Wednesday 27 May 2020

Church-Buildings v House Meetings

A few reflections:
If we think church-buildings don't matter, I sometimes think that we should demonstrate that, not only by legitimising gatherings which happen outside church-buildings - but also by not illegitimising gatherings that do. 
If we hint that a gathering is somehow illegitimised if it happens in a church-building, we're actually giving significance to a 'building' (albeit a negative significance) - despite saying buildings don't have any significance! 
The building versus a house isn't the issue - the issue is what happens (or should happen) when we gather - wherever that might be.
Churches in persecuted countries are often touted as examples of house-meetings having an advantage over church-buildings. But churches in persecuted countries didn't stop meeting in church-buildings because they wanted to: they only stopped meeting in church-buildings and meeting in homes instead because they had to! 
Meeting in homes may indeed have made better use of the God-given role of the laity - but meeting in bigger groups wasn't something churches in persecuted countries have wanted to shun. They're eager to start that up again too, as soon as they can!
And even though they currently do mainly meet in homes, their churches are still led by a recognised and ordained clergy - it isn't all led by the laity. 
Look closely at any successful house-church movement in any country in the world - persecuted or not - and I think you'll find they all have very strong leadership by a gifted, recognised and ordained clergy somewhere in the mix - it's not just all lay activity. 
So I think: why can't we legitimise it all?- and just do it all! if we can, safely. 
Meet in homes, and release the laity; 
Also recognise and ordain gifted clergy, and have bigger gatherings as well - even if congregations own their own building in which to gather; 
Meet anywhere and everywhere at all times; and 
Wherever and whenever we meet, 'do' what we're meant to do when we meet;
That is, don't suppress the laity - but also don't deny a clergy.
What that means is, let the Holy Spirit do all that He wants, through whomever He wants, wherever He wants, whenever He wants, in any way He wants, for as long as He wants.
Because:

"...God hath set some in the church, first apostles, secondarily prophets, thirdly teachers, after that miracles, then gifts of healings, helps, governments, diversities of tongues" (I Cor.12:28).

On the Bible and Babylonian Myth and Genre

A problem I have with saying a Biblical writer “was writing in coded language” is it gives the impression the writer made stuff up - whereas the claim of the texts themselves is that the authors had seen visions and they were merely writing down what they saw.
         
         
‪So the authors needed to interpret what they’d seen, just as much as the readers had to.
         
                           
‪It wasn’t like the authors’ starting-point was a message and then they sat down and thought, “Now what symbols and imagery can I come up with which will hopefully communicate what I want to say”.
         
         
‪The authors couldn’t see visions at will. 
         
         
‪So the initiative came from God.
         
         
‪He gave them visions.
         
         
‪Then they wrote them down.
         
         
‪The authors didn’t invent the symbols and imagery.
         
                           
‪That’s the claim made in the texts themselves


                           
‪The prophets said they ‘saw’ visions, and they wrote what they saw. Either that’s true or they were lying.



         
                  
         
‪Whenever the Bible tells a parable, it usually states so.
         
         
‪But as for the prophets, they said they really saw these visions!
         
         
‪If the prophets had been making it up, they wouldn’t have had to inquire of the Lord about what their own prophecies had meant.
         
         
‪But Peter said the prophets themselves inquired about what the revelations they themselves had been given meant.
         
         
‪So it’s not just a Western literalist thing to think the prophets really saw visions - unless Peter also was a Western literalist thinker ahead of his times. 
         
         
‪So the prophets weren’t making stuff up just to fit some established genre. They really saw visions, and they wrote what they saw - and they themselves afterwards had to inquire what it meant!
         
         
‪And Jesus really thought Moses wrote Genesis. Not some much later figure writing to adapt to some alleged Babylonian-era genre of writing.
         
         
‪Even if Genesis 1 was employing some alleged genre, Exodus was written by the same person who compiled Genesis (Moses, which Jesus accepted) and Moses says in Exodus that heaven and earth and all that are in them were made in six days. He says that in straight prose!
         
         
‪So that serves as a commentary on Genesis 1, by the same author. 
         
         
‪It denies the gap-theory between Gen.1:1 and the rest of the chapter.
         
         
‪And as an internal commentary on Genesis 1, it also doesn’t say anything other than that the totality of creation only took six days.
         
         
‪I don’t feel confronted in my world with evidence for Darwin’s theory of a single origin of species. So I don’t feel a need to reconcile the Bible with his theory.
         
         
‪And old-earth creationism doesn’t seem to me to eliminate conflict with popular modern scientific theories: it only replaces some of the conflict with new conflict!
         
         
‪(Like, the order of events in an old earth take on Genesis 1 still don’t fit some popular modern hypotheses about the geologic timetable anyway.)
         
         
‪The earth’s atmosphere isn’t made of iron. But Moses wasn’t told that it was: and it is hard enough.
         
         
‪Hard enough to melt meteors.
         
         
‪Hard enough to prevent radiation.
         
         
‪Hard enough that a re-entering space-craft can ‘bounce’ off it - or burn up - if not entering on the right angle.
         
         
‪Moses was evidently compiling documents. But the documents were described as genealogies and generations - not as parables.
         
         
‪When a prophet included a parable, he stated that it was a parable.
         
         
‪But when he saw a vision, he said that he saw a vision.
         
         
‪A vision isn’t made-up, but it doesn’t only have to be about concrete things. They can have meanings that aren’t material. So this doesn’t imply Dispensationalism. 
         
         
‪Maybe because I’m a Continuationist not a Cessationist, I’m comfortable accepting that the prophets really saw visions.
         
                           
‪So, my starting-point when reading prophecy or Genesis is not one that assumes the supernatural can’t have been involved.
         
         
‪If there was influence between the Old Testament and Babylonian-era writings, what if the influence went the other way?
         
         
‪After all, two or three kings in a row each wrote decrees to every nation under heaven in every language declaring God’s wonders and ordering everyone everywhere, with death-threats, to worship the God of Israel - and as a result many of the peoples became Jews - across lands spanning from Ethiopia to India!
         
         
‪So there could have been - would have been - a lot of influence from the Bible on those societies - not just the other way around.
         
         
‪Besides, even if there wasn’t influence from the Bible to those nations’ own writings, still I think those nations could have retained semblances of Bible truths from even further back.
         
         
‪(Like Chinese characters reflect Bible stories, from way before modern missionaries came to China.)
         
         
‪So similarity didn’t necessarily mean influence. 
         
         
‪I also don’t think, if the Bible stories were just made up in Babylon, that it could have suddenly gained enough traction with the Jews themselves to inspire them to leave their lands at great risk and return to Israel and found what would have been a new religion for them if the Bible stories only originated in Babylonian times.
         
         
‪But if the older Bible stories had already been part of Israel before they went into captivity, and they really believed it, and then their prophets saw more visions while in captivity, and Jewry also influenced all 127 of the member-provinces, then it makes better sense of the return from captivity and subsequent history of Judaism. 
         
         
‪And then all the way into the first century AD, that take and that history is affirmed (by the New Testament, and other sources). 
         
         
‪So I’m not convinced that unearthing a piece of Babylonian work is now meant to shape what the whole of Bible Prophecy means. 
         
         
‪Better to understand Bible Prophecy on its own terms and with its own claims, with history, I think - rather than in a humanistic sense alone. Because the mere humanistic approach doesn’t seem to me to make as good a sense of the history. 
         
         
‪(In the same way that humanistic explanations for the resurrection don’t make as good a sense of the subsequent emergence of the Church - the ‘Babylon-genre explanation of Israel’s Scriptures’ doesn’t seem to me to explain the existence and history and hopes of Israel so well.)
         
         
‪Both the history of Israel and the birth of Christianity is best explained if the supernatural occurrences described in both the old and new testaments really did happen. 
         
         
‪And that’s not hard for me to believe, because as a Continuationist not a Cessationist I am experiencing the supernatural and I see the Scriptures as providing for those experiences to happen.
         
         
‪It doesn’t have to imply Dispensationalism though. 
         
         
‪So far I don’t think Dispensationalism is quite the claim the apostles were making. 
         
-->
                           
‪I think their claim (about Jesus, about their gospel) was more radical than that and more directly linked to the story and Scriptures of Israel. The good news of the kingdom of God. 

Pentecostal Theology Especially Eschatology

I'm Pentecostal.
But what would you think about this:
The thought occurred to me today that many Pentecostals (and other Dispensationalists) mightn't really know what the Bible is all about. Well, they do and they don't. 
They know enough in the Bible to save their souls, which is awesome - but they just don't realise that that might be what the whole Bible is really all about! So in a sense they might unknowingly be downplaying the significance of the gospel in the overall scheme of the Bible. 
They're confused by many of the promises and visions in the Old Testament - and about prophecies in the New Testament too - thinking the future is going to be about a temple in Jerusalem and even about offering animal sacrifices.
So they don't quite know how to link their salvation to the Old Testament. Or, as a matter of doctrine, they may deliberately detach the 'gospel' from what they think the Bible-story overall is about. 
They think this thing we call the 'gospel' (and the 'Church' and all that) was pretty-much unforeseen in the Old Testament; all the while having a thought in the back of their minds that once the Bible-story resumes, the whole world will end-up having to make make pilgrimages to Jerualem for an ancient Jewish annual festival to offer animal sacririces in a temple in future or be cursed. 
Meanwhile though, they're enjoying their salvation, going on mission, powerfully helping others see the light and experience salvation - like they instinctively 'know' that's the crux of it - like they 'know' more than they know. 
So, since they're really doing the crux of it, maybe it doesn't matter too much anyway. (Unless they start thinking they should try to start keeping as much of Moses' ancient customs as they can now, instead of waiting 'til the future - like some Pentecostal and other folk have already started saying; and as a result of that some are even rethinking the gospel itself, and even rethinking Christ's Divinity. So it can be a slippery slope.)
But for most who do still manage to keep the gospel their focus, do you think our grasp of the Bible-story overall might matter more than we think?
What if the 'gospel of your salvation' isn't something unforeseen just plonked down in-between what the Bible is about? 
What if instead, our salvation - Jesus - the gospel - the Church - is what the whole Bible was really always going to be all about?
What if the story the New Testament is telling us is that the 'gospel' itself is the precise inauguration of the fulfilment of Old Testament promises, covenants, types, shadows, figures and prophecies, in a single storyline.
The gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ isn't just something 'else' we're doing while waiting for the real Bible-story to resume in future. 
This gospel of the kingdom of God is precisely where the whole Bible was going. 
Jesus hasn't just come to take the title 'Christ' (Messiah) - He has accomplished precisely what Messiah was meant to do! 
The Old Testament pointed-to and therefore now authenticates Jesus as Messiah, and authenticates the gospel.
So animal sacrifices in a temple won't be necessary in future - the future will now and forever be Christ-centred and gospel-shaped.
And New Testament prophecy is therefore to be understood as fitting within that framework. 
God had a plan to restore mankind, and creation, back to paradise and back to Himself. He begun revealing that plan to the patriarchs. The law foreshadowed it. The prophets foresaw it. It was all about JESUS. He has inaugurated it, by His ministry in Israel, and by His cross and resurrection, for all mankind. The gospel proclaims it. We experience it now by the Spirit. And it's full-rollout will occur at His Second Appearing, when death shall be abolished; there'll be a new earth, where God will be tabernacled with His people forever. 
The greatest story ever told! 
But only the born-again shall see it. 
If that is the story the whole Bible is really telling us overall (including Bible Prophecy), would it help to know that? - even if we're already getting the guts of it (the salvation of our souls part).
I'm still working my eschatology out. 
In the meantime I can still call myself Pentecostal, I hope.

Thursday 21 May 2020

The Isles Shall Wait for His Law

Someone asked: What law is being referenced here?


ISAIAH 42:1-4
Behold my servant, whom I uphold; mine elect, in whom my soul delighteth; I have put my spirit upon him: he shall bring forth judgment to the Gentiles.
He shall not cry, nor lift up, nor cause his voice to be heard in the street.
A bruised reed shall he not break, and the smoking flax shall he not quench: he shall bring forth judgment unto truth.
He shall not fail nor be discouraged, till he have set judgment in the earth: and the isles shall wait for his law.

If you were a contemporary of Isaiah's, you might think that Israel, as God's servant, was called with a vocation to glorify God's law, as it was expressed through Moses, in the eyes of the earth. And you might try to live into that. 

But still, the prophecy would make you think of Israel's failure to do that; and perhaps of your own failure to do so. So you would think there must be more to this prophecy - there must be Someone - who will succeed at carrying-out such a high calling. 

And so you would begin to wonder Who this Person might be. And when He might come. And you would wonder what form of 'law' His law might be - which people in every nation will eagerly attend to (in contrast to Moses' Law, which was very-much for Jews and Jewish-proselytes only).

Enter: the forerunner, John the Baptist, preparing the way, and proclaiming, "This is He!"

Followed by: Jesus of Nazareth. The Servant. The Holy One of Israel. Son of David. Son of Abraham. Son of God. Jesus the Messiah fulfilled the Law and the Prophets; carried-out Israel's vocation; made a New Covenant/Law in His blood; His gospel is preached to all nations. 

Believers in Him from among all the nations now fulfil Divine law - without needing to become Jewish proselytes and without becoming Observant of Moses' customs. They become children of God. Partakers of the Divine nature. By the Spirit of God. By grace. A people marked-out by their faith, hope and love. 

All to the glory of God!

Tuesday 19 May 2020

The Coming of the Lord

When the disciples asked Jesus about His 'coming', they didn't at that time have the concept that Jesus was going to be going away anywhere. They thought that as Messiah He was here to do His thing and here to stay!
So by asking about His 'coming', they weren't thinking so much about a vertical return from heaven to earth: they were asking when Jesus intended escalating His Messianic-program, which He'd obviously already inaugurated, up to the next level, up to its ultimate level.
Turns out, that wasn't all going to be completed quite as neatly as they may have been thinking. 
For starters, He was going to be crucified; and rise again - and that was going to turn-out to be central to the Messianic kingdom-program.
Then the heavens were going to have to receive Him - He would have to reign in and from heaven - until the time appointed by the Father. 
There would be a lot of suffering in the world; a lot of persecution against disciples - the temple and city of Jerusalem would even be destroyed within a generation.
But the Apostles were to be concerned with receiving the power of the Holy Spirit and going into all the world to announce the gospel of the kingdom of God to everyone regardless of ethnicity.
Then at the last day Christ will appear the second time, to take the kingdom-program up to its ultimate level eternally. That's our blessed hope. Eternity with Jesus. A new earth. 
The dead in Christ won't miss-out - because when Jesus returns He shall bring the dead in Christ with Him, and they shall rise from the dead. We'll be caught up in the air. We shall appear with Him gloriously, to the awe of all the world. 
The wicked will also be raised, to judgment. To the wicked, the affect of His coming will be like an unexpected robbery. The earth and all the works in it shall be burned up. But to us who believe, He is precious: there will be a new earth, and we shall be together with the Lord forever! 
But only the born-again will see the kingdom of God - whether Gentile or Jew. 
So today is the day of salvation.
But how shall the hear without a preacher? So we must go. 
Our announcement: the good news of the kingdom of God. 

The Gospel and the Future

  • The gospel is called "the everlasting gospel".

    The gospel isn't just something inserted temporarily for now until an old program resumes in future and then some new and different program will begin.

    No, the gospel is here to inform the shape of the future forever!

  • Christ is said to have been made "a priest forever" after an Order which superseded the Levitical Order.

    Christ's present style of priesthood is "forever" - not just until some old style of priesthood resumes or some new style of priesthood begins in future.

    The present-style of worship is the forever style!
  • Jesus said "the time is coming" (that points to the future) "and now is" (that means the present) when it will not be a requirement to go to Jerusalem to worship.

    The new order of worship wasn't only for the present but not for the future - it's for the future as well as for the present.

    Therefore it won't be a requirement in future to make pilgrimages to Jerusalem to offer animal sacrifices.

Christ's "once-for-all" sacrifice means that both the present and the future will forever be Christ-centred and gospel-shaped, not material temple-centred and Old Testament-shaped.

Sunday 17 May 2020

Themes and Imagery in Zechariah's Prophecies

Someone asked:

"so do you deny Zechariah 14:9-21 ? Do you even have an exposition of it ?"

Answer:

I don't know fully, that's why I ask questions. 

But some things I do know:

1. Zechariah's prophecies were intended, at least partly, to inspire the Jews of the captivity with the courage to leave the only life they'd known, go back 'home' to the land of Israel, and rebuild a temple and get on with the Levitical style of worship which Moses had commanded them; 

2. They responded, and built the temple, and finished it. It was a finished project 

3. God had commanded them to build it - the prophecies weren't worded like building it would just be something they would do even though God wasn't asking them to.

4. All of the nations who had brought-about Israel's downfall, did end-up seeing their own demise.

5. It did come to pass, that people from all over the known world began making annual pilgrimages to Jerusalem for the feast of tabernacles. Examples are mentioned in the New Testament.

6. Despite all that fulfilment, there was still a sense in Israel that there was 'more'. 

7. But there wasn't consensus in Israel about what the 'more' would look like. There were many different parties, each with their own version, each vying for the nation's support 

8. Each of them were seeking and proposing answers to questions like: 

What might the 'more' mean?

What might it look like?

When might it happen?

Who might He be?

What, if anything, should we do to help it happen?

Who in Israel might qualify to be part of it?

What about those who have already died: will they miss out?

9. It was into that world, that John the Baptist started announcing his answer to some of those questions 

10. The gospel was announced as the answer to those questions. It was the gospel 'of the kingdom' - not a gospel about something 'other' than kingdom. 

11. As part of the prophetic/kingdom scheme, Christ was sacrificed once for all, as prophesied. 

12. The Levitical priesthood has therefore now been superseded forever 

13. Old Testament imagery like temple, mountain, city and river were applied in a Christ-centred, gospel-shaped way in the New Testament literature, without mentioning a Levitical-style future at all 

14. The future will involve the complete and final rollout of what's already been inaugurated by the gospel, by the cross and resurrection. It won't involve reverting back to the shadow. 

15. Zechariah 14:9-21 wasn't a standalone prophecy. It was part of a wider prophecy which included verses which the New Testament claims have now been fulfilled (around Jesus, the cross, and the ministry of the gospel).

16. God hasn't withdrawn any promises to Israel - however, like the rest of humanity, modern Israelis are now on 'this' side of the cross - not still back on the other side of it. 

So with all that in mind, I could probably attempt to "rightly divide" Zechariah. Divide it between past, present and future. Between imagery and meaning. Etc. 

But still, I wouldn't say it's easy. 

Still asking. Still learning. 

Thank you.