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My Website where you will find: ordering information and chapter summaries for The Beauty of God for a Broken World; audio sermons; a few poems and hymns; and some other essays.

My Videos where you will find a few two-minute videos on various subjects related to The Beauty of God for a Broken World.

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Monday, February 6, 2017

Jesus, the Son of God

At Christmas, we celebrate the birth of the Son of God. What does the Bible mean when it refers to Him by that title? In ancient times, and still today some have given “Son of God” a meaning never taught by any major branch of the Christian church.

The Bible does not teach that Jesus was an ordinary man who was adopted by God; nor that He was merely a man in whom the Christ-Spirit dwelt; nor that God the Father, in an immortal physical body, had sex with Mary; nor that the Son came into existence from the Father at some time in the distant past; nor that He is the preeminent Son among many similar sons of God.

All of these aberrations have been firmly denied by the Eastern Orthodox, the Roman Catholic, and all the major Protestant churches. Only when clergy depart from the founding documents of their faith do they forsake the common confession of the universal Church.

When the Bible and the creeds call Jesus the Son of God, they are confessing that He is fully God, equal in power, wisdom, love, holiness, and glory to God the Father. He is God, the Son, who has an eternal relationship with the Father that is the pattern for our time-bound relationship with our earthly fathers.

The Bible says, “In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. He was in the beginning with God. And the Word became flesh, and dwelt among us, and we saw His glory, glory as of the only begotten from the Father, full of grace and truth” (John 1:1-2, 14).

The eternal Word was God, and was with God, and remained God when He took on our humanity in the womb of Mary. All of His DNA was human, and it came from Mary. There was no divine DNA as we see in the demi-gods of Greek mythology. The Holy Spirit fashioned the humanity of Jesus in the womb of Mary, from the stuff of Mary, for the eternal Son of God to inhabit. When Mary asked how she, a virgin, could have a baby, “The angel answered and said to her, ‘The Holy Spirit will come upon you, and the power of the Most High will overshadow you; and for that reason the holy Child shall be called the Son of God’” (Luke 1:35).

The whole Trinity was active in the miracle of the incarnation—the Father exerting His power, the Holy Spirit preparing the body of Jesus, and the Son joining Himself to the human embryo growing in Mary’s womb. (By the way, the Trinity, though mysterious, is not a contradictory doctrine when properly stated, but that would entail another essay.)

Why is it important that Jesus was (and is) fully God and fully human? The answer is simple. If He were not a genuine human being, He could not have died to save human beings. He stood in our place and took our punishment. An ox could not have done that nor even an angel.


On the other hand, if He had only been a man, He might have died for the sins of one other man, but not for a multitude of sinners. If He had been a mere man, He would have been crushed by our sins, never to rise again. As the infinite God, He was able to bear up under the load of our sins and then to rise up again in glory. As a man, He could die for us. As God, He can lift us up to God. This is the meaning of Christmas.

Monday, January 30, 2017

Matthew Vines' Video

In 2012 Matthew Vines, then only twenty-one years old, produced a remarkable YouTube video in which he attempted to provide a biblical defense of loving, faithful, gay marriage.

There are a number of commendable features of this presentation. First, Vines apparently accepts the authority of Scripture, and he attempts to base his conclusions on a careful interaction with the biblical texts. Second, while this is an emotionally charged issue, he maintains a calm demeanor. Third, his appeal at the end of the presentation is passionate without becoming maudlin.

Nevertheless, his handling of Scripture is fundamentally flawed. Rather than going point by point through the texts he examines, I want to begin with his misrepresentation of the relationship between the Old and New Testaments. I’ll start with Paul’s final letter to his young apprentice Timothy (Star Wars verbal parallel noted).

You, however, continue in the things you have learned and become convinced of, knowing from whom you have learned them, and that from childhood you have known the sacred writings which are able to give you the wisdom that leads to salvation through faith which is in Christ Jesus. All Scripture is inspired by God and profitable for teaching, for reproof, for correction, for training in righteousness; so that the man of God may be adequate, equipped for every good work (2 Timothy 3:14-17).

The sacred writings Timothy learned as a child from his mother and grandmother (2 Timothy 1:5) were, of course the books of the Old Testament. The New Testament did not exist when Timothy was a child. Jesus and the authors of the New Testament constantly pointed back to the Old Testament as (1) a testimony of Christ to come, and (2) a guide for living in a manner pleasing to God. Even “love your neighbor as yourself,” which many people assume Jesus must have invented, comes from the Old Testament (Leviticus 19:18). New Testament ethics is based squarely on the Old Testament.

There are, of course, many commands in the Old Testament that do not apply to believers today—for example wearing clothes with mixed fabric or boiling a kid in its mother’s milk. The issue, therefore, is how to determine which commandments are permanently valid. In order to answer this question, we must keep in mind the three kinds of commandments included in the Mosaic Covenant.

Ø  Moral Law. Commandments that are permanently valid because they are based on God’s character and on the image of God in human beings (what we might call created human nature).
Ø  Ceremonial Law. Commandments relating to the Old Testament sacrificial system and commandments designed to keep ancient Israel separate from the surrounding culture. We also include here the Sabbath commandment which was the sign of the Mosaic Covenant (Exodus 31:13-17).
Ø  Civil Law. This aspect of the law prescribes penalties for infractions of the Moral Law and the Ceremonial Law. The Civil Law was specifically designed for Israel living in the land of Palestine under a theocratic government.

The Mosaic Law as a Covenant given to Israel has indeed passed away since it is fulfilled in Christ. This is the argument of Hebrews 7-10. Notice (and this is important)—the author bases his argument for the passing of the Old Covenant on the Old Testament itself. The apostles did not do away with the Mosaic Covenant on their own authority. So what remains?

Ø  The New Testament specifically sets aside the sacrificial system of the Old Covenant (Hebrews 7-10); circumcision (Acts 15; Galatians 2:1-10); the Sabbath and other holy days, and dietary laws (Colossians 2:16-23; 1 Timothy 4:1-5).
Ø  The civil penalties of the Old Covenant are completely ignored in the New Testament. Jesus and the apostles never applied the Civil Law of the Jewish state to the church.
Ø  The provisions of the Moral Law, however, are frequently and firmly reiterated in the New Testament. So how do we know which provisions of the Old Covenant are permanent? We look at the New Testament.

With all of this in view, it simply will not do for Vines to say that since we no longer stone disobedient children, we are no longer to regard the prohibition of homosexuality as permanent. Stoning the incorrigibly rebellious child was a penalty of the Civil Law under the Mosaic Covenant. The Civil Law of the Jews is no longer in force, but disobedience to parents is still a sin, since it violates the permanent Moral Law of God (Romans 1:30).

Which brings me to Romans 1. Vines spends quite a bit of time trying to undermine the plain sense of this passage.
For this reason God gave them over to degrading passions; for their women exchanged the natural function for that which is unnatural, and in the same way also the men abandoned the natural function of the woman and burned in their desire toward one another, men with men committing indecent acts and receiving in their own persons the due penalty of their error. And just as they did not see fit to acknowledge God any longer, God gave them over to a depraved mind, to do those things which are not proper (Romans 1:26-28).

Vines’ argument rests on two key foundations. First, ancient peoples did not understand sexual orientation as we do—that some people, by nature have an attraction to the same sex. Therefore, the ancients could only think of same-sex relationships as an excess of the normal sexual drive, like promiscuity. Second, the people Paul condemned were acting contrary to their own personal nature. They were doing what was unnatural for themselves, since their natural desire was for the opposite sex. I’ll take the second issue first.

Paul was clearly not referring to sexual relations contrary to a person’s own individual nature. Paul’s argument in Romans 1 and 2 is that all people have the permanent Moral Law of God impressed on their hearts. They are able to suppress this law so that they no longer feel its force, but that only increases their guilt.

For the wrath of God is revealed from heaven against all ungodliness and unrighteousness of men who suppress the truth in unrighteousness, because that which is known about God is evident within them; for God made it evident to them. For since the creation of the world His invisible attributes, His eternal power and divine nature, have been clearly seen, being understood through what has been made, so that they are without excuse. For even though they knew God, they did not honor Him as God or give thanks, but they became futile in their speculations, and their foolish heart was darkened. Professing to be wise, they became fools (Romans 1:18-22).

Those who do not have the written Law, the Mosaic Law, nevertheless know God’s Law since it is written on their hearts.

For all who have sinned without the Law will also perish without the Law, and all who have sinned under the Law will be judged by the Law; for it is not the hearers of the Law who are just before God, but the doers of the Law will be justified. For when Gentiles who do not have the Law do instinctively the things of the Law, these, not having the Law, are a law to themselves, in that they show the work of the Law written in their hearts, their conscience bearing witness and their thoughts alternately accusing or else defending them, on the day when, according to my gospel, God will judge the secrets of men through Christ Jesus (Romans 2:12-16).

When Paul writes that men and women exchanged the natural sexual partner for what was unnatural, he clearly means that they were going against God’s created nature for men and women, not that they were going against their own sexual orientation. Furthermore, unnatural sexual relations are listed along with all sorts of other activities that Vines would recognize as sinful: being filled with all unrighteousness, wickedness, greed, evil; full of envy, murder, strife, deceit, malice; they are gossips, slanderers, haters of God, insolent, arrogant, boastful, inventors of evil, disobedient to parents, without understanding, untrustworthy, unloving, unmerciful (Romans 1:29-31). I suspect, by the way, that some rapacious hedge fund managers will end up in a far deeper pit of hell that some gays in life-long committed relationships. We oughtn’t to single out gays as hell-bound when all human beings are headed that direction apart from the saving grace of Christ.

Now I return to the other pillar of Vines’ interpretation of Romans 1. There is no evidence at all that Paul was basing his condemnation of same-sex relations on a supposed Greco-Roman notion of an excess of sexual desire. The proper context for Paul’s understanding of the Moral Law is the Old Testament. He really believed, as he later wrote to Timothy, that the Scriptures teach us how to live in a manner pleasing to God.

Homosexual and lesbian relationships were not strongly condemned in the Greco-Roman world. In Plato’s Symposium one of the speakers praises homosexuality as heavenly love. Rather than defending it as an outlet for excessive passion, he describes how to make a virtuous choice when choosing a lover. One of the other speakers may be mildly mocking him, but the dialogue has no outright condemnation of same-sex relations.

Jesus had no need to condemn homosexuality because the Jews already knew it was wrong (Leviticus 18:22; 20:13). Paul had to address it in clear and forceful language because it was condoned rather than condemned in Greco-Roman culture.

Now I need to address the issue of human thriving, which formed another major part of Vines’ argument. He noted from Matthew 7 that a good tree produces good fruit and a bad tree produces bad fruit. Therefore, he said, good teaching doesn’t push people down into low self-esteem and despair. Furthermore, from Genesis 2, we know that is not good for people to be alone, but depriving gays of the right to marry forces them to be alone. God created some people gay, therefore God must want them to find companionship and happiness in gay relationships. To tell gay people that they are broken crushes their spirits and goes against the way God has made them.

Unfortunately, many children in Sunday school learn that since God made them, He likes them just the way they are. This false teaching is a radical denial of the doctrine of original sin. When God made Adam and Eve, He was starting with unfallen stuff. He pronounced them and the rest of creation “very good.” Now, however, He is starting with broken stuff. All of us are born broken. What we ought to be telling children is they were made by God in His image, but because of sin His image in us is broken. God loves us even though we are broken, and He wants to fix us. That is why He sent His Son Jesus to die for us.

Jesus begins to fix us when we are born again, but the work will not be finished until we see Him face to face at the resurrection. All of us carry around baggage that keeps us from experiencing perfect happiness. So we have some healing now, and we experience true joy in the Lord, but perfect healing and perfect happiness must wait for that future day. Some gay people may be able to have a satisfying marriage with a person of the opposite sex, but many will not. Nevertheless, they can please the Lord by living chastely, and they can have healthy relationships with people of both sexes.

It is a mistake to start with the notion that God wants me to be happy. The problem is that we do not know how to be truly happy. People very frequently make choices, in an effort to be happy, that produce exactly the opposite result. According to Jesus, true happiness (blessedness) is an outgrowth of a certain kind of character. The beatitudes (Matthew 5:1-12) include, “Blessed are the pure in heart, for they shall see God” (v. 8). The way to be happy is to seek to be holy. That is God’s way. Seek holiness first and you will find true happiness. Seek happiness first, and you will lose everything. “For he who wishes to save his life will lose it; but whoever loses his life for My sake will find it” (Matthew 16:25).

I want to close with one final, sobering observation. After condemning homosexual and lesbian relationships along with a host of other sins, the apostle Paul concludes, “and although they know the ordinance of God, that those who practice such things are worthy of death, they not only do the same, but also give hearty approval to those who practice them” (Romans 1:32). This ought to make you cautious about endorsing a gay lifestyle. Love your gay friends. Be kind to them. Listen to their heart-felt anguish, and sympathize with them, but I beg you not to endorse their rebellion against God.

What all people need is the gospel of Christ, winsomely explained and lovingly lived. In our interactions with gay people, as with all people, we ought to focus on the death and resurrection of Christ, the generosity of God, and the promise of happiness through holiness. And yes, we need to speak about their sin, fully conscious that we also are sinners of the deepest dye. When our friends and family insist on clinging to their sins instead of turning to the Savior, we ought to weep rather than self-righteously condemning them.

May God give us the grace to love sinners like ourselves into the kingdom of God.



Thursday, December 31, 2015

The Christmas Refugee

In churches across the country, children put on simple Christmas pageants. Angels with floppy wings and floppier halos announce the birth of Jesus to shepherds wearing grey or tan bathrobes. Perhaps the shepherds bring a small, stuffed sheep to the Baby as He lies in a bed of straw. Then three wise men in kingly robes arrive holding brightly wrapped gifts. The children sing Away in a Manger; the congregation holds lighted candles as they sing Silent Night; and the program is over.
But the Christmas story is not really over. The gospel of Matthew tells us that after the wise men left, God warned Joseph to flee with Mary and the Baby into Egypt to escape the murderous rage of Herod. After the death of Herod, Joseph brought his small family back to Israel. “This was to fulfill what had been spoken by the prophet: ‘Out of Egypt I called My Son’” (Matthew 2:15). The passage Matthew quotes is Hosea 11:1, where the prophet says that God called the nation of Israel out of Egypt
In the Old Testament, Israel is God’s national son (Exodus 4:21-23). In the New Testament, Jesus is God’s eternal Son. During their four hundred years as refugees in Egypt, the family of Jacob became the nation of Israel. Then God sent Moses to lead them back into the Promised Land. So when Jesus took refuge in Egypt, He (the eternal Son of God) was recapitulating the history of the Israel (the national son of God).
God used Israel’s refugee experience to exhort them to be kind to aliens. “The stranger who resides with you shall be to you as the native among you, and you shall love him as yourself, for you were aliens in the land of Egypt; I am the lord your God” (Leviticus 19:34). Similarly, Jesus commanded His followers to be kind to strangers.
Do you remember the parable of the Good Samaritan (Luke 10:30-37)? A Jewish man who had been beaten, robbed, and left for dead was rescued by a Samaritan. The Jews despised Samaritans. Furthermore, the robbers might well have been lingering the vicinity, so the Samaritan was risking his own life to help the injured man. Finally, the Samaritan paid an innkeeper to care for the man until he recovered. Jesus concluded the parable by saying, “Go and do the same.” In other words, be willing to help people who don’t like you even if there is some risk and some cost involved.
That is what Jesus did for us. The Bible says that Jesus died for us when we were ungodly sinners, enemies of God, and subject to His wrath (Romans 5:6-10). Those who put their faith in the crucified, risen Christ are healed of sin’s curse and enter into a peaceable relationship with God (Romans 4:25-5:1).
Therefore, those who have been befriended by God ought to befriend the friendless, even those who might be our enemies. At this Christmas season, we need to remember that Jesus was a refugee Himself, and we ought to be willing to help refugees, even if there is some risk and some cost in doing so.
Some Christian leaders, whom I greatly respect, have opposed settling Syrian refugees in the United States. The Lehigh Valley, which hosts a large Syrian community, has been in the national news lately because the Syrians who live here are divided over the refugee issue. Some of them fear that the very Syrians who murdered their relatives might find a home here. Some fear that ISIS might deliberately smuggle its operatives in among genuine refugees.
I understand those fears. I really do. There are some genuine (though very small) risks involved. In recent years, my wife and I have hosted five refugee families in our home for two weeks at a time. Three were Muslim; two were Christian. We have loved all of them. Our health would not permit us to take another family right now, but perhaps in a few months we would be able to do so. And we would welcome a Syrian family as willingly as we have the rest.

(Published in the Allentown Morning Call 12/19/2015)


Friday, December 25, 2015

Fear Not

“Fear not” said the angel to the shepherds, “for, behold, I bring you good tidings of great joy” (Luke 2:10). Fear not. Angels seem to have a habit of saying that. The angel Gabriel who appeared to Zacharias told him not to be afraid. The same angel said the same thing to Mary.

I suppose most of us have assumed that the sudden appearance of the angel is what frightened Zacharias and Mary. The glory of the Lord shone around the angel that spoke to the shepherds, and a sudden light on a dark night must have been frightening.
But what if the angels themselves were scary creatures. Angels don’t have bodies as we do. They are spirit creatures. They can take on bodies from time to time in order to appear to human beings, but the bodies they take on may not always have the same form. Sometimes they look like normal men, as when two angels and the Lord dropped by Abraham’s tent for dinner. By the way, in the Bible, angels never appear as women or children. Angels are never gentle and soft. Sometimes angels appear with four wings or six wings. The angels Ezekiel saw had four wings and four hands.
As for the form of their faces, each had the face of a man; all four had the face of a lion on the right and the face of a bull on the left, and all four had the face of an eagle (Ezekiel 1:10).

What if the angels who appeared to the shepherds looked like that? While our granddaughter Meghan was staying with us, I loaned her a word burner and gave her a piece of wood. This is what she produced in an afternoon. It is one of Ezekiel’s angels with four wings. Two of his hands are visible and three of his faces – the lion, the eagle, and the man’s face. The bull’s face would be out of sight in the back. Over the head of the angel some wheels within a wheel, and as Ezekiel says, its rims are full of eyes. Underneath the angel are the words, “Fear Not.”
If one of these angels appeared surrounded by a blindingly bright light, you or I would certainly be terrified. I don’t know what the shepherds saw when the terror of the Lord fell upon them. Perhaps they looked like men without wings. Perhaps they looked like Ezekiel’s angels. In any case, the words of the angel were certainly necessary, “Fear not.”

When angels appear, they frequently display some of the glory of the Lord, and when they do, they are awesome and fearful to behold. God uses these servants of His to impress upon us the fact that He is great and terrifying. No human being is able to stand in His presence.

BUT God is also gentle and kind. When He sent His Son to the earth to save us from our sins, how did He have Him appear? He came as a tiny, helpless baby who had to be cuddled and carried and clothed. He had to be nursed at His mother’s breast. He had to learn to sit up, and then to crawl, and then to toddle back and forth between Joseph and Mary.

You and I would not feel comfortable walking up to a scary angel for a casual chat, but we can draw near to a baby in a bed of hay. The angels teach us that God is powerful and terrifying. The baby Jesus teaches us that God is approachable. He is approachable through Jesus. If you come to God through Jesus, He will accept you. If you try to come to God on your own, watch out lest an angry angel cast you out of heaven before you get anywhere near the throne of God.


You don’t have to fear the angels if, like the shepherds, you are going to Jesus. The brightest, scariest angel would say to you, “Fear not, go to Bethlehem and see your Savior. Fear not, go to Calvary and see the Lamb slain for your sins. Fear not, go to the empty tomb and confess Jesus as your risen Lord.”