be human.

On Friday I posted some thoughts on how the Bible can be simultaneously both the words of God and written by humans. Here are some more thoughts on this mind-altering truth, from Thomas Oden’s book Classic Christianity. “God the Spirit,” writes Oden, has been historically viewed by Christians  as “the author of scripture.” He continues:

The authors [of the Scriptures] wrote or spoke as moved by God’s own Spirit. Their consciousness, peculiarities of language, personalities, and psychological makeup became fittingly adapted instruments of the divine address. The Spirit found their particular psyches, their intelligence, their readiness, their social location, their historical placement useful to the divine plan and purpose, and spoke through them to and for all. It is the personal particularity that made the most differences in telling the story, since each hearer is unique….Each one’s personal human existence is unique and characteristic of that person; this is especially so in respect to speech…

Prophecy was not understood [even from the beginning] by ancient [Christians] as a product of the human imagination, but of human agency being gloriously transfigured by God’s own Spirit, wherein human egocentricity did not interrupt or distort what God sought to communicate…

The commonly received assumption [in the beginning of Church history] was that the Spirit so guided the writers that, without circumventing their own human willing, knowing, language, personal temperaments, or any other distinctly personal factors, God’s own Word was recalled and transmitted with complete adequacy and sufficiency.

Seriously, isn’t this awesome?

And doesn’t it challenge the common ideas about what it means to be human, and what it means for God to work with humans?