Saturday 29 December 2018

Thoughts on 'The New Perspective' on Paul

It's not that broader meanings can't exist in Biblical themes - just that as readers of ancient manuscripts, it's helpful (necessary, in fact) for us to try to put ourselves in the original picture, try to catch the flow of where the writer was going by mentioning the themes he mentions, and try to grasp the portion of truth which the writer meant by mentioning the themes where he did. 

It's sort of like if a witness answers that Yes, he indeed saw a truck driving along the road. We could focus on the description of the truck - and that wouldn't be wrong. All trucks have descriptions! But what if the reason he'd been asked, was more to do with the load that the truck was alleged to have been carrying? By noticing what a truck is doing - carrying the load that it is carrying - that's not a denial that trucks do more than just carry that type of load. 

Sort of like a scene in a film showing a fresh stream flowing rapidly over round black stones: it wouldn't be impossible to focus our attention on the stones, and think about their nature in full - but what if the significance which the scene has in the videographer's overall story is not the full nature of the stones, but the stream, and where it's going as it flows over the stones. He's telling a story: he mainly wants us to see the part the stones have in that story - even though of course all stones do have more to their own composition than just the part they happen to play in someone's story. 

Anything that's true of a nation as a whole, in this case, Israel - is true of the nation as a whole only because it was first of all true of individuals in the nation, right? Anything that's true of individuals, will be true of a nation that's comprised of those individuals. That's a given - and there's no denying that. But the thing to grasp, for what it's worth, is: what is the passage doing? which might it mainly have in mind? 

It's like someone looking at a patch of a distant mountain through binoculars, and describing to you what he's seeing. Certainly, there's more to the mountain-range than just what he's describing to you. There's no denying that. It's just that right now he's focusing on a very particular patch of the mountain - for his own reasons. 

And that's what any writer does, isn't it? Paul included. He has his own reasons for mentioning the themes he mentions. He's answering his own questions. Addressing his own issues. Even though of course the themes are bigger than that. A theme always is! 

Every piece of manuscript by any writer, on any theme, usually takes a particular aspect on something - not that there isn't more to some of the themes they mention, and not that the writer didn't also know that. Just that he was doing something by mentioning the theme, and it pays for us to notice that. 

So, words like 'righteousness'; 'justification'; 'works'; 'faith' - it's not that there aren't multiple facets inherent within each of those words - there always is more, just like the guy with the binoculars - nevertheless Paul uses those words in his letters because he was going somewhere with it - like the stream flowing over those rounded rocks - and that's what we're meant to see: we're meant to grasp what he's doing with it and where he's going with it in each instance (without denying that there's more to the themes he mentions - of course there is: there always is, with anything!)

I'm no expert on Tom Wright, for example - but he knows there's more to each of those words, not only in English but especially even in Greek; and what I think Wright attempts to do is to draw our attention to the particular aspect which he thinks the original writer may have had in mind by mentioning those terms where he did the way he did.

My 'hunch' when I read Paul, is that he very often did have the corporate body in mind - even though of course Paul loved the individual. 

What's true of a corporate body, say the Church, is only true of the corporate body because it is first of all true for individuals; anything that's true of the corporate body can and must be experienced personally; or what's said about the corporate body can also be said of the individual. But noticing which way an author is discussing it might be important for other questions. 

Maybe?

Friday 14 December 2018

A Thought About Contemporary Worship

I think one of a number of goals of church worship-leaders ought to be:
To equip new Christians with songs they can find themselves singing spontaneously all the way through impromptu, remembering the melody-line and all the words even when they're away from the band and big screen, and without a digital media player.
Certainly there's also a place for more complex song-structures; and for show-casing the full-range of a songwriter's capability - like 'contemporary worship' songs perhaps, with their three-verses-plus-chorus-plus-bridge type structures. But because that's 'all' some churches are performing nowadays, their congregations don't have the ability to sing very well outside of church.
We used to be able to do that! During Charismatic Renewal days we could sing impromptu together in the car, on the beach, on the mountaintop, or in one another's homes - song after song, for hours sometimes, without ever needing to look at the words - and it still sounded catchy and complete without the band, even without any musical backing at all sometimes - because the song-structures were such that they didn't need instrumental fills.
When I get together with old friends from that era, we can still recall songs we haven't sung for decades. We can literally stay up all night singing song after song together and still not exhaust our repertoire. But it's hard for informal small groups nowadays to sing spontaneously together like that, or when they're by themselves - and I think they're missing-out on something that truly was edifying.
So I reckon it could be beneficial for contemporary churches to once again start including some simple, single-stanza, catchy, melodic, bouncy, rhythmic, toe-tapping joyful, nostalgically beautiful, worshipful, moving, familiar and rememberable songs that go straight to heart and remain there not only until the next morning but for years to come. If we're singing some songs like that during church, people will also find themselves singing them when they're by themselves or in small groups during the week. That wouldn't be a bad thing would it!
"Let the word of Christ dwell in you richly in all wisdom; teaching and admonishing one another in psalms and hymns and spiritual songs, singing with grace in your hearts to the Lord" (Colossians 3:16).

Wednesday 28 November 2018

Healing is the Children's Bread

To assert that 'healing' has ceased...
...is really to deny the Jewish theology of healing, health, covenant, sin, forgiveness, Messiah, God and His kingdom and how these were each interconnected.
The claim of the New Testament was that the ancient Jewish outlook on the future - grounded as it was in their Old Testament Scriptures - was now being fulfilled, inaugurated and carried-out precisely by 'the gospel'.
That's what 'the gospel' meant - it was the glad announcement that the ancient hope of Israel was now being fulfilled - that each of those themes were now coming together, in Jesus the Messiah - for all mankind.
God was visiting His people; dealing with their sin at last; healing and health could, according to covenant, consequently be experienced; evil regimes and even death itself was to be defeated. The 'gospel of the kingdom'.
To say instead that healing had a different purpose and that it was only temporary, disconnects 'healing' from the significance given to it all through the Scriptures - in the Old Testament (the Law, promise, covenant, Psalms and Prophets) first of all; and also in the New Testament.
It would reinvent the Bible-theology of healing - and it would therefore actually be tantamount to modifying 'the gospel' itself.
By reinventing the significance of 'healing' and then eliminating it, we would in effect be minimising part of what 'the gospel' was claimed in the New Testament to actually be.
"And I am sure that, when I come unto you, I shall come in the FULNESS OF THE BLESSING OF THE GOSPEL OF CHRIST" (Romans 15:29).

Monday 26 November 2018

Gospel = Kingdom

The 'gospel' is the gospel 'of the kingdom'.
We glean the key takeaway truths (about Jesus' death, burial and resurrection being for the forgiveness of the sins of the whole world) from WITHIN a story which in the first instance was more specifically concerned with Israel, and not in a non-kingdom sense either:
Jesus submitted to the Jews who were intent on handing Him over to death at the hands of the Romans in order to avert what they knew would otherwise mean national retribution if they were instead perceived as political revolutionaries.
And even that part of the plot was told by the gospel-writers within an OVER-ARCHING NARRATIVE of what God was doing for Israel:
God was visiting Israel, in the Person of His Son, fulfilling the promise of Abraham, inaugurating the kingdom of God and all that the Kingdom of God entailed as promised in Covenant and Prophecy (forgiveness, healing, restoration, Israel becoming a blessing to all nations, along with judgement, resurrection, the final defeat of evil regimes, and newness in every way).
The 'gospel' was the glad announcement that all of that was now being inaugurated - in Jesus Christ, by His death, burial and resurrection. An announcement to Israel first, and also to all nations.
"God was in Christ, reconciling the world to Himself, not imputing their trespasses to them".
Individual forgiveness, although it's central, was not so much a standalone theme which can be plucked from the gospels and labelled as 'the gospel' while the theme of the 'kingdom' gets dispensed with until later as if the theme of Israel's 'kingdom' is somehow separate from the gospel.
No, what God did in Christ Jesus through His cross and resurrection, was God's way of bringing the 'kingdom' - for Israelis first, and also for all the world.
It's just that there's timing in how some components of the achievement of the cross are to get rolled-out. But even though it's yet to be consummated, it's all already been intrinsically inaugurated, through the cross and resurrection of Jesus.
Kingdom already/kingdom to come.
We are saved - we're going to be saved.
We're raised with Christ - we're going to be raised at His coming.
Evil has been judged - it's going to be finally judged on the last day.
First coming/second coming.
That's the revelation of the New Testament. The 'gospel' - 'of the kingdom'.
It's 'news' and it's 'good'!

Sunday 11 November 2018

Abraham and JESUS

God announced the GOSPEL ahead of time to Abraham, when He promised him that:
"...in thy seed shall ALL FAMILIES of the earth be BLESSED..."
Not 'seeds' plural, but in thy 'seed' singular, which was Christ...
"...shall all nations of the earth..."
Without discrimination or distinction between them on the basis of ethnicity nor Judaism, which came after the promise and only temporarily...
"...be BLESSED..."
Justified, saved.
Jesus said:
"...Abraham rejoiced to see MY day, and he saw it and was glad".
JESUS is the fulfilment of the promise - and you - us - IN HIM.

Saturday 10 November 2018

What of Jerusalem?

Some people get excited about the modern State of Israel, like that's the be-all and end-all of Bible Prophecy.

I wonder if that's the view I should take of Bible Prophecy too, instead of entertaining the idea that the gospel is the highpoint.

Certainly David did have high hopes for the city of Jerusalem and did rejoice a lot in Jerusalem, in the Psalms. But is that really the high-point of God's eternal plan? What about the Psalms' mention of military warfare - is that the way to bring about the kingdom of God? Is the gospel, and the Church, only a sideline to the main theme of Prophecy instead of the means and climax of Israel's long awaited hope?

While thinking about this, wondering also about whether David had much of a concept of the place that the resurrection shall have in the ultimate victory of God, while driving to Ipswich, I put a CD on - a reading of the Psalms - and Psalm 49 happened to come on:

To the chief Musician, A Psalm for the sons of Korah.49  Hear this, all ye people; give ear, all ye inhabitants of the world: Both low and high, rich and poor, together. My mouth shall speak of wisdom; and the meditation of my heartshall be of understanding. I will incline mine ear to a parable: I will open my dark saying upon the harp. Wherefore should I fear in the days of evil, when the iniquity of my heels shall compass me about? They that trust in their wealth, and boast themselves in the multitude of their riches; None of them can by any means redeem his brother, nor give to God a ransom for him: (For the redemption of their soul is precious, and it ceaseth for ever:
 That he should still live for ever, and not see corruption.10  For he seeth that wise men die, likewise the fool and the brutish person perish, and leave their wealth to others.11  Their inward thought is, that their houses shall continue for ever, and their dwelling places to all generations; they call their lands after their own names.12  Nevertheless man being in honour abideth not: he is like the beasts that perish.13  This their way is their folly: yet their posterity approve their sayings. Selah.14  Like sheep they are laid in the grave; death shall feed on them; and the upright shall have dominion over them in the morning; and their beauty shall consume in the grave from their dwelling.15  But God will redeem my soul from the power of the grave: for he shall receive me. Selah.16  Be not thou afraid when one is made rich, when the glory of his house is increased;17  For when he dieth he shall carry nothing away: his glory shall not descend after him.18  Though while he lived he blessed his soul: and men will praise thee, when thou doest well to thyself.19  He shall go to the generation of his fathers; they shall never see light.20  Man that is in honour, and understandeth not, is like the beasts that perish.

That talks about the power of death, right? the powerlessness of all mankind in the face of it. And it talks about the victory which the righteous shall have over it - but 'in the morning', not necessarily straightaway. In the meantime, the wicked may sometimes prosper, to some extent, for some time.

So even the Psalmist understood that death might come in-between the ultimate victory which was promised to Israel - to Israelis - to all of us. The ultimate victory won't necessarily be seen, until the resurrection. The gospel is entirely consistent with this worldview - with this version of Israel's 'story'.

The Scripture didn't then, and doesn't now, imply a victory which could be obtained through military means alone. The scope of the victory described by the Bible was to involve victory even over death. Suffering was never precluded, in the interim. That's still promised to Jerusalem - to the faithful - to the true Jew, the Israel of God: but the message of the New Testament is that the same promise extends to embrace all of Abraham's children, through the cross and resurrection of Jesus from the dead - not only those who are Abraham's children after the flesh. And it's to involve the liberation of the whole of creation, at the resurrection.

And all of this in accordance with the Scriptures - in accordance with promise, allegory, the law, shadow, the Psalms, and prophecy - the story of Israel - that which was under Israeli custodianship, but which now has been made sure to all the seed. 

That takes nothing away from modern Israel - rather, it confirms what's possible for Israelis, as much as for everyone.

Could it perhaps be said then that the creation of the State of Israel last century, was not a direct fulfilment of any specific Bible Prophecy as if that is the pinnacle-theme of God's plan, but rather it is something which was possible because of fulfilled prophecy - as a derivative of it - possible because once fulfilled, the promise was never revoked, so it could always potentially be attained-to again? Not a rival eschatology, but a derivative of the Apostles' first-century realised-eschatology (realised in the sense of it having been inaugurated, though not-yet consummated, by and in Jesus).

But in any case Israel after the flesh - and their land - was always only ever going to be part of the fuller story of redemption which had been promised to Abraham. Abraham's promises included - and centred on - a promise which was for all nations. 

By Kerry Nobbs

View from Terranora, NSW
by Kerry Nobbs
oil on canvas
60x44cm
circa 1980s

Tuesday 6 November 2018

Isaiah's New Heavens and Earth

In our Post-Enlightenment, Post-Modern, Plato-influenced minds, we tend to want to force Bible Prophecies into a single category - but that's not how ancient Jews treated their sacred Scriptures.

I think a lot of Old Testament prophecies often predicted the future in very broad strokes. Grand imagery. The New Testament however unpacks that for us, rightly dividing it into what's now past, what's present and what's still future. The Old Testament passages themselves often didn't do that, but the New does. 


"New heavens and a new earth", in Isaiah 65, for instance. Firstly notice the passage doesn't mention 'Millennium'. But that aside, Peter looked forward to new heavens and earth. But he said only righteousness will live in it. So 'the sinner' and the 'curse' mentioned by Isaiah in verse 20 can't be part of Peter's new earth.

First century Jews saw that God had begun his work of 'new creation' for Israel, at the return from Babylonian captivity, but they certainly saw it as incomplete and were still hoping for more.

Paul said that new creation was already a reality, in a sense, through the resurrection of Jesus from the dead. Though he too, like Peter, still looked forward to its culmination at Christ's coming.

So, Isaiah's prophecy looked forward in a broad sense, encompassing everything from the return from captivity, to the work of the gospel of Christ, to the still-future culmination of new creation. All of that. But the New Testament unpacks those themes for us more clearly than an Old Testament passage itself could.

Friday 26 October 2018

Why the Early Church Finally Rejected Premillennialism - article by Charles E. Hill


Why the Early Church Finally Rejected Premillennialism

CHARLES E. HILL

©1999, 2000 Alliance of Confessing Evangelicals
Chiliasm is the ancient name for what today is known as premillennialism, the belief that when Jesus Christ returns he will not execute the last judgment at once, but will first set up on earth a temporary kingdom, where resurrected saints will rule with him over non-resurrected subjects for a thousand years of peace and righteousness.1 To say that the Church "rejected chiliasm" may sound bizarre today, when premillennialism is the best known eschatology in Evangelicalism. Having attached itself to funda-mentalism, chiliasm in its dispensationalist form has been vigorously preached in pulpits, taught in Bible colleges and seminaries, and successfully promoted to the masses through study Bibles, books, pamphlets, charts, and a host of radio and television ministries. To many Christians today, premillennialism is the very mark of Christian orthodoxy. But there was a period of well over a "millennium" (over half of the Church's history), from at least the early fifth century until the sixteenth, when chiliasm was dormant and practically non-existent. Even through the Reformation and much of the post-Refor-mation period, advocates of chiliasm were usually found among fringe groups like the Msterites. The Augsburg Confession went out of its way to condemn chiliasm (Art. XVII, "Of Christ's Return to Judgment"), and John Calvin criticized "the chiliasts, who limited the reign of Christ to a thousand years" (Institutes 3.25.5). It was not until the nineteenth century that chiliasm made a respectable comeback, as a favorite doctrine of Christian teachers who were promoting revival in the face of the deadening effects of encroaching liberalism.
But how are we to view the Church's earliest period up until the first decisive rejection of chiliasm in the Church? By most accounts this was the heyday of chiliastic belief in the Church. Many modern apologists for premillennialism allege that before the time of Augustine chiliasm was the dominant, if not the "universal" eschatology of the Church, preserving the faith of the apostles.2 Some form of chiliasm was certainly defended by such notable names as Justin Martyr and Irenaeus of Lyons in the second century and Tertullian of Carthage in the third. How and why then did this view finally fall into disrepute?
The answer given by modern premillennial apologists usually suggests that premillennialism was overcome for illegitimate reasons. They cite the rise of an unbiblical and dangerous allegorical hermeneutic (by such as Clement of Alexandria and Origen) which took a sad toll on sound biblical exegesis. They explain that the prophetic excesses of the Montanists gave chiliasm a bad name. They note that the peace of Constantine led the Church to the false belief that the millennium had already arrived. And, finally, they suggest that the authoritative repudiation of chiliasm by Augustine, who formerly had held such a belief, "put the nails in the coffin" of premillennialism.
But are these the real factors?
The hermeneutical question is indeed an important one, but to put the debate in terms of literal against allegorical is overly simplistic. Both sides used literal exegesis and both used allegorical exegesis when they deemed it best. For example, despite Origen's intentional use of the allegorical method, his essential critique of chiliasm had real theological and traditional motivations. These motivations were not his alone but belonged to large segments of the Church. The early Montanists, it turns out, were not chiliasts and were never criticized for being so.3 Tertullian, who became a Montanist, did not get his chiliasm from them, but from Irenaeus. There is no evidence that chiliasm was hurt by any association with Montanism. By the time Constantine proclaimed Christianity the state religion in the fourth century, a non-chiliastic eschatology was surely the norm in most places, and in many it had been so ever since Christianity had arrived there. Many signs thus tell us that even without the aid of Augustine, chiliasm was probably in its death-throes by the time he wrote the last books of The City of God in a.d. 420.
So why did the Church reject chiliasm? As with most historical questions, the answers are complex and have social as well as hermeneutical and theological aspects. It would take a long time to compare and evaluate the exegesis of individual biblical passages by a number of given authors. One common criticism, however, can serve as a convenient organizer for what are probably the most important factors in chiliasm's demise. That common criticism, known from Origen to the Augsburg Confession and beyond, is that chiliasm is a "Jewish" error.4 This criticism is open to grave misunderstanding today if one views it as part of the Church's shameful legacy of anti-Semitism. But this is not what lay at the base of such criticism of chiliasm as "Jewish." Jesus was a Jew, as were all of his apostles. "Salvation is of the Jews," Jesus said, and all the Church fathers knew and agreed with this. There is no embarrassment at all in something being "Jewish" and the ancient and honorable tradition of the Jews, in monotheism, morals, and the safeguarding of Holy Scripture, is something Christian leaders always prized.
Another modern misunderstanding of this criticism must also be avoided. Certain current forms of premillennialism, particularly dispensationalism, might seem "Jewish" to some because they promise that the kingdom of God will be restored to ethnic Jews as the just fulfillment of the Old Testament promises to Abraham and his descendants. But this was not the case with ancient Christian chiliasm. The New Testament's revelation of the Church as the true Israel and heir of all the promises of God in Christ was too well-established and too deeply ingrained in the early Christian consciousness for such a view to have been viable. Ancient Church chiliasts like Irenaeus did indeed argue that some of God's promises to Israel had to be fulfilled literally in a kingdom on earth, but they recognized that the humble recipients of this kingdom would be spiritual Israel, all who confessed Jesus as God's Messiah, regardless of their national or ethnic origin.5 Ancient chiliasm was not criticized because it "favored" the Jews as having a distinct, blessed future apart from Gentile Christians.
What then did critics mean by calling chiliasm "Jewish"? Their use of the label meant "non-Christian Jewish," or even, "anti-Christian Jewish." These early critics believed that chiliasm represented an approach to biblical religion that was sub-Christian, essentially failing to reckon with the full redemptive implications of the coming of Jesus of Nazareth as Messiah. They saw it as an under-realized, a not-fully-Christian, eschatology. We can outline at least three aspects of this criticism.
Its Sources Were Non-Christian Jewish Sources
First, critics of chiliasm point out that Christian chiliasts got their chiliasm not so much from the apostles as from non-Christian Jewish sources.6 Irenaeus cites a tradition from a book written by Papias of Hierapolis about the millennial kingdom.7 The tradition purports to reproduce Jesus' teaching on the kingdom as related through the Apostle John to those who remembered the latter's teaching. It is the famous report about each grapevine in the kingdom having ten thousand branches, each branch ten thousand twigs, each twig ten thousand shoots, each shoot ten thousand clusters, and each cluster ten thousand grapes, etc., with talking grapes, each one anxious that the saints would bless the Lord through it.8 As it turns out, this account seems to be a development of a tradition recorded in the Jewish apocalypse 2 Baruch in its account of the Messiah's earthly kingdom (Ch. 29).
Some scholars note that the chiliasm of Justin, though it derives the number 1,000 from Revelation 20, springs more from a certain approach to Old Testament exegesis (particularly on Is. 65:17-25) than from the eschatology of Revelation.9 And this approach is in basic agreement with that of Trypho, his Jewish interlocutor. This is in keeping with the role chiliasm plays in Justin's Dialogue with Trypho, where it functions as part of an apologetic which sought to claim everything Jewish for Christianity. The issue of the fulfillment of the prophets' predictions of glory for Israel was very much a part of the atmosphere of the discussion between these representatives of Christianity and Judaism, for their encounter took place not long after the failed attempt by Bar Cochba to take Jerusalem back from the Romans (a.d. 132).
Chiliasm Was "Jewish" in its View of the Saints' Afterlife 
Second, we now know that early chiliast and non-chiliast Christian eschatologies had to do with more than an expectation of a temporary, earthly kingdom, or lack thereof. They encompassed other beliefs about eschatology. It may seem curious to us today, but the ancient Christian chiliasts defended a view of the afterlife in which the souls of the righteous did not go immediately to God's presence in heaven at the time of death, but went instead to a subterranean Hades. Here souls, in refreshment and joyful contemplation, waited for the resurrection and the earthly kingdom before they could enter the presence of God.10 The only ones exempted from Hades were men like Enoch and Elijah who, it was thought, had not experienced death but had been translated alive to paradise. This view of the afterlife on the part of the chiliasts Papias, Justin, Irenaeus, Tertullian, Victorinus, and Lactantius was connected directly to their chiliasm. We know this both from the coexistence of these beliefs in Jewish sources (2 Baruch, 4 Ezra, Ps. Philo's Biblical Antiquities, and some rabbinic traditions) and from the internal connection between the doctrines drawn by Irenaeus.11
Yet most of the Church (and at times even the chiliasts themselves in spite of themselves) knew and treasured the New Testament hope of an immediate enjoyment of the presence of God in heaven with Christ at death (Luke 23:42-43; John 14:2-4; 17:24; Phil. 1:22-23; 2 Cor. 5:6-8; Heb. 12:22-24; 2 Pet. 1:11; Rev. 6:9-11; 14:1-5; 15:2; 18:20; 19:14). But this aspect of the Christian eschatology, this "hope of heaven" made possible only by the completed work of Jesus the Messiah and his own ascension to heaven, shattered the mold of Jewish chiliastic eschatology. Such a vision belonged to a non-chiliast (what we would today call amillennial) understanding of the return of Christ. This vision essentially saw the millennium of Revelation 20 as pertaining to the present age, wherein the righteous dead are alive in Christ and are now participating with their King and High Priest in the priestly kingdom in heaven (Rev. 20:4-6).12 In the new light of this fully Christian expectation, a return to an earthly existence, where sin and bodily desires still persisted and a final war (as in Rev. 20:8-10) still loomed, could only be a retrogression in redemptive history.13
We can observe then two competing patterns of Christian eschatology from the second century on: one chiliastic, which expects an intermediate kingdom on earth before the last judgment and says that the souls of the saints after death await that earthly kingdom in the refreshing underworldly vaults of Hades; the other which teaches instead that departed Christians have a blessed abode with Christ in heaven, in the presence of God, as they await the return of Christ to earth, the resurrection and judgment of all, and the new heaven and new earth.
Why did the chiliastic view of the afterlife appeal to some of the most prominent defenders of Christianity? As noted, for Justin, it functioned as a way of claiming all the Jewish inheritance for Christians. Did the prophets promise a kingdom of peace, bounty, and righteousness as the Jews insisted it did? Then these prophecies could be claimed for Christianity, for Christianity is the fulfillment of Judaism. But by the time of Irenaeus (later in the second century) there was another motivation. Orthodox believers were battling Marcionism, Valentinianism, and various other gnosticisms, which were devastating portions of the Church. All these heterodoxies rejected any notion of the salvation of the physical body through resurrection and any notion of a restored creation, since they all claimed that the material creation was inherently evil (or at least destined for annihilation), because it was not the creation of the highest God. They also claimed that their adherents would mount up to the highest heaven (beyond the orthodox) at death.14 Both aspects of eschatology were designed to "do the orthodox one better." Chiliasm provided an ideal response for Irenaeus, for it emphasized the goodness of the material creation as the good product of a benevolent God. It also refuted the inflated afterlife boasts of the heretics about direct ascension to the highest God as soon as they died. The true believer instead would follow the course of the Lord and remain in Hades until his soul was reunited with his body at the resurrection.15
But despite its usefulness in helping to claim the mantle of Judaism and in fending off matter-denying Gnosticism, chiliasm was at odds with aspects of the Church's hope handed down from the apostles and made so clear in the New Testament writings. As such, the chiliastic eschatology could not survive intact. Tertullian, after embracing chiliasm, tried some minor modifications. Even as a chiliast he remained more open to understanding the "earthly" prophecies of the Old Testament in a more "spiritualized" way.16 He also argued that some Christians--but only those who literally suffered martyrdom--could be spared a stay in Hades and could inhabit the heavenly paradise before the resurrection.17 But even Tertullian's admirer Cyprian could not accept this ameliorated form of chiliasm, and comforted his congregations in the face of a raging plague with the Christian hope of the heavenly kingdom when they died.18 With Lactantius in the early fourth century we see a determined attempt to revive a more "genuine" form of chiliasm.19 But by the fourth century these views could not stand long among educated clergy. The Christian hope of union and fellowship with Christ after death was too strong for the chiliastic eschatology to flourish ever again in its original form. The work of Tyconius, Jerome, and Augustine at the end of the fourth century and in the early fifth simply put the exclamation point on the inevitable.
Chiliasm's Old Testament Hermeneutic Led to the Crucifixion
Finally, the chiliastic alternative on the intermediate state of the Christian soul between death and the resurrection was a problem which in itself could have led to chiliasm's demise. But there was another problem which, when clearly exposed, had the potential of being downright scandalous. It was recognized by Origen and has been seen by non-chiliasts down to the present day.20 It is the realization that the "literal," nationalistic interpretation of the prophets was the standard that Jesus, in the eyes of his opponents, did not live up to, and therefore was the basis of their rejection of his messiahship. One of the prophecies that Irenaeus had insisted will be literally fulfilled in the kingdom on earth was Is. 11:6-7, which speaks of the wolf dwelling with the lamb and the leopard with the kid, etc. Origen specifically mentions this passage as among those which the Jews misinterpret: "and having seen none of these events literally happening during the advent of him whom we believe to be Christ they did not accept our Lord Jesus, but crucified him on the ground that he had wrongly called himself Christ."21 This "Jewish" approach to the Old Testament prophecies and its role in the Jewish rejection of Jesus was recognized even by Tertullian and was no doubt one of his motivations for taking a more "spiritualized" approach to those prophecies than Irenaeus had done.22
Conclusion 
Why did the Church reject chiliasm? Essentially because chiliasm was judged not to be a fully Christian phenomenon. We have organized three faults of chiliasm around the theme of its so-called "Jewish" character. These faults include its sources; holding out an attenuated hope of blessing for the Christian after death, for it was based in a pre-Christian system which as yet lacked a Savior who had raised humanity to heaven; and clinging to an interpretation of Old Testament prophecies which did not comport with the Christian approach but which could be used to justify the crucifixion. Instead the crucifixion, resurrection, and ascension of Jesus the Messiah had effected a momentous change which Jewish chiliasm was not well-adapted to accommodate.
But it was not these "faults" alone that fatally injured chiliasm. It might have lasted longer if there had not always existed in the Church another, more fully "Christian," eschatology sustaining the Church throughout the whole period. That eschatology, revealed in the New Testament writings, proclaimed Jesus Christ's present reign over all things from heaven, where his saints were "with him" (Luke 23:42-43; John 14:2-4; 17:24; Phil. 1:22-23; 2 Cor. 5:6-8). It saw the culmination of that reign not in a future, limited, and provisional kingdom on earth where perfection mingled once again with imperfection, but rather in the full arrival of the perfect (Rom. 8:21; 1 Cor. 13:10) and the replacement of the present heaven and earth with a heaven and earth in which righteousness dwells (2 Pet. 3:13; Rev. 21-22). Evidence of this eschatology runs throughout the post New Testament period, from Clement of Rome to Augustine.
Modern premillennialism, in its several forms, has indeed undergone certain transmutations from its ancient ancestor, some of which are improvements, some arguably not. It may be possible to develop a premillennialism which obviates the worst of chiliasm's pitfalls in antiquity. But the more challenging question will always be whether any form of chiliasm can ever be shown to be the view of the New Testament writers.
 
Dr. Charles E. Hill is associate professor of New Testament at Reformed Theological Seminary in Orlando. He is the author of Regnum Caelorum: Patterns of Future Hope in Early Christianity(Oxford, 1992).

Source:

https://www.monergism.com/why-early-church-finally-rejected-premillennialism

Sunday 21 October 2018

Gold May Be Deposited Instantaneously

The usual Evolutionary narrative is that gold came to exist in seams below the surface of the earth a time long ago when the earth was hypothetically hotter and molten.

But a recent study claims that "process can occur almost instantaneously — possibly within a few tenths of a second" - through earthquakes, not a hot, molten earth!

https://www.nature.com/news/earthquakes-make-gold-veins-in-an-instant-1.12615

http://www.abc.net.au/science/articles/2013/03/18/3716298.htm

A Usually-Workable, Advisable Definition of Marriage

Marriage is when a man and woman publicly declare their lifetime commitment to each other as husband and wife, before God and the angels and the community to which they belong, in a way which their community witnesses and acknowledges and ratifies to be bona fide holy marriage.

Friday 12 October 2018

Smith Wigglesworth Quote - About Thoughts

"Do you see how Jesus mastered the devil in the wilderness? He knew He was the Son of God, and Satan came along with...

How many times has Satan come along to you this way. He says, "After all, you may be deceived. You know you really are not a child of God."

If the devil comes along and says that you are not saved, it is a pretty sure sign that you are.

When he comes and tells you that you are not healed, it may be taken as good evidence that the Lord has sent His Word and healed you.

The devil knows that if he can capture your thought-life, he has won a mighty victory over you. His great business is injecting thoughts. But if you are pure and holy, you will instantly shrink from them.

God wants us to let the mind that was in Christ Jesus - the pure, holy, humble mind of Christ - be in us.

I come across people everywhere I go who are held bound by deceptive conditions - and these conditions have come about simply because they have allowed the devil to make their minds the place of his stronghold.

How are we to guard against this? The Lord has provided us with weapons that are mighty through God to the pulling down of these strongholds of the enemy, and by means of which every thought shall be brought into captivity to the obedience of Christ. The blood of Jesus Christ and His mighty Name are an antidote to all the subtle seeds of unbelief that Satan would sow in your minds!"

Jesus, River, Light

ZECHARIAH 14:6-8
6And it shall come to pass in that day, that the light shall not be clear, nor dark: 
7But it shall be one day which shall be known to the LORD, not day, nor night: but it shall come to pass, that at evening time it shall be light.
8And it shall be in that day, that living waters shall go out from Jerusalem; half of them toward the former sea, and half of them toward the hinder sea: in summer and in winter shall it be.

Perhaps in relation to these verses, the Jews lit lights and poured water, during the Feast of Tabernacles. On one such occasion Jesus declared Himself, with a loud voice, to be the giver of the true water, and also the light of the world.

So JESUS Himself is the ultimate fulfilment of Zechariah's prophecy. The theme of the river is repeated in the Book of Revelation. 

Tuesday 18 September 2018

The Old Testament Echoed the Real

Straight after Jesus came down off the mount after teaching His disciples in an event whose echo sounded all the way back in time to Moses on the mount giving the commandments, Jesus enacted His greater-than-Moses authority by first of all doing for a child of Abraham what the Law could not do - healed him of his leprosy - and in a way which didn't break the Law (because He said to him 'Go show yourself to the priests and offer for thy cleansing those things which Moses has commanded'); then secondly He did a miracle for a Gentile, and not just any Gentile, but a delegate of Caesar at that! on the basis of faith - in a move which pointed-forward to the the fact that Gentiles, even the 'worst' of them, would soon be embraced into Abraham's blessing simply on the basis of faith (not by becoming Proselytes to Judaism). And the remark is made that such faith as the Centurion's had not even been seen in Israel - hinting that Gentiles (who were without the law) could meet the conditions for receiving Abraham's promise while not all Jews would (despite having the law). 

'Evening Calm' by Josephine Jenyns 1974

"Evening Calm" by Josephine Jenyns 1974
Oil on canvas board 

Monday 10 September 2018

Where Does Your Tone Come From?

I often think it's almost possible to guess where an American preacher comes from - whether a former Confederate State or a Union State - just by his 'tone' - even without knowing where he lives.

Some preachers in some denominations preach with the tone of a remnant-people under siege. 

While many members of another denomination have the demeanour of people who almost feel that their denomination 'is' the establishment. 

All of this is steeped in history! 

Then there are also national-traits which can make their way into members of a denomination even in other countries. 

Whether it's the trait of methodical sociableness; or of often feeling a doctrinal 'kampf' in one's breast; or something else. 

When really our example in the gospel is none other than the Lord JESUS. If we allow ourselves to be always guided by His indwelling Holy Spirit, we'll stay true.