Mobile Site

Monday, April 28, 2008 

The Security of the Shepherd and the Sheep

Reading: Murray, John Redemption Accomplished and Applied
Enjoying: poptarts with the wife (nutritious!)
Listening: The Killers

For an upcoming sermon on the I Am saying from John 10, Calvin draws an interesting application that illuminates some of the struggles the Reformer may have keenly felt. From his commentary on John 10:4, 9: "When he has brought out all his own, he goes before them, and the sheep follow him, for they know his voice... I am the door. If anyone enters by me, he will be saved and will go in and out and find pasture:"
This passage should make us deeply ashamed. First, because we are so unused to the voice of our Shepherd that hardly anyone listens to it without indifference. And then because we are so slow and lazy to follow him. I am speaking of the good, or at least of the passable, for most of those who claim to be Christ’s disciples openly rebel against him. Lastly as soon as we hear the voice of any stranger, we are carried unstably here and there, and this unsteadiness and levity shows just how little we have advanced in the faith so far. But although the number of believers is less than we would want, and many of this small number continually fall away, faithful teachers have the consolation of knowing that they are heard by God’s elect, who are Christ’s “sheep.” It is our job to work hard and to strive in every way to bring, if possible, the whole world to agreement in the unity of the faith. Meanwhile, we must be content with our number.
The pressures of reforming the Church and the seeming apathy and disobedience of Europe must have been taxing on the consciences of the Reformers. However, it is especially comforting to know that, despite the shortcomings and weaknesses of this preacher, "God's true sheep will hear God's pure word" (emphasis mine).



Tags
[Calvin] | [exegesis]

Labels: ,

|

Wednesday, October 17, 2007 

Leithart on Adam on City Building

Reading: Ridderbos Coming of the Kingdom
Enjoying: waffles
Listening: Kanye West "Stronger"

Peter Leithart argues that Adam was to build a city, foreshadowed in Eve. Is he echoing Kline and the Megapolis?

Tags
[Leithart] | [Kline]

Labels: ,

|

Monday, October 15, 2007 

Congrats to Thate

Having noted his previous work before, we here at What the Thunder Said... would be remiss not to point out what slid across our desk this morning.
Thate, Michael J. "Conditionality in John's Gospel: A Critique and Examination of Time and Reality as Classically Conceived in Conditional Constructions" Journal of the Evangelical Theological Society Vol. 50, No. 3 (September 2007) 561 - 72.
Michael Thate is a Ph.D. student at Trinity Evangelical Divinity School

Kudos, Mike.

Labels: , ,

|

Monday, July 30, 2007 

Surviving Sermon Summaries

Reading: New Horizons (July, 2007)
Enjoying: Dunn Bros coffee and wireless
Listening: oldies station, but I did get to listen to 93X in the car

I'm in the Twin Cities, helping Ben & Anna Dahlvang move apartments. Then I'm heading back to Fairmont tonight. Everyone who loves the Dahlvangs needs to see this. Seriously. And yes, that is Ben.

God faithfully sustained me in my preaching judgment-ordeal, and I am infinitely thankful for His grace. In the morning I preached at Bethel Ev. Free Church on Exodus 33:18 - 23. In the evening I exhorted at Mission OPC from I John 3:4 - 10.

In the future I may get a chance to post more about these experiences, but I wanted to jot down a few exegetical notes right away. First, from Exodus 33, Moses' request to see God's glory is antithetical to the Israelites pursuit of glory in the golden calf made of Egyptian gold. Moses is a typological law keeper, who follows the second commandment and intercedes for law breakers. He then returns to the camp, aglow with the glory of God. I tried to bring John 1:14 - 18 and II Corinthians 3:15 - 4:4 to bear on the texts. Having been rescued from our self-glorifying by beholding the glory of God in the gospel of Jesus Christ, we are being transformed from one degree of glory to the next. Glory is not as the world defines it, but is found chiefly in the cross of Christ, where our pursuit of our own glory dies and where Jesus is truly glorified. In Christ's resurrection, our hope for a new body that will not be consumed in the presence of God - that CAN look on His face and live - is realized. In the meantime, rather than our faces, our hearts (Paul's "inner man") is lit ablaze with the glory of God, with which we are to return to the camp and proclaim the glory of Jesus' gospel. Obviously, volumes more could be said of this.

In I John 3:4 - 10, I attempted to explain the insidiousness of "lawlessness;" that rather than merely being the breaking of God's law, lawlessness is actually any time I assert my will above God's expressed will, which plunges me into historia lineage of the seed of the serpent, making me a child of the devil and a participator in satanic, antichristian behavior. This historia damnatia actually runs against the historia salutis and God violently wrenches us away from our satanic father and adopts us as His own sons. Christ, our Elder brother, teaches us brotherly love by pouring out His own Spirit of Love upon us, that instead of taking our brother's life like Cain did, we now live to lay down our lives for our neighbors, and show them the knowledge and vision of God's love. This conquering Love(r) keeps us from sinning, so that we are no longer able to practice a lifestyle of sin.

No doubt there will be more to follow.

Tags
[sermons] | [exegesis]

Labels: , ,

|

Wednesday, September 27, 2006 

Leithart on I John
Topic: Exegesis

For all the Greek II students at WSC, this brief sketch on I John 1:5 - 2:11 may prove helpful by Dr. Leithart. It mostly comprises word sketches and idea clauses. When Leithart says,

Though 1:7b (or 1:8)-2:2 forms a distinct unit, it splits in two with the direct address, "My little children" (2:1). Further, the structure of 1:8-10 indicates that it forms a distinct sub-unit.
he echoes Dr. Kim's suspicions that he voiced in class the other day. Happy parsing.

Update: Here are sermon notes on the text by Leithart as well.

Tags
[WSC]
[Exegesis]
[Leithart]

Labels: ,

|

Friday, April 21, 2006 

KWOTED
Topic: Theology

Reading: John H. Leith Introduction to the Reformed Tradition
Enjoying: Maria's corn pancakes in my tummy
Listening: I'm in the TBI resource center... silence

"Students who want to understand Paul but feel they have nothing to learn from Martin Luther should consider a career in metallurgy. Exegesis is learned from the masters."
-Stephen Westerholm, Israel's Law and the Church's Faith, p. 173

Tags
[quotes]
[Luther]
[Westerholm]
[exegesis]

Labels: ,

|

Monday, April 03, 2006 

Reflection's on John's Gospel
Part 1
Topic: Exegetical

Reading: Lifehacker and 43folders
Enjoying: Fruit roll ups
Listening: Bruce Ware on the Trinity. I had heard him at the the BCP last year, and while some of the content is similar, it is sooo good again.

Upon recently listening to an interview of Dr. Carl R. Trueman by Pastor Mark Dever at IX Marks, Dr. Trueman mentioned the injustice done to the Fourth Gospel in the Academy. Rarely is much advanced scholarship done on this Gospel. Though it is not one of the Synoptics and has a variety of reasons for not receiving the scholarly attention other NT books have, we should be more honest: atheistic German scholars who had sold their souls to higher criticism, modernity and their own idols could not manipulate this text as they had the Synoptics.

What follows are some of my own and others' meanderings on the Fourth Gospel. As much as possible, the order follows the basic flow of the Gospel. Though this is by no means a comprehensive list, perhaps this will stimulate other minds as well. Hopefully, this proves to be some well used fodder for all Christians - teachers and learners alike.

Structure and Theme
* Despite the prologue encircling the Logos - the Word - in John 1, John's Gospel is not primarily "the Hellenized (read: Greek) Gospel," but rather the opposite. While the Fourth Gospel does not have direct quotes from the OT like the three Synoptics do, in form and in content John has written a very Hebrew - not Hellenized - Gospel. Starting out with "In the beginning," John is writing a commentary on the Old Testament, and furthering the OT narrative through the person and life of Jesus of Nazareth, the incarnate Logos.

* Jesus, moreso in this Gospel than in the other three, takes up the mantle of prophet, and specifically, that of covenant prosecutor. The Old Testament is dominated by the motif of prophet coming to prosecute the covenant obligations on behalf of God to the faithless Hebrew people. Having cut a covenant with God at Sinai, both Yahweh and the Israelites make promises to perform functions. The disobedient Israelites try to play the whore and make side deals on God, who sends His prophets to prosecute the covenant law and carry out covenant sanctions. Jesus furthers this in John's Gospel, coming as the final arbiter of the Law, and ultimately to condemn Israel.

* John's gospel is a contentious courtroom of a gospel. Legal language dominates the whole gospel - witnesses are called, Jesus promises an advocate, the Jews are constantly trying to put Jesus in the dock. But the whole gospel is really the trial of the Jews, just as what appears to be the trial of Jesus before Pilate is really the trial of the Jews who ultimately say they have no king but Caesar. John's gospel shows Jesus bringing the covenant lawsuit against Israel, and Revelation, John's companion volume, shows Jesus carrying out the sentence against His own who have rejected Him.[1]

* John and Revelation function like Luke-Acts, with Revelation completing the story that was begun in the gospel. Gage pointed out the various ways that the opening chapters of John "gesture" toward the end of Revelation. Early in John, Jesus is presented as a Bridegroom, but there is no bride until the end of Revelation. John begins his gospel with explicit allusions to Genesis 1 ("in the beginning"; imagery of light/darkness, etc.), and this is completed in the Genesis 2 imagery of Revelation 21-22. The word tabernacles with men, and at the end of Revelation this same imagery appears again. He connected the prediction to Nathaniel (Jn 1:51) to the vision of angels and the appearance of the son of man in Revelation 18-19; the angels are "ascending and descending" on the Son of Man, who is revealed as the rider on the white horse at the "peak" of the vision in Revelation. In this sense, then, John-Revelation tells one continuous story.

* Both John and Revelation are chiastic, and they run parallel. John 12 is the center of the gospel, and Revelation 12 is the center of Revelation. Jesus is lifted up on the cross in John 12, and in Revelation 12 he is exalted to rule with a rod of iron. Jesus says that the prince of this world is judged in John 12, and Satan is cast from heaven in Revelation 12.[2]

* Jesus, his name in Aramaic rendered literally as "Yeshua," oftens figures as the typologicaly fulfillment of Joshua - "Yoshua." Joshua began his crusade by crossing the Jordan River to begin his holy war, and Jesus crossed the Jordan between Judea and Galilee. Joshua sent spies into Jericho (Jerusalem), two of which witnessed faithfully to God and urged the people to obedience. These spies had escaped the king of the land by going to the whore Rahab, and she signaled to them by a scarlet cord. In John's Revelation, God sends two witnesses urging the people to faith in God, and the kings of the land seek to put them to death. A whore is marked by a scarlet cord. Joshua sees a vision of a divine Man with a drawn sword who leads them into battle. John falls before the Son of Man, and a sword portrudes from His mouth, with which He makes war on the whore and kings of the earth. Jesus fulfills the Conquest and Joshua typologies throughout John's Gospel and Revelation.[3]

The Good News According to John
John 1

* Homer's prologue to the Odyssey delays the identification of the hero until the end of the prologue, a literary sign that this hero comes hidden, disguised, in craft. That, of course, is precisely how Odysseus behaves throughout the epic.

John's gospel begins with similar techniques. We learn about the Word and have some sense that he is a person from the opening verses. John is named, and we think perhaps John is the Word and the light; but no, John has tricked us, because John is only a witness to the light. We know all about what this Word has done - made the world, come into it, given rights of children to those who receive Him, revealed glory, given the fullness of grace. But it's not until verse 17, right at the end of the prologue, that Jesus is named.

And throughout John's gospel, Jesus is the elusive hero, the one born of the Spirit who comes and goes where He pleases and is heard but not grasped or seen. In some sense, he remains the hidden hero until His un-veiling in John's second volume, the "Apocalypse," when, like Odysseus, he returns to His bride to destroy the unruly suitors.[4]

* Though there was always grace for believing Israel at Mount Sinai, there is a new disposition to be found in the same stream of Christ. Grace and truth have come through Jesus, and it is a new matrix for grace - it is grace against grace. Though the Old Covenant is fading and being fulfilled/abolished under Christ's inauguration, the New Covenant is reaching high noon, and the glory of its light is now penetrating at full strength. While never disapproving of the Law, since it was good and can convert the soul, Christ is the means and giver of said Law, and His grace and truth are the means of all transforming power, for both justification, sanctification, and union with God.

* While it is true that God has always covenanted with man, He has also always provided an avenue - a contact point - for His glory to be in the midst of His people. In the Garden, His glory was radiated in His image-bearers. Post-fall, man's marred and defaced countenance could no-longer adequately convey the splendor of God, so new avenues were employed. For awhile, His glory was displayed in the shekinah cloud, Moses' face, and the tabernacle. Under David and Solomon, Yahweh's house was established permanently temporarily in Jerusalem. Now, however, in Jesus Christ we see the glory of God restored in the face of man once again. This Logos has tabernacled amongst us, and we have beheled His glory in the face of God. In Christ, the image-bearer who is a worthy vessel of God's glory, the pre-fall condition of Eden is restored. In Christ, there is no temple, for the Lamb is the temple where we come into the Holy of Holies and commune with our Great God.

John 2
* As mentioned above, Jesus is the Bridegroom awaiting His Bride, and nearly usurps His place in the Wedding at Cana. When most grooms serve the best wine first, Jesus shows Himself to be the true groom - and the rightful - groom, by providing the fine wine. His mother recognizes this, to which Jesus responds by calling her "Woman." Christ is here naming her a type of Eve ('woman'), who recognizes a New Adam who not only names, but creates wine from water. Like the first Eve who had hoped Cain might be the one to crush the serpent, this Eve (mother Mary) does not yet understand Christ's timing. He does not yet pour out the wine of the cup of wrath. It is His to drink, not the wedding celebrants.

* The word "zeal" appears only in John 2:17 and Rev 3:19. In both cases, the import is zeal for the cleansing of God's house - the temple in Jerusalem in one case and the church in the other. (In another study, which shows that John and Revelation form a single chiasm, the cleansing of the temple of merchandizers in John 2 is matched by the description of the merchandizing in "Babylon" in Revelation 17-18. When we factor in Jim Jordan's insight that economic imagery in Revelation refers to worship, we gain considerable insight into John 2. John appears to be using the same "merchandizing" imagery in his gospel as he does in Revelation; Jesus' objection is not to economic activity in the temple, but to liturgical corruptions.)[5]

More to come
__________________________________
Footnotes

[1]One of the resources that this piece uses are the thoughts generated by Dr. Peter Leithart. His text, A House for My Name (Moscow, ID: Canon, 2001), is a biblical theology tour of the Old and New Testaments. This particular idea was generated here. Back

[2]Here, Dr. Leithart plays off Dr. Gage, who will be mentioned more below. How the chiasm precisely works in John|Revelation is still a bit of a question, at least to our mind. For instance, does the chiasm run

John Revelation

<

A. A.

B. B.

C. C.

B'. B'.

A'. A'.

or does it run through both, such as

John

A.

B.

C.

D.

Revelation

E

D'.

C'.

B'.

A'. Back

[3]Dr. Gage of Knox Seminary has, with Dr. White, done some important work on John|Revelation that both Dr. Leithart and What the Thunder Said... plays off of. Back

[4]From Dr. Leithart. Back

[5]Ibid. Back


Labels: ,

|

Thursday, March 30, 2006 

Justification and Imputation: Some Questions
Topic:Exegetical

Due to various discussions with friends, a series of questions developed regarding justification and its implications for the imputation of Christ's righteousness. Many theologians have talked about the double imputation (or crediting, reckoning) typically seen in the Scriptures.

The first occurs when human sin is imputed or credited to Christ on the cross when He bears our sin as the perfect Substitute, the Lamb of God. The second (more controversial) imputation is seen when Christ credits or reckons His righteousness on the believer's behalf.

What follows is several questions regarding exactly how this occurs, as well as some objections some have brought to the issue. Questions such as the nature between justification and forgiveness, the role of justification and good works, and other thorny queries are dealt with below. Hopefully, the following is illuminating, biblically faithful, and helpful.

Objection #1
Is justification synonymous with the forgiveness of sin in Scripture? "If according to the Apostle those propositions be equivalent, 'Blessed is the man whose iniquities are forgiven', and 'Blessed is the man to whom the God justifies', then according to the Apostle, justification and forgiveness of sins are all one."[1]

While all true students of the Bible readily and quickly admit/affirm that justification is synonymous with forgiveness, it does not follow, as the quote has done, that justification is tautologous with forgiveness. This is clear from any of the several other categories justification is aligned with (e.g., reconciliation, II Corinthians 5:19 – 21; adoption, Romans 8:23 – 24, 29 – 30; unity, Ephesians 4:4 – 7, 13, 15 – 16, etc.). To the extent that justification is synonymous with forgiveness, it is also synonymous with reconciliation, adoption, and unity, etc. Since (presumably) not even Clifford would claim that unity, for example, is the exact same as forgiveness of sins, he is claiming more than the Scriptures prove. "Justification" is a wider sphere than "forgiveness of sins."

What the Scriptures teach us here is that justification (salvation by faith) is often used shorthand for the whole salvific process that unites the ordo salutis with the historia salutis. Based merely on the logic provided by Clifford above, we would come to the conclusion that forgiveness (not even justification!) is based on works, as James cites Genesis 15 as Paul did.[2] This is patently false, and I doubt even Clifford would want to argue for that.

Exegetically, this fails on two grounds. Based on his citation – "If according to the Apostle those propositions be equivalent, 'Blessed is the man whose iniquities are forgiven', and 'Blessed is the man to whom the God justifies', then according to the Apostle, justification and forgiveness of sins are all one" – I will assume he is alluding to Romans 4:1 – 8. This is the only place David’s line from Psalm 32 is put into contrast with any sort of ‘justifying’ language. (However, his line 'Blessed is the man to whom the God justifies' is either 1.) his collation, or 2.) a hack of Romans 4:8, which by switching terms begs the question.)[3]

On Romans 4
Paul’s goal in his argument here in the early parts of chapter four regard whether or not Abraham was justified by faith or by works (4:4 – 5), not what the essence of justification is or is not. So in some sense, it is foolish to draw a final definition from one pericope (ignoring the rest of the viable biblical data) that is not explicit on the nature of justification. This would be as equally foolish as building a theology of justification from Matthew 11:19. To understand whether or not [justification] and [forgiveness of sins] are coinciding categories is going to require more exegesis than merely an appeal to Romans 4. But we will press on in the exegesis.

Despite this fatal error, notice the logic Paul is constructing from vv. 5 – 7. In v. 5 he states his thesis, that faith imputes Christ's righteousness to us (not works). Verse six follows with a καθάπερ, “just (exactly) as.” The content of v. 6 is meant to support the statement made in v. 5. Paul says that David “speaks of the blessing of the one to whom God counts righteous apart from works…,” and then quotes Psalm 32.

So, Paul understands Psalm 32:1 – 2 as a support for imputing (or counting, λογίζεται) righteousness by faith, not works. Regardless of the actual content of Psalm 32, I think there is no other way to understand what Paul is doing here: Psalm 32 is subject to Paul's preceding argument (because of the καθάπερ and the fact that Paul is logically building verses on top of each other). While Clifford is busy arguing backwards from Romans 4:8 to 4:3, Paul’s logic is working the exact opposite direction. Romans 4:8/Psalm 32 is being interpreted in light of Romans 4:3 – exactly what Clifford is not doing. Jonathan Edwards calls this an “instance” of justification (Owen called it a “particular”), and not the whole of it.[4]

The second exegetical error is thinking that there is a tension between what Paul is arguing in vv. 1 – 6, and the content of the Davidic psalm in vv. 7 – 8, which Clifford does. This is contrary to the fact. Psalm 32:1, and its quotation in Romans 4:7, is in fact a wonderful definition of imputation, both the non-imputation (negative imputation) of the individual’s sin – i.e., God does not impute a person’s sin to his account – and the imputation (positive imputation) of Christ’s righteousness to the individual’s account. If it can be shown that Psalm 32:1 – 2 can support the double imputation of justification, than 1.) Clifford is wrong in his exegesis, and 2.) Paul’s argument in Romans 4 is unscathed.

Arguing from Psalm 32
Psalm 32:1 – 2 is what Paul quotes in Romans 4. He quotes the LXX perfectly, but leaves off the subsequent in v. 2. (According to Clifford’s logic – supra – God’s imputation of sin is “all one” with not being deceitful.) These verses form a parallelism, and the MT form is classic Hebrew poetry. The antecedent of Psalm 32:1 and v. 2 are paralleled to give a classic definition of non-imputation: the Lord (יהוה) will not count (חשׁב, LXX: λογίσηται) his sin.

The subsequent of v. 1, however, is our definition of the positive imputation; this is the phrase that corresponds to verse six’s “God counts righteous.” This is clearly seen in the language, “… and whose sins are covered.” Covered there is interpreting כּסה. It is not used often in the OT, but is translated to cover, to clothe, to fill in (fill up), etc.[5] So the question before us is: in what sense is David using כּסה to indicate how God deals with our sins?

At least twice the word is used in the sense of “cover up,” to “put over” (Psalm 80:10; Proverbs 24:31). However, far more often this word – and its derivate, כּסוּי - is used in talking about “to clothe, to dress.” The best example of this occurs in Numbers 4, where God dispenses instructions with how to dress the articles & elements of OC liturgy for travel. Here the words occur often (4:5, 6, 8, 14, etc.). The ark of the Covenant, which only the High Priest was allowed to see once a year, had to be covered in royal furs and colored silks so that during travel the Israelites wouldn’t have to keep averting their eyes, lest they die. In this sense, כּסה and כּסוּי denote a hiding of the ark’s true nature, as well as a dressing of its regality and sacredness, so that the Jews wouldn’t sin. It seems to us that this correlates exactly with what is happening in Psalm 32:1. The sinfulness of man is covered. However, what Clifford fails to account for, and this is the killing stroke, is determining the following: what are the individual’s sins covered by? What blanket will God cover our sins with? No doubt, Clifford might answer something like, “Christ’s blood.” This is absolutely correct, and while His blood covers our heinousness, and keeps it hidden, from the outside all that is seen is Christ’s blood, which in His Father’s eyes, is the only token of pure righteousness.

Thus, Psalm 32:1a & 2a describe the non-imputation of our sin, while v. 1b describes the positive imputation of Christ’s righteousness (the dressing which covers our sin). This shows that Psalm 32, as cited in Romans 4, affirms and upholds what Paul had said earlier about Abraham’s justification, and what the Reformed have always taught.

Objection #2
The atonement wrought by Christ is our only righteousness and it is imputed to us by faith. Justification is not a "once-for-all" event but happens as often are we are forgiven.

The first sentence is of course wholly orthodox, and only varies to the extent of what he means by “the atonement.” While we may entirely agree, based off what else he has said, he very well may mean by “atonement” only the dying and sin-bearing work of Christ, and that this is our sole righteousness imputed to us. In theological categories, he affirms the non-imputation and denies the positive imputation. Regardless of which route Clifford takes, Piper’s Counted Righteous in Christ[6] and Sproul’s Faith Alone[7] easily answer his argument. You’ll forgive me if I don’t attempt to re-lay the exegetical groundwork these men have already established.

However, his second statement (“Justification is not…”) is a bit more unique, and may not be addressed by the above authors. Nevertheless, it is easily laid to rest, since it so emphatically goes against the entire tenor of the NT. Justification is often referred to as a past event: Romans 3:24, 4:2, 5:1 (“Having been justified…”); I Corinthians 6:10 (“…you were justified…”); Titus 3:7; James 2:24. When justification is regarded as a future act (viz., Romans 3:30), it is still regarded as a one-time act, with a beginning and a completion. This is why, during the height of High Orthodoxy in Britain, some heterodox theology crept up concerning the idea that justification was declared in eternity by God.[8] This idea of eternal justification is on the opposite end of the spectrum from a continual justification. In summary, while justification is often past tense, whether future or past, justification is always a single event, and never portrayed in Scripture as an ongoing process.

At root here is a confusion mentioned earlier. Theological terms such as ‘regeneration,’ ‘conversion,’ ‘adoption,’ etc., are used by theologians to map out biblical concepts that are not as neat and tidy as Reymond’s New Systematic Theology. It is obvious that the Apostle's duty was epistle writing, not doctrinal monographs, and thus mature reflection is required to adequately handle the Word of Truth. While activities such as conversion, sanctification, and subjection have dynamic components with ongoing effects in believers’ lives, other terms, such as regeneration and justification, are not activities at all, but events – carefully nuanced and defined – that have a “once and for all” character to them. Clifford, attempting to deal with the near overwhelming categories of historical theology, exegesis, and dogmatics, is clearly mixing his categories.

Question #3
If Christ's active righteousness were ours, then this does away with the motivation for good works since our righteousness can never be improved. "To assume that his active obedience had the same vicarious signficance as his death cannot but encourage an antinomian mentality."[9]

This is so wrong headed one wonders to what extent he is familiar with the New Testament This is incorrect. The two classic instances of positive imputation in the New Testament are Paul’s arguments in Romans 5 and his definitive statement in II Corinthians 5:21. In both of these cases Paul employs Christ’s active obedience in urging his epistle’s recipients on to good works.

Romans 5
First, in Romans 5:18 – 19, Paul argues that the One Man’s “act of righteousness leads to justification and life for all men.” Contrasting the Adamic paradigm of disobedience – sin – death with the Christic obedience – righteousness – life, Paul discusses the means and ends in 5:21. With his subject as grace, Paul notes that “grace should reign through righteousness” (διὰ δικαιοσύνης) which then leads “to eternal life.” Because of Christ’s active obedience on behalf of “the many,” Paul says, grace gives way to eternal life by means of the righteousness (i.e., good works) of believers “through Jesus Christ our Lord.”

In case this point is missed by the hearers in Rome, Paul goes on to deal with Clifford’s objection in the introduction to holiness that will feature in chapter six. Paul says in the very next verse, “What shall we say then? Are we to continue in sin that grace may abound?” (Grace here, according to three verses prior to this, is the result of Christ’s obedient life.)[10] “By no means! (Romans 6:1 – 2).” Paul goes on to argue that since we have been baptized in Christ’s sin-bearing death and His perfectly obedient life (6:4), this is then the ground for our “walk in [the] newness of life.” Contra Clifford, the ground for our walking in life is Christ’s life spent walking in life.

II Corinthians 5
In case one thinks this only an isolated or accidental occurrence in Pauline theology, II Corinthians 5:21 highlights this as well. The Apostle begins by noting that because of Christ’s death and resurrection (death and life) compounded with His union to His Bride, we act according to love and according to Christ – not living for ourselves but for Him (5:14 – 15). Thus, good works (“living… for Him”) is based in this text from our union with Christ. But the question Paul pursues is, how are we to be unified with God? How can we be reconciled to Him?

The answer Paul gives comes a few verses later in 5:21. Christ, who knew no sin, is made to become our sin, for the purpose (note the ἵνα clause) of our becoming the righteousness of God, thus reconciled and joined to Him. What is Paul’s conclusion from this in the following verse? We are to work “together with Him” to perfect the holiness hinted at in the Mosaic tabernacle, when God dwelt among His people in the wilderness (II Corinthians 6:1, 16 – 18; cf. Leviticus 26:12). To clarify, the imputation of Christ’s active righteousness is the means by which unity with Him is possible, and union with Him – in this text – is the ground for our sanctification.[11] Far from being a detriment to good works, the antinomian mentality cannot ultimately flourish in one for whom Christ has imputed His perfect, Torah-righteousness.

Thus I argue that the two most well known instances cited in support of positive imputation show that good works will inevitably follow, and anticipate Clifford’s lamed rebuttal. Romans 5 and II Corinthians 5:21 easily parry his thrust, and find it wanting. No doubt that if more time and exegesis were allowed, further illustrations from the Scriptures could be procured.

The NT Paradigm
Finally, looking broadly at the way Christ and His apostles’ reasoned, the general principle in the New Testament seems to be that we follow in Christ’s footsteps. Thus, it would go against the grain of NT teaching to expect fallen man to in some sense fulfill the Law (Romans 8:4) if Christ had not first completed/fulfilled the Law on our behalf and then given us the means (the Spirit, Romans 8:2 – 3) to complete it ourselves. Without a positive imputation, we are only unjustly acquitted criminals, doomed to find ourselves quickly back in court before the Judge. The only motivation offered to believers for good works is what has already transpired in the heavenly courts and in their own souls.

Question #4
If we have the active righteousness of Christ then this empties the atonement. Those who affirm a two-fold imputation, the active and passive righteousness of Christ, actually deny the latter because we would need no sacrifice if Christ fulfilled the law for us. If the Orthodox theory of the imputation of the active righteousness of Christ is correct then "we would need no pardon, for he that is reputed to be innocent, by fulfilling the law, is reputed never to have sinned [...] therefore, such an imputation of Christ's righteousness to us would make his satisfaction null or vain."[12]

This problem is quickly answered if we substitute “Adam” for “Christ.” Thus it reads, “Those who affirm a two-fold imputation, the active and passive righteousness of Christ, actually deny the latter because we would need no sacrifice if ADAM fulfilled the law for us.” Upon supplying "Adam" for "Christ," we see that this statement is true. Which means this statement in the original is false, since Adam didn’t fulfill the Law for us. What this statement fails to account for is sin, and specifically the Divine Curse humanity is under post-Fall.

One could possibly theorize that in a vacuum - a historically, relationally sterile possible world - Clifford’s statement is true. However, it is simply not worth puzzling over very long, since it is so obvious that this possible world can never obtain. We live under God’s Curse, which took place in a specific place and time. The Fall is localized, even if the exact details are not. Thus, to say that a man may possess all of Christ’s righteousness still cannot save him, since he still lives under a Curse. Nor can any amount of mortal suffering alleviate the Curse, since only a Divine Man could bear the eternal wrath stored up for any who have broken the Law and come under the Curse.

(Anselm’s answer in Cur Deus Homo regarding the necessary divinity and humanity of Christ helps us in this regard. Anselm argued that Christ had to be fully divine and fully human, otherwise His suffering could not have helped us. Had He been only Divine, He would not have been truly man, and thus able to federally represent us. Had He been mere human, and not fully Divine, He would have been unable to bear the full, eternal wrath of God that burned towards humanity.[13]

This idea helps us when we come to His active obedience as well. Had He been merely human, He would not have been able to transcend the Curse, and be upright and holy as Adam was pre-lapse. Had He been only Divine, His perfections would have never intersected with our faculties.)

Clifford’s objection here is entirely man-centered, since he is not taking into account God’s wrath, which Christ suffered for, nor God’s Law, which both prohibited (negatively) and commanded (positively). Instead, he remains preoccupied with human sin and human duty, which inevitably leads to a weaker and lesser view of the Atonement.


Question #5
What about Clifford's historical methodology?

(
At this point, it was getting late, and I get a bit less generous. While I still think the following accords with Christian love, please take some of the saltier remarks with a grain of salt.)

Allow me a few caveats regarding Clifford et al. First, Alan C. Clifford has several characteristics that some find disturbing. They can perhaps best be grouped according to historical methodology and his personal beliefs.

Historical Methodology
Regarding first his historical theological method, Clifford is an uncritical imbiber of a nineteenth century dogmatic tradition that consistently fails to appropriate both a diachronic as well as synchronic view of history. For instance, Clifford seems nearly completely uninformed of problems when dealing with Owen vs. Wesley’s view and use of Aristotle without appreciating the changes that underwent Aristotelian philosophy during the course of time. While criticizing Owen for Aristotelianism, Clifford wholly adopts anything and everything David Hume and Bertrand Russell have to say – uncritically – and never once comes to grips with his own presuppositions. For more in this vein, see Carl Trueman’s devastating critique of Clifford in The Claims of Truth.[14]

In a similar concept, Clifford is pantomiming in Atonement and Justification. He uses the same tired, worn out accusations Kendall, Hall, McGrath, and Armstrong all used at other times.[15] Now unless Clifford has new arguments (which he doesn’t), one would think you would not want to stake your academic career against the united coalition of Heinrich Heppe, Richard Muller, R.S. Clark, C. Trueman, Bob Letham, Joel Beeke, and Paul Helm.[16] When all of these guys write on Calvin and the Calvinists, and they all say the same thing, I – for one – am siding with them. I will gladly side with them over against some neo-orthodox heterodox/liberals.

Clifford says in his introduction on page ix that despite the fact that Owen and Wesley lived in different ages, different contexts, different continents (at times) and were fighting different theological battles, that none of this matters and their theological views can be compared 1:1. This methodology is incredibly sloppy, and should not be copied by any student seeking to get serious about historical theology. (I am also frustrated that Clifford quotes Owen’s V. 5 less than ten times compared to nearly exclusively looking at V. 10. This is excusable when dealing with atonement, but sloppy when dealing with justification.)[17]

Personal Beliefs
Finally, as regards Clifford’s personal views, I do not see how he can escape the charge of Amyrauldianism… at all. Though I think his theology is in danger of falling into universalism, I can rationally construe a possible world in which this does not happen. I cannot, however, construe of such a place in which he is not a dyed-in-the-wool Amyrauldian.[18]

* * *


Summary & Conclusion
If I have been successful, I have shown that Clifford’s objections do not stack up to the gospel truth handed down to us in the Bible.
  1. He improperly equates justification and forgiveness of sin by eisegeting Romans 4 and making equivocations where there are none. (Jonathan Edwards calls this an “instance” of justification, and not the whole of it. Owen calls it a “particular.”)
  2. He misunderstands the place of positive imputation and good works by not seeing the exegetical links Paul forges between these two ideas and having unbiblical notions of motivation.
  3. Thirdly, he does not recognize the place of the Divine Curse in the historia salutis and thus misappropriates Christ’s work in His life and in His death.
  4. (Finally, he is an Amyrauldian and a shaky historical theologian who follows old, worn out arguments that have been beaten to death long ago by scholars better than most.)

____________________________
Footnotes

[1]A good deal of the quotes are from interaction with a certain book (mentioned later) by Alan C. Clifford. Atonement and Justification: English Evangelical Theology 1640 - 1790, An Evaluation (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1990). Unless otherwise noted, all quotes are from this edition. Back

[2]Both Paul and James argue from Genesis 15:6 - "And Abraham believed God, and it was counted to him as righteousness." James, of course, uses it to establish a living faith in 2:18ff. Back

[3]Upon further study, I stand by this statement, and cannot recognize Clifford's quote. The assumption is that he is collating several biblical themes into a single phrase. Back

[4]Edwards, Jonathan Justification by Faith Alone ed. Don Kistler (Morgan, PA: Soli Deo Gloria, 2002) p. 91. Back

[5]HALOT; Sorry, I use e-Sword. No page numbers... Back

[6]Piper, John Counted Righteous In Christ: Should We Abandon the Imputation of Christ's Righteousness? (Crossway, 2002). Back

[7]Sproul, R.C. Faith Alone: The Evangelical Doctrine of Justification (Baker, 1995). Michael S. Horton's foreward is vintage Horton. Back

[8]Representatives of this view include Tobias Crisp, John Eaton, John Saltmarsh, and William Twisse. This view did not gain any notoriety outside of select English and Dutch theologians of the seventeenth century. We do not endorse this position, but merely use it as a reference point. Back

[9]Clifford Atonement and Justification p. 188. Back

[10]In v. 21, Paul associates Adam's one deed with sin, while he associates Christ's righteous life with grace which "reign[s] through righteousness." This is the fruit of v. 17, which ties "the abundance of grace" to "the one man Jesus Christ." Back

[11]Unity and union, as they are used in this sentence, should not be confused. The first term is not the theological position of "union in Christ." The second term is. Imputation is not the ground for union with Christ, it is the fruit; nevertheless, it does make possible our unity - i.e., our ability to be present in God's presence.Back

[12]Clifford Atonement and Justification p. 192. Back

[13]Anselm's position is spelled out in this online text here. Back

[14]Trueman, Carl R. The Claims of Truth: John Owen’s Trinitarian Theology (Carlisle: Paternoster Press, 1998) p. 216ff. Back

[15]For a short good article dealing with both the revisionists and the rebuttals, see this article on "Calvin and the Calvinists" by David Sutherland writing for RTJ here. Back

[16]The aforementioned rebuttals. Though not writing to present a unified front, their writing presented a (basically) harmonious understanding of the issue. Back

[17]I think my counting may have been off. Clifford may not cite Owen's Volume V so infrequently. That is, Clifford only consorts with The Death of Death in the Death of Christ, and not his work on justification in the fifth volume. Back

[18]Go to this article here to get a great overview of Amyrauldianism, the "hypothetical universalism" position. Back


Labels: ,

|

Friday, December 09, 2005 

Christmas Typology from We Three Kings
Exegetical
Biblical Theology

Reading: Gaffin Resurrection and Redemption
Enjoying: Swiss milk chocolate my wife's grandmother brought back for me from Die Schweiz
Listening: Christmas carols

In Matthew 2, we get a load of Christological typology that helps us see the telescopic lens the biblical authors often employ. The Apostle Matthew, in penning this under the Holy Spirit, quotes Micah 5, Hosea 11, Jeremiah 31, and the Nazarite theology to show how Christ is both the fulfillment of the promises made in covenant to Abraham, as well as the fulfillment of all of God's eschatological redemption by employing the Magi.

Abraham as Background
The Gospel according to Matthew has as one of its chief concerns how Christ fulfills the Abrahamic covenant, and how He relates to the patriarchs. In Luke's lineage text (Luke 3:23 - 28) Jesus is the son of Adam, the son of God. This is not what Matthew highlights. Rather, Matthew points out that Jesus is the son of Abraham (Matthew 1:1, 2).

God's promise to Abraham is that in him, and specifically in his seed, all the nations of the earth would be blessed. Matthew's gospel culminates in how this is to happen: in the Great Commission, Jesus commands His Church to be the light and blessing to the nations Israel was always meant to be. Matthew (with Mark) records Christ's words of being forsaken by His Father. Christ is the sacrificed Son, though this time there is no angel to stay His Father's knife. He is the Lamb caught in a thicket of sins, laying down His life for the scattered sheep, lost without their shepherd (Matthew 26:31).

One other great hint is the pervasive "kingdom of heaven" teaching that exudes from Matthew's point of view. In His "Sermon on the Mount" - though effectively fulfilling the Law from Sinai - Christ lays out His Kingdom's ethics (Matthew 5 - 7). He gives several discourses on the kingdom (Matthew 13, 18) and expounds on His (covenantal) kingdom curses (Matthew 23 - 24). This kingdom is the fulfillment of the land promised to Abraham. The kingdom of heaven is the country that is built without hands, whose Architect promised it first to Abraham so very long ago (Hebrews 11:10). Without being simplistic - there are several literary and redemptive themes that the Holy Spirit winds together in Matthew's gospel - it is important to see how important Abraham is to this account.

So how does this shed light on Matthew 2?

The Magi as True Israel

Peter Leithart notes that Matthew brings out important elements to show that the Magi - the Wise men from the east - are showing an important step in redemptive history. The Magi travel, from the east, westward towards Bethlehem (Matthew 2:1). In redemptive history, sin always drives to the east, while God leads His people westward. Adam and Eve were driven out of Eden to the east (Genesis 3:24). Moses and the Israelites, after wandering (aimlessly and without direction due to sin) in the Exodus, enter westwardly into the Promised Land. God enslaves the Hebrews to Assyria and Babylon, respectively, in moves to the east, but brings a remnant back from the exile towards the West, to Jerusalem. The Magi follow this trend.

Furthermore, the Magi followed a star, even as the Israelites had followed the pillar of cloud and fire in the Exodus (Matthew 2:9). Matthew employs a hebraism to show that the Magi properly worshipped according to strict Levitical standards, noting that they " they rejoiced exceedingly with great joy" (echaresan charan; Matthew 2:10).

Upon having found the child, Leithart points out, "They bring gold, frankincense, and myrrh to worship at the place where God had pitched his tent in human flesh." Jesus Christ has come to "tabernacle" among His people (cf. John 1:14), and the Magi bring the appropriate goods to worship the true God with. They have come ready to worship God at His true Temple.

In contrast to this is Herod, who is currently reigning over God's chosen people. He deceives and is deceived (Matthew 2:7 - 8, 12). He is full of rage and hypocrisy, and seeks to kill the Jewish Messiah rather than defend and worship Him. The Magi, unclean Gentiles from the East, follow in the path of the Israelites, following God's sign in the heavens and coming to worship with appropriate gifts at God's Temple, while the Jewish king - ever slowly contorted by his sin - finally is utterly corrupted and transforms into the infidel Pharoah, slaughtering the Hebrew baby boys (Matthew 2:16). Herod proves himself by his unbelief to be uncircumcised of heart, regardless of his heritage. The Magi, like the gentile Abram, are counted righteous by faith, and in their belief show themselves to be true Jews.

God's promise is coming true: all the nations of the earth are being blessed by His Servant.

The Magi as Kings of the Nations
Looking back, Leithart was absolutely correct to see the Magi, the three wise men, as being in a typological strain that hearkened back to the Israelites. But what he did not take time in his article to note, is how the prophecies of the Old Testament - though they are wrapping up - are unfolding anew in Christ Jesus.

From Revelation 21:22 - 27:
And I saw no temple in the city, for its temple is the Lord God the Almighty and the Lamb. And the city has no need of sun or moon to shine on it, for the glory of God gives it light, and its lamp is the Lamb. By its light will the nations walk, and the kings of the earth will bring their glory into it, and its gates will never be shut by day--and there will be no night there. They will bring into it the glory and the honor of the nations. But nothing unclean will ever enter it, nor anyone who does what is detestable or false, but only those who are written in the Lamb's book of life.
The Apostle John paints a picture of the eschaton, of what life will be like when the Kingdom of Heaven that Jesus preached about is brought to its fulness. Here, he portrays how the nations, and specifically their kings will bring their respective honor and glory in the New Zion to display before her Lord.

While the Magi represent God keeping His promises to the patriarchs, they also represent something future. The Magi are three kings from the East, and as they fulfill Old Testament promises, they prove to be the first fruits of other promises. The three kings have walked by light of the glory of the Father, and they bring their honor and glory to Christ to worship and be in His presence - which is the essence of Zion. The unclean, Gentile kings are made to be clean, and show themselves in their dealings with Herod to be honest and true. They are written in the Lamb's book of life. Herod, on the other hand, is all the things John warns against. He will be cast out into utter darkness. "That Gentiles who did not pursue righteousness have attained... righteousness... But Israel who pursued a law that would lead to righteousness did not succeed" (Romans 9:30 - 31).

God is reordering His covenant people, and all the warnings against Israel are coming true. John the Baptist was the last prosecutor to come and lible unbelieving Jews, and having rejected their Messiah, the Magi are portent for things to come. The prophecies of Revelation are even now coming true as the Magi lay their glory at the feet of the Savior babe.

O come, let us adore Him, Christ the Lord.

Labels: ,

|

Friday, December 02, 2005 

Dealing with Post-Calvinism
Exegetical

Scott McKnight, formerly professor at Trinity Divinity and now at North Park, writes in a series of blog posts that he has gone to a position he calls "post-Calvinism:"

I am reflecting here in a series of posts on how “I changed my mind” about Calvinism and adopted a more Ariminian view of whether or not the Christian can throw away redemption.

This journey took me through the book of Hebrews, where I suggested we can find four elements to each Warning Passage. Today I want to look briefly at the fourth element, the consequences. Very few will disagree with this (I hope).

During one of his courses, specifically NT 612 Advanced Exegesis when he and his class marched through Hebrews, McKnight was challenged by the warning passages in the book of Hebrews.

Frankly, I think all this post-everything is post-ridiculous. Dr. McKnight, if you ever find yourself reading this, with all respect:

I am firmly sure that you are wise enough to know that centuries of intelligent, thoroughly Reformed men and women have read the same texts you marched through in NT 612. Why did they not feel the need to abandon ship and become a post-Calvinist? Why did I. Howard Marshall's arguments in Kept by the Power of God not produce lemming drives of people out of the confines of Reformed orthodoxy into the welcoming folds of Arminianism? You happily recount your experience with said texts and Dr. Osborne's influence. What is your expertise in Reformed theology to discredit it?

To be perfectly honest, I'm not sure what the big deal is with the warning passages in Hebrews. The Reformed have been exegeting these texts for a long time. I realize that for some people, they offer a live defeater for perseverance, but I don't think so if we deal honestly with the text first, and with the historic orthodox faith second.

A person who tastes the "powers of the age to come," is "enlightened," has benefitted from the Holy Spirit, and ultimately trods the Son under foot in his blasphemy, is the classic definition of Matthew 7 apostates, the perfect definition of I John 2:18-19 antichrists, and the way the historic church has always defined these; whether patristics, (scripturally) faithful medieval scholastics, Reformers, Protestant Scholastics, Puritans, and contemporary confessional Christians. What really sheds light on this subject is covenant theology. Just like Ishmael, like Esau, like the generation in the wilderness who had been liberated from Egypt, there have always been people who have benefitted from God's covenant blessings on His chosen people, yet shown they have been ultimately reprobate. The line continues, through King Saul, apostate kings, Judas, Ananias and Sapphira, Hymenaeus, and the scores of others who gave life to the covenantal threats in Hebrews. These have sealed themselves, but for those who trust in Christ for a living faith, "we hope for better things."

Finally, to Dr. McKnight, the classic covenantal theology promoted by John Calvin, Herman Witsius, Z. Ursinus, G. Vos, Bavinck, and L. Berkhof are well aware of Hebrews, and (in my opinion - which may not be worth much!) more than adequately deal with these texts, letting the full force show while explaining how historic orthodoxy is shaped and supportsthese very texts. I do not say this to think that you should change your position regarding the various pericopes in the Epistle to the Hebrews. Nevertheless, a tag like "post-Calvinism" seems hardly apropos for what you are dealing with. Thank you for your labor for the kingdom, especially at TEDS.

Labels: ,

|

Thursday, December 01, 2005 

Feed My Sheep
Exegetical

Music Hack: Want to listen to some music while you read this post? How about listening to Project 86's new album ...And the Rest Will Follow. If you are using Firefox (which you should be. New Firefox 1.5 out yesterday!), open Project in one tab, and do the rest of your surfing in others. That way you can listen to their killer new tracks while browsing the net. Tracks include "Sincerely, Ichabod;" "Doomsday Stomp;" "Subject to Change;" "Necktie Remedy," among others. You can listen to nearly half the new album. On a personal review, I really like what I hear.

Sometimes, the Scriptures break forth on your heart in ways you can't understand. All of a sudden, a text shines more brightly than normal under the Holy Spirit's tutelage. When Matthew records the account of Jesus feeding the five thousand, I had an occurence like this a few years ago.

Jesus, in the fourteenth chapter of Matthew's rendition of the Good News, hears the tragic news of John the Baptist's death. Who among us can understand the psychological toll this would have effected on Him? John, who was making the path smooth for Jesus, was now paving the way to Golgotha with his own death. Jerusalem, which had killed all Her prophets, now killed the greatest (Matthew 11:11), and was about to slay Her Prince. In His humanity, perhaps Christ was reeling from this emotional blow (though no doubt He knew it, planned it, foreordained it); regardless, he went off to "a desolate place." However, the crowds still find Him.

Now when it was evening, the disciples came to him and said, "This is a desolate place, and the day is now over; send the crowds away to go into the villages and buy food for themselves." But Jesus said, "They need not go away; you give them something to eat." They said to him, "We have only five loaves here and two fish." And he said, "Bring them here to me." Then he ordered the crowds to sit down on the grass, and taking the five loaves and the two fish, he looked up to heaven and said a blessing. Then he broke the loaves and gave them to the disciples, and the disciples gave them to the crowds. And they all ate and were satisfied. And they took up twelve baskets full of the broken pieces left over. And those who ate were about five thousand men, besides women and children.

I can remember being in a Bible study of college guys, when Jesus' words landed on us: "They aren't leaving to get food. YOU get them food."

What would you do if you were one of the twelve and Jesus broadsided you like this? (Of course, broadsiding in one sense, but in another, Jesus was always making comments like this.) There you are, you've just picked your jaw up off the ground, and how do you handle this. Everyone one of you knows there is no way you are going to get enough food - or money to buy enough food - to feed all these people. If there are five thousand men, assume one woman per man. Then realize there were probably more women than men in attendance, given male-dominated vocations. Children? Families were bigger back then, and there was no day care. Is it any exaggeration to guess-timate a crowd of 13,000?

Here is the Lord, giving His disciples a command. For all those who feel that it is so en vogue to say that commands and Law are gracious, here's an interesting example. Conversely, for everyone who assumes that God only gives commands that we have the ability to keep, this is quite a prooftext.

The Law is Gracious
Is there any way to think of Christ's command here as gracious? I suppose several ways, actually. At the very least, our Lord is being very gracious to the hungry multitude who is ready for a snack. Perhaps one might argue His talk here is encouragement, to spur the lax disciples on to good deeds and love for their neighbors.

But on the face of it, this seems mostly preposterous. Jesus is commanding His disciples to do what they obviously could not. We are left helpless in the face of God's commands. It is tragic to think that the command to love as He has loved is any easier than feeding a multitude. It is superfluous to suppose being holy as He is holy is a command that humans have any more chance to perform than feeding the five thousand. And don't think they are different kinds of commands either. Starting down the road of holiness, "I gave it my best shot," and other admirable starts never fulfill any command.

I cannot think of a single matrix in which the disciples justification or sanctification was in any way furthered by Christ's command.

The Law as Dunamis
In Koine Greek, the dialect commonly spoke during Second Temple Judaism - the period of time in which Christ lived - and the language the New Testament was written in, the word to describe "power" or "ability" is often dunamis, from which we get our word dynamite. The connotation is that dynamite, as explosive power, makes you able to accomplish things; whether you need to create a hole, blast a tunnel for a train, or whatever. The power creates the ability. (Lyotard, eat your heart out.)

The disciples simply do not possess the dunamis necessary to carry out Christ's command. They only have a few loaves and fish in their possession, and feeding crowds in excess of ten thousand will not occur.

I'll never forget that bible study I mentioned, as the full force of what Jesus was truly expecting of His disciples landed on us at various points in that time. For a bunch of guys who had grown up vainly striving to keep way too many laws, this was a revelation on a whole new level. I'm still thankful for that night, both for my own experience and theirs.

Christ as Law-Giver and -Fulfiller
Jesus Christ told His disciples to feed the multitude. He didn't offer platitudes or hypotheticals or best case scenarios. When I was young, I was very black and white in my thinking, and as I grow older I see shades and variations to more and more of life. The demands of God are not one of these. They are absolutely black and white.

Our Lord obviously didn't require the disciples five loaves and filets to perform the blessing; any infinite billion combination of possibilities could have rectified the situation - angels granting care, ravens feeding, turning stones into bread, or manna from heaven. Instead, after blessing the meal, Christ provided what the disciples couldn't. Jesus met His own stipulation. From this, we pray with Augustine: Command what Thou wilt, and grant what Thou commandest.

After His resurrection, Jesus reinstated Peter by commanding him to feed His sheep. Peter was instructed to do that by feeding them on the pure milk of the Word (1 Peter 2:2). By faith in the way Christ has already fed (physically and spiritually) His sheep, Peter is granted to follow in his Master's footsteps, walking by the Spirit, and so fulfills the Law himself (Romans 8:4). Never attaining the perfect feeding that Christ Himself has done, nevertheless, Peter - and we with him - follow our Lord by doing as He has commanded us in faith. Our inability and His efficiency becomes the ground for our own walking after the Law-giver, and Law-fulfiller.

Labels: , ,

|

Thursday, July 28, 2005 

Calvin's Accomodating OT Hermeneutics
Theology

Reading: "Problems With the Patriarchs: John Calvin's Interpretation of Difficult Passages in Genesis" WTJ
Listening: Only the AC unit, still haven't got the music uploaded yet.
Enjoying: Black and Gold on briar

Just got volume 67, No. 1 of the Westminster Theological Journal the other day. The opening article is by Scott M. Manetsch of TEDS, entitled above. His article is part of a larger movement in academia reflecting on Calvin the preacher in his commentaries rather than merely his theological reflections (a la the Institutes). After dealing with the logistics necessary for interacting with Calvin in theological prose, commentary, and notated sermon, Manetsch subdivides his investigation. He treats
four "naturally obscure" difficulties of Genesis, as well as two instances where various sins of Abraham and Noah are displayed in the text.

In wrestling with the former, questions such as "Was Moses an astronomer?" will eventually break the surface. However, Manetsch often shies away from attempting to deal with the texts in other disciplines, such as science or anthropology (methinks wisely). Instead, he allows Calvin to speak through copious footnotes, revealing The Theologian's genius, exegetical skills and biblical theology for the excellence it was and still is. Also during this time, he emphasizes Calvin's doctrine of
accomodare: the idea that
Here in the early chapters of Genesis, Calvin frequently reminds his audience that the scriptural text - as a speech-bridge between infinite deity and finite humanity - regularly employs rude and unrefined language in order to communicate divine truth in a manner comprehensible to the reader... Hence, when Moses wrote that God planted a garden in Eden (Gen. 2:8), he was "accomodating himself, by a simple and uncultivated style, to the capacity of the vulgar..." It is ultimately the Holy Spirit who "accomodates" himself to human capacity in the language of Scripture. Accomodation reflects God's fatherly love for human beings and his desire to instruct them despite the limitations of their finitude and sin... [Moses] has chosen to communicate God's truth in language suitable for the understanding of children. pp. 12 - 13
This is a desperately needed, nearly totally forgotten doctrine/hermeneutic that the Enlightenment cashed in early on. When dealing with the sins of the patriarchs, Manetsch focuses on two: Noah's drunkenness after the ark and Abram's use of Sarai when traveling abroad. In the instance of each man, according to Manetsch The Theologian emphasizes the righteousness and praiseworthyness of each man, while never excusing or making light of their faults. Separately, the value and dignity of properly partaking of wine, and the horrendous sin and terror that results from its misuse, are both themes emphasized in his expounding. Somewhat similarly, Abram's motives are never questioned, and only his execution is condemned. Both men are held up as examples to be followed, while the grave error and seriousness of their sins is placarded before the congregation as the reality of the deceit of sin - even a patriarch can stumble. The Theologian, while critical of the men and their sins in prose and commentary, is much gentler and encouraging in preaching.

Overall, Manetsch's article is well done. He (wisely) limits his scope to keep the material manageable, and proves an able historical scholar. The only thing I would have liked to have seen was more comparisons between sermons and the
Institutes. Alternatives to this, I think, would have been to look at other, smaller, works (especially On the Sacraments) that would have dealt with the patriarchs. Nevertheless, Manetsch did a terrific job.

I was surprised at his findings. I agree theologically with Calvin, and am not sure I would have made the transition (were I called upon to preach Genesis). I think I would have stuck with the moral flaws of the patriarch's, emphasizing justification by faith alone, the grace of God, and Jesus as our only example and hope. (Peter Leithart's A House For My Name is another example of someone who thinks the patriarchs get a bad rap, and should be viewed as basically obedient and righteous.) But then again, the main reason The Theologian was doing this was to edify his congregation. So maybe I have something to learn. As I said, the article was great.

For more, I would recommend:


Ford Lewis Battles "God was Accomodating Himself to Human Capacity" Readings in Calvin's Theology (Wipf & Stock, 1998)
David F. Wright "Calvin's Accomodating God"
Calvinus Sincerioris Religionis Vindex (Sixteenth Century Journal Publishers, 1997) [***** Five stars! A must have!]
Check the link to CCEL at the right.

Labels: ,

|

Transplanted from the artic blight of Minnesota to the sunny paradise of SoCal, I am attending school and learning to say "dude." I like to think of myself as equal parts surf rash, Batman, heavy metal, Levinas, poetic license, and reformational. Other than creating blund blogs, I enjoy reading, sporting, and socializing with serious and funny people.
My profile



Web Blog

About

Email:

FAQ - Author|Site
Upcoming Events |30 Boxes|
blund Frappr Places
Looking for Poem|Eliot information?

Thunder Sites

Thunder Mobile
Thunder Photo Album
Thunder Media
Thunder Frappr Map
Thunder Directory



Popular and Favorite Posts
Liturgical Bingo: BBC
Updated Video Roundup
Levinas and the Inner Demons

Categories

under construction

Recent Posts


Thunder Comments

under construction

Thunder Bookshelf


by J. R. R. Tolkien


by Flannery O'Connor


by Herman Bavinck


by Peter A. Lillback

Banners

For proper use please use
Get Firefox! Get Thunderbird!



Purevolume.com

Weblog Commenting and Trackback by HaloScan.com

Desiring God

MN Wild Hockey



Bethlehem

30 Boxes

Oceanside URC

Send Me A Message

Mission OPC



Westminster Seminary, California

Statcounter.com

Christ PCA Temecula

MN Twins Baseball



Clustrmaps.com






Powered by Blogger







How does Rowling and the "Harry Potter" series stack up against Tolkien and "The Lord of the Rings" trilogy?
Rowling is the new dreamweaver. She is reigniting literature and fantasy as we know it.
Tolkien is the undisputed favorite. We have not yet seen a match for his philogistic skill.
This is apples and oranges. You might as well compare ping pong with Halo. Two different animals.
Rowling wins, but only by one quidditch goal.
Tolkien still stands, but only barely.
  
pollcode.com free polls






Firefox 2