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By In Scribblings

Psychopathology and Covenant Blessings

Guest Post by Joshua Torrey

Psychopathology, the study of mental disorders, is not a light subject. Attempts to harmonize psychopathology (or psychology in general) with orthodox theology have left much to be desired. The Bible does reveal the mental state of its human authors (namely the book of Psalms) but it is not a textbook on counseling. So one must read books on psychopathology with caution in mind, and Scripture on the heart. On occasion, however, a practical point or reflection stands out unobtrusively and provides insightful depth to Biblical application. Take for example this quote from Christianity and Developmental Psychopathology (CAPS Book/IVP Academic):

“Children are more likely to form secure attachments to their parents when the parents are securely attached to each other. Insecure attachments between parents and children have also been linked to the parents’ own insecure attachment histories, but a secure marital attachment appears to buffer the effects of a parent’s own insecure attachment history” (128).

Marriage has a fascinating two way impact on relationships. A secure marital attachment helps mitigate history of parental detachment while providing a strong home for children. Admittedly, this insight does not undergird depictions of marriage in the Scriptures. Still, it is interesting to view the redemptive nature of God with this additional psychological lens. The prophet Ezekiel summarizes the history of Israel as the rescue and marriage of an abandoned child (Eze 16:3-4). The symbols of a broken home, adoption, and restored dignity are expressed in a heartfelt manner despite the Lord’s anger with Israel. The apostle Paul provides a foundationally eschatological doctrine of a similar adoption (Rom 8:22-25). The image of God adopting a people for Himself points to the breaking off from the history of rebellion and attachment to sin. The church looks forward to final day when this is true in the consummate new creation.

Cratered within Ezekiel’s imagery is the giving of God in marriage to the one He delivered. This language permeates the prophecies of Jeremiah and Hosea as God speaks out against the unfaithfulness of His people. Once again, the apostle Paul picked up this covenantal marriage language in his teaching on Christ and the church (Eph 5:31-32). The imagery is shared throughout the Scriptures. In the annals of salvation history God has delivered a people for Himself with historical and familial attachment to sin. Our Sovereign God breaks his people free from the behavior and addiction of cultures and families. He has broken these bonds and He provides the offspring of the covenant bountiful benefits.

The above psychopathology quote speaks in the same theme as the Scriptures using statistics and observations. Both point to the same set of truths. God’s covenant relationship of marriage is to be a blessing to children (Isa 59:21; Jer 32:38-40). God, in fact, desires “Godly offspring” (Mal 2:15) and so He instructs us to pass on to them our holy attachment to Him (Deut 6:6-9; Eph 6:4). Apart from faith, these truths instill fear of perverting God’s blessing (Eze 16:20). In faith, they are a tremendous blessing of hope.

For those who have grown up in difficult homes ravaged by sin, God’s covenant marriage to the church promises healing. Not only for themselves but also for their offspring. To those who have been abused, mistreated and retain histories of distrust and hatred God’s covenant speaks hope to generations. The Scriptures plainly teach this. Even developmental psychology has detected reflections of God’s desire to heal the world. This hope is not found merely in biological relationships and temporal marriages, just as this hope cannot be lost because of them. Instead, it is founded on the great marriage of Jesus Christ to His church: the sin-conquering marriage and covenantal-attachment that produces benefits in its covenant children.<>подбор слов гуглоптимизации а цена

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By In Culture

What’s wrong with tattoos?

Guest Post by Dr. Steve Jeffery, Minister at Emmanuel Evangelical Church

Of the many issues worth considering here, one that’s well worth reflecting on is the issue of permanence. A tattoo effectively freezes the wearer in time. Whatever he (or she) is saying with the tattoo at the moment it’s done, (s)he’ll be saying for ever.

This is most obviously a problem if the design is inherently sinful – an explicit picture, a pagan religious symbol, or some profane language, for example.

But other seemingly more innocuous designs can also create problems. Your teenage girlfriend Julie might love the design, but Wendy will probably be less impressed when you finally marry her ten years later.

Even things that appear harmless can, with the passing of the years, end up as badges of immaturity: a profound slogan can quickly become banal, and a teenager’s edgy motto can be childish on the arm of a 35-year-old.

The bottom line is that growing up in every aspect of life – from basic Christian godliness to cultural appreciation – is an important part of Christian living. And a tattoo simply puts the brakes on.<>seo продвижение  ов

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By In Theology

Hearing and Doing: Two Simple Tests

DOERS“But be doers of the word, and not hearers only, deceiving yourselves. For if anyone is a hearer of the word and not a doer, he is like a man who looks intently at his natural face in a mirror. For he looks at himself and goes away and at once forgets what he was like. But the one who looks into the perfect law, the law of liberty, and perseveres, being no hearer who forgets but a doer who acts, he will be blessed in his doing.” (James 1:22-25 ESV)

James gives us two tests to see whether we are both doers and hears, or merely “hearers only” of the word. It is important to know, because if we think we are both hearers and doers, while we’re not, we deceive ourselves. Based on the rest of James’ epistle, we could liken “hearers only” to those whose faith is dead, for it is lacking works. Living faith? Good; Dead faith? Bad; Hearers only? Bad; Both hearers and doers? Good. How will we know if we need to make adjustments, i.e., repent, if we cannot judge ourselves rightly?  James provides us with two tests in the text—one negative, one positive:

1.) The Negative test: The Man in the Mirror – A hearer, but no doer of the word looks “intently” in the mirror and then forgets. This is not a cursory look. This is not a passing glance. This is an analogy of a teenage girl, who works on her hair for hours, getting it just right, or of a teenage boy, who is just sure he sees some fuzz on his chin, inspecting every square millimeter until he knows for sure. James’ example of a “hearer only” is someone who looks intently at the mirror, and subsequently forgets what he or she saw. If a girl works for hours on her hair, is she going to forget what style she chose? If the boy finds a whisker, is he going to forget later what he saw? No. Not a chance.

But a person, who is only a hearer, walks away from the word forgetting what he heard while he was listening to the word. When temptations arise, there is no remembrance of how to flee or fight; when blessings come, there is no remembrance of who to thank. If one forgets what he heard while he was in the word, he is a hearer and not a doer. It is that simple.

2.) The Positive test: the Law of Liberty—The glorious thing about God’s law is that it sets one free. A law is a yoke—it constrains, but Jesus’ yoke is a light one—it constrains unto liberty, which is freedom from sin. There are only two choices: the light yoke of Jesus, or the heavy yoke of the world, the flesh, and the devil. There is no third option.

The one who is the hearer and the doer of the word is one who looks into the law of God and sees liberty. Who doesn’t want to be free? The doer of the word wants to be free unto Christ, while the hearer only wants to be free from Christ, but freedom from Christ is bondage to sin. “For freedom, Christ has set us free” (Galatians 5:1a), and “For whatever overcomes a person, to that he is enslaved.” (2 peter 2:19b) The negative test is that a hearer forgets: the positive test is that the doer acts, and when he acts, his actions are free from bondage to sin.

In Luke 10, in the Martha vs. Mary episode, Jesus said that Mary had chosen the better portion. Martha was busy “doing,” without stopping to “hear.” Mary was busy “hearing,” not yet “doing.” As she was sitting at his feet, Jesus said Mary was doing well. What would he have said if she arose and forgot everything he had just said to her? James tells us what Jesus would have said. It is the same thing Jesus says to us through James, “Be ye doers of the word, and not hearers only.”<>online gameчто такое pr а

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By In Scribblings

Spurgeon – They Shall Go Hindmost With Their Standards

Today’s meditation from Mornings and Evenings, by Charles Haddon Spurgeon.

“They shall go hindmost with their standards.”—Numbers 2:31.

HE camp of Dan brought up the rear when the armies of Israel were on the march. The Danites occupied the hindmost place, but what mattered the position, since they were as truly part of the host as were the foremost tribes; they followed the same fiery cloudy pillar, they ate of the same manna, drank of the same spiritual rock, and journeyed to the same inheritance. Come, my heart, cheer up, though last and least; it is thy privilege to be in the army, and to fare as they fare who lead the van. Some one must be hindmost in honour and esteem, some one must do menial work for Jesus, and why should not I? In a poor village, among an ignorant peasantry; or in a back street, among degraded sinners, I will work on, and “go hindmost with my standard.”
The Danites occupied a very useful place. Stragglers have to be picked up upon the march, and lost property has to be gathered from the field. Fiery spirits may dash forward over untrodden paths to learn fresh truth, and win more souls to Jesus; but some of a more conservative spirit may be well engaged in reminding the church of her ancient faith, and restoring her fainting sons. Every position has its duties, and the slowly moving children of God will find their peculiar state one in which they may be eminently a blessing to the whole host.
The rear guard is a place of danger. There are foes behind us as well as before us. Attacks may come from any quarter. We read that Amalek fell upon Israel, and slew some of the hindmost of them. The experienced Christian will find much work for his weapons in aiding those poor doubting, desponding, wavering, souls, who are hindmost in faith, knowledge, and joy. These must not be left unaided, and therefore be it the business of well-taught saints to bear their standards among the hindmost. My soul, do thou tenderly watch to help the hindmost this day.

http://www.spurgeon.org/morn_eve/this_morning.cgi

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By In Theology

A Biblical Case for Classical Education

 

Guest Post by Dr. Steve Jeffery, Minister at Emmanuel Evangelical Church

“Are you serious? Your kids are following a medieval curriculum? From the days of feudalism; when life was nasty, brutish, and short; when people thought the earth was flat and doctors diagnosed their patients by drinking their urine? If that’s what you mean by ‘Classical education,’ you can keep it. I want my kids to have a Christian education.”

These sentiments are a little overstated, perhaps, but for many parents with children in Classical Christian education they’re not entirely unfamiliar. The criticism refers to the “trivium,” the three-fold medieval pattern of grammar, dialectic and rhetoric that lies at the heart of Classical education. This system just isn’t biblical, the argument runs. It’s pure paganism, devised by scholastic casuists long after Christendom crumbled, and now raised from the rubble by well-meaning Christians who’ve read a little too much Bede and Boethius and not enough Bible. No faithful Israelite would ever have dreamed of subjecting his kids to such a crackpot scheme, and you can bet that whatever Timothy learned from Grandma Lois and Ma Eunice, the trivium played no part.

At first glance the criticism seems justified. A medieval system of education might well be preferable to one built on the shifting sands of post-60s educational experimentation, but as Christians we must surely set our standards a little higher than that. And even if the medieval reality didn’t quite reach the depths of the “nasty, brutish, and short” caricature, it wasn’t all wine and roses either. These are the people who bequeathed to posterity the doctrines of purgatory, papal indulgences, and transubstantiation; they’re not the obvious go-to guys when we’re trying to figure out how to raise our kids.

But the critics are wrong. The trivium goes back further than many people think – a lot further, in fact. The roots of the trivium stretch right back to the Bible. These roots are worth exploring, even for parents already convinced of the value of the Classical model. And perhaps a brief biblical outline might also be helpful for parents new to the idea of Classical Christian education – parents who may not readily be convinced merely by the example of some urine-drinking flat-earthers.

Let’s begin with a reminder of the trivium, famously revived in Dorothy L. Sayers’ famous essay “The Lost Tools of Learning.” There Miss Sayers explains the three stages of the medieval trivium: grammar, dialectic, and rhetoric.

During the grammar stage, children were drenched in a flood of raw information. They learned the stories and legends of great literature; the dates, events, and personalities of history; the countries and capitals of the world. Mathematics was all about sums and multiplication tables; theology classes were devoted to the biblical narrative, the creed, and the Ten Commandments; and language lessons were a whirlwind tour of Latin grammar and vocabulary. (I will irk the hardened classicists in passing by signaling my strong preference for Koinē Greek over Latin, but I will not attempt to defend the point here – maybe another day.) Contrary to popular belief, young kids don’t object to this kind of rote-learning in the slightest. Only an adult, for whom the fun of endlessly chanting nursery rhymes is all but forgotten, could think such a thing. Children will happily repeat “Eeny, meeny, miney, moe” ad nauseam; they will be no less amused by “Amo, amas, amat” (or, if I had my way, “Philō, phileis, philei”). If it can be learned by heart, it belongs in the grammar stage, and youngsters will drink it in.

Next came the dialectic stage, when raw facts stepped aside allowing logic and disputation to enter the arena. The aim was to teach the child to think rationally and argue correctly. The study of formal logic was central, and this was then applied across all the subjects whose grammar had previously been learned. The student would be introduced to critical essays and commentaries; to debate and discussion; to historical analysis, advanced arithmetic, systematic theology, and ethics.

The move from grammar to dialectic mirrors the child’s natural development. It begins as they enter the age of the interminable “Why?” questions, when they start to think for themselves and question Mum and Dad’s decisions. They are beginning to cut their dialectical teeth, and they need something to chew on.

Finally, the child entered the rhetoric stage. This was the time for creativity, when literary analysis and criticism gave way to appreciation and self-expression. Budding mathematicians were challenged not merely to learn proofs, but to devise them; young scientists deployed the understanding gained previously to formulate and perform experiments of their own. Above all, the rhetoric stage aimed to equip students to present and defend their views in a coherent, elegant, and persuasive manner. No longer was it sufficient merely to know about the world or understand how it works; the time had come to shape it and change it.

If we turn to the Bible with this three-fold pattern in mind, we notice something intriguing. These three educational stages map exactly onto the structure of God’s self-revelation in Scripture, and thus onto the development of his relationship with his people. Where the trivium says “Grammar, dialectic, rhetoric,” the Bible tells the unfolding story of “Priest, King, Prophet” through Israel’s history.

The first office to dominate in Israel’s life was that of the Priest. True, there were prophets in the early days (Abraham and Moses, for example), but the Priesthood was the first institution to be formally established in the nation of Israel. The people had a tabernacle, regulations for sacrifice, and a well-oiled priestly system long before the monarchy, and many centuries before the writing Prophets showed up.

Priestly existence was simple existence. Training to be a Priest was a matter of learning long lists of detailed rules, the basic grammar of Israel’s relationship with God. Consider the books of Exodus and Leviticus, for example. After Israel escaped from Egypt, the Ten Commandments and the case laws left little doubt about how to negotiate life’s daily conundrums. None of the details of the Tabernacle’s furnishings or the Priestly garments were left to chance; every detail was specified. When the glory of the LORD filled the Tabernacle, leaving Moses and his friends sitting outside in a confused huddle wondering what to do next, the LORD himself came to their aid with several feet of scroll giving precise instructions about sacrificial rituals and priestly ordinations, followed by several feet more about when the sacrifices would be necessary. A Priest didn’t have much creative thinking to do. Indeed, creativity in priestly duties was best avoided, as Nadab and Abihu discovered to their cost. The message was simple: Leave the thinking to God, just follow the rules. That’s all.

The office of King emerged later, and brought much greater complexity. A Priest could get away with following some simple rules, but a King must apply these rules in the complex and every-changing situations of real life. Grammar was no longer enough; a faithful King needed dialectic.

To take a purely random example, a King might be presented with two distraught, squabbling mothers, both claiming that a certain child belongs to them. The situation is confusing, and the King is thrown into the turmoil of conflict and debate. There’s no specific rule to follow here. The King can’t just turn to the appropriate Bible verse and look up the answer. He needs to figure it out for himself. God has given him the tools for the job, but he needs to do a lot more of the thinking.

Godly kings were therefore characterized by wisdom. This wisdom must obviously be built on the foundation of Israel’s priestly grammar, and therefore a newly-enthroned King’s first task was to copy out his own personal copy of the Torah. But mere knowledge was no longer enough. A King must address not just the “What?” of life, but also the “Why?” and the “How?” For this reason, the books of Ecclesiastes, Song of Solomon, and Proverbs – books devoted to these complex and teasing questions – are associated with Solomon, Israel’s preeminent wise King.

The formal office of Prophet emerged last. Of course, Prophets had spoken the word of God from the beginning, but they achieved their greatest prominence only after the establishment of the monarchy, and the earliest writing prophets arose several generations after King David. A Prophet needed to deal with even greater complexity than a King. The King’s job was to keep everything working right; the Prophet stepped in when the King (and with him the whole nation) had gone wrong. In relation to God, the Prophet was a confidant, one with whom the LORD consulted and discussed his plans. But in relation to the world, the Prophet was preeminently a speaker. His task was to persuade, to use words in a powerful and compelling way, to change people’s minds and so to change the world. The Prophet was a mover and shaker, and the successful Prophet was a master of rhetoric.

Now, let’s think about how this Priest–King–Prophet progression applies to individual human lives. Children move through these same three stages as they grow from childhood (Priest) through their teenage years (King) to mature adulthood (Prophet). Of course, there are no hard and fast boundaries – no one turns from a Priest to a King overnight. Moreover, mature adults still have many priestly and kingly responsibilities alongside their prophetic tasks, just as Israel still retained Priests after the establishment of the monarchy. Nonetheless, a definite progression is discernible, both in Israel’s history and in human life, and it is this that provides the basic biblical foundation for what later became known as the trivium.

The significance of these stages of growth is not restricted to a child’s education. The whole of a child’s life has the same shape. It’s immensely valuable for parents to be aware of this, for it helps us to have the right approach to different stages of our children’s development.

Let’s begin with early years of a child’s life – the priestly stage. Here, life is very simple: just do what Mom and Dad tell you. A child’s life needs to be shaped by plenty of straightforward, direct instructions: get up, get dressed (in these clothes), eat your breakfast, don’t put your sister’s doll in the microwave, and so on. As parents, we need to make sure our instructions are clear and unambiguous, or our children won’t know what to do, we’ll end up frustrated, and they’ll be upset and confused. Don’t worry if your little toddler doesn’t yet figure much out by himself; he’s not ready for this. If your three-year-old spills her breakfast cereal all over the floor while you’re out of the room, don’t get annoyed that she hasn’t taken the initiative to start clearing it up. She’s still at the priestly stage, and initiative isn’t in the job description. But if you say, “C’mon, sweetie, eat your Cheerios,” and she throws a tantrum, then that’s the moment to lay down the law, because laws are precisely what the little darling needs in these early years.

As the years pass, a wise parent will start to give a growing child more and more kingly responsibility. A child might receive pocket money, and will therefore need to show a degree of wisdom and discernment in spending it. He’ll be given a little more freedom in how he uses his time. He’ll be given tasks that require thought and initiative (“Could you get some breakfast for your sister, son?”) rather than straightforward jobs requiring simple obedience. And if he scatters Cheerios all over the floor before heading out to play baseball in the back yard, then a firm hand is in order, because by now he should be able to figure out for himself that a tidy kitchen comes before the perfect curveball.

As adulthood approaches, life takes on more prophetic aspects. Instead of merely working out how to spend money, the older teenager needs to work out how to earn it. Instead of just taking the initiative to help keep the house clean and tidy, the young woman (no longer the little girl) will have to work out for herself how her own home ought to be managed. After all, one day she’ll have flown the nest and be managing her own household. Then it won’t be enough merely to keep the rules (like a Priest), or even to understand the complexities of the world (like a King); she and her husband will need to knock it back into shape when it goes wrong. This is the task of a Prophet.

This Priest–King–Prophet structure also helps us to identify some ways in which a child’s upbringing can go wrong. One potential problem is that a child never learns the priestly rules before entering the more complicated kingly and prophetic stages of life. Children who have not been trained in the basic rules of godliness – love your neighbor as yourself, keep the Ten Commandments, bear the fruit of the Spirit – have not the slightest hope of dealing with the complexity of life at college or in the workplace. It was the same in ancient Israel. The King needed to master the priestly rules in all their glorious simplicity if he was to have any hope of applying them in the rough and tumble of the world. For this reason, parents should be unashamed about teaching their kids the basic dos and don’ts of Christian godliness at an early age. Ten Commandment wallcharts in the nursery and fruit of the Spirit pictures on the bathroom door are not an admission of defeat; they’re early signposts along exactly the right road.

The different problem can occur when parents refuse to let their children grow up. Many Christian parents do a great job of training young priests – children well-versed in the ABCs of the Christian life. These children often grow rapidly, becoming Kings and Prophets faster than their parents might expect, and by the age of eighteen or so they’re pretty much ready for the world. At this point the parents panic and slam the gates shut, unnerved or even intimidated by the spiritual stature of their six-foot baby. They misinterpret their child’s energy and drive as rebellion, and create in him a spirit of restlessness and resentment. This is not the fault of the child; it’s the fault of the parents. For the child is in fact no longer a child at all; he’s an adult, and it’s about time he was allowed to live like one. The farmer who raises a prize-winning 1000-pound bull has done a great job. But the farmer who persists in keeping that snorting beast in the same little pen where it was born shouldn’t be surprised if he wakes up one morning to find the gate hanging off its hinges.

In the end, all of this boils down to a single lesson: Parents must live by faith in the covenant promises of God. Parents who really believe that God keeps his promises to his people and to their children will joyfully anticipate the day when their children become better parents than they. Just as every child needs to learn that he is not yet an adult, all parents need to learn that their kids one day will be. We’re preparing them for that day in order to let them go.

Steve Jeffery is Minister of Emmanuel Evangelical Church, London, UK. He blogs on the church website at  www.northlondonchurch.org<>как посмотреть на какой позиции

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By In Books, Scribblings

Dewey’s Pragmatism vs. Poetic Knowledge

poetic knowledge coverHere’s a quote from James S. Taylor’s Poetic Knowledge: The Recovery of Education:

[John] Dewey’s so-called pragmatism, as it filtered down to the masses who largely never read a word he wrote, fit neatly into the American view of education for the good life.  It was perfect, in its popular versions, for the American oligarchic man, that is, the practical businessman seeking not only to retain, but to increase his property and profits. Ideas were important to these descendants of the European industrial revolutions and the new notions of the wealth of nations, insofar as they worked toward increasing the common wealth of the country and the personal wealth of those practical and clever enough to succeed. The typical American businessman had no time for philosophy–he was smart enough to know it required real leisure–but he loved what he understood of pragmatism. Quite often the oligarchic man was honest, hardworking, and fair; he even might quote a poem or two he had memorized and enjoy reciting a verse on special occasions. But how could he ever see the use in pursuing a life of contemplation and leisure, since there was not “use” in these things anyway? And when the needs of oligarchic America begin to be felt in the schools and colleges, when schools themselves became more and more places where the “product” and “commodity” of education was “produced,” then what there was of the poetic mode was assigned to the token English or humanities teacher, so that the students would have a practical sense of literature, history, and philosophy. Then, when schooling was finally over, the student could plunge into the “real world. (p. 102)

That’s as far as I am into the book. This is not meant to be a review of the book, but the above quote seemed a great summary of Dewey’s initiative and the resulting impact it’s had on American education and culture. Here’s a link to Matt Bianco’s full review of Poetic Knowledge on his blog: http://mattbian.co/tag/poetic-knowledge/

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By In Family and Children

Practicing Hospitality

Guest Post by Rev. Gregg Strawbridge

Just a little after the Council of Nicea in 325 AD, Flavius Claudius Julianus, was born in 332. He became infamous: Julian the Apostate. He tried to reinstate paganism despite the fact that he was the last of the Constantian emperors of Rome. Augustine reports how Julian the Apostate (the Roman emperor, 361-363) would not permit masters of rhetoric and grammar to teach Christians. Why? Because the liberal arts were “conducive to the acquisition of argumentative and persuasive power” (City of God, 18). Philip Schaff, wrote of this episode in Church history:

“Julian would thus deny Christian youth the advantages of education, and compel them either to sink in ignorance and barbarism or to imbibe with the study of the classics in the heathen schools of the principles of idolatry. . . Hence he hated especially the learned church teachers, Basil, Gregory of Nazianzen, Apollinaris of Laodicea, who applied the classical culture to the refutation of heathenism and the defence of Christianity…” (Church History, Vol. 3, pp. 53-54).

While he suppressed Christians through these educational policies for a time, there was something that he could not suppress: the hospitality of Christians. In Julian’s Letter “To Arsacius, High-priest of Galatia,” he complained against Christians, “the impious Galilaeans support not only their own poor but ours as well,” and “it is their benevolence to strangers” that keeps Hellenistic religion from greater acceptance.

The concept of hospitality is woven into the fabric on the gospel. The Father sent Jesus as the bread of life for the world. He showed the ultimate kindness to those at enmity with Him (Rom. 5:8). Though the world rejected Him at first, by His grace, He efficaciously called us to Himself and continually serves us. The terms translated in the NT strongly convey the concept: Philoxenia literally means, love for strangers or foreigners. Hospitality is kindness to strangers (Rom. 12:13, 1 Pet. 4:9). Another term, Xenodocheo (a verb) means literally to “lodge strangers” (1Tim. 5:10). Jesus taught this in Luke 14:12–14:

“When you give a luncheon or a dinner, do not invite your friends or your brothers or your relatives or rich neighbors, otherwise they may also invite you in return and that will be your repayment. But when you give a reception, invite the poor, the crippled, the lame, the blind, and you will be blessed, since they do not have the means to repay you; for you will be repaid at the resurrection of the righteous.”

When we welcome others, strangers, foreigners, those that are different, this approaches the idea of hospitality. Many times, we have our friends over, whom we feel comfortable with and know that they will repay the kindness. This may be good to do, but it misses the mark of the biblical commands of hospitality. Hospitality takes us beyond our comforts into those awkward and somewhat fearful places of risking ourselves and our goods, without knowing or caring about a return. When we truly show hospitality, there is sometimes an occasion for complaining, e.g., since we did not get any return on our investment. This is why Peter adds a second exhortation to being hospitable: “Be hospitable to one another without complaint (1 Pet. 4:9). Why would he have to say this? Because welcoming and serving those you know least and who are not your close and comfortable friends sometimes creates the occasion of guests not responding graciously.

If you knew your next guests would not be very gracious, would not be very grateful, and would even do some damage to your property (e.g., one of the kids break a dish), would you still serve them? The biblical answer is that true hospitality does not look for reward or repayment here or now. It acts on the basis of grace already received and gives without the need for human repayment. In this way the gospel can be preached through casseroles and cupcakes, through burgers, brats, and blueberries, when these are freely and graciously given.

I think once we have a right mind about hospitality (stranger love based on grace and looking for no repayment), then we must apply this to our own church circumstances. Hospitality is a means of loving people to Christ and to the means of grace in your church. It provides a means of general ministry for you and your family. It provides opportunities with visiting missionaries, pastors, or Christian workers.

Let Me Get Specific

  • Schedule it. Set a regular time to reach out to those you don’t know well.
  • Set a goal: Every family in the church over a set time period, starting with those least known to you.
  • Write it down: Make a list of people who may need to be encouraged by your service.
  • Practice kindness:
    • “Some folks make you feel at home. Others make you wish you were.” Arnold H. Glasow.
    • Learn to ask meaningful questions; make the conversation about your guests; seek to understand their spiritual journey; focus on knowing Christ, not secondary matters; don’t be negative; look for gifts and graces in guest’s lives; ask for matters about which you can pray and then pray.
    • Practice serving and hosting in peace: Proverbs 15:17 – “Better is a dish of vegetables where love is than a fattened ox served with hatred.” Proverbs 17:1 – “Better is a dry morsel and quietness with it than a house full of feasting with strife.”
  • Volunteer to house missionaries or traveling servants of the Lord.

Hospitality by hosting families for a meal can be a wonderful service. Unfortunately, we sometimes fall into the pattern of hosting those who least need it. One of the challenges in the Church today is the tendency for divisions along social and/or economic lines. Some perceive themselves as “normal” and view others not like them as “fringe.” There are those that have less means and space. They may feel intimidated by others and fear that what they could offer is “not good enough” for another family.

Epiphany in the kitchen. Some years ago an acquaintance invited our family to a meal along with another family, whom we also did not know very well. There was a slight amount of concern on my part: will this be enjoyable, awkward, stressful, peaceful? As soon as we arrived, we were put to work cutting up vegetables, sautéing mushrooms, peeling shrimp, filling up water glasses. We did not know these people very well and very soon we were conversing freely in the kitchen. The meal was great, but I hardly remember it. What I do remember is that the experience of simple preparations drew me into their lives.

Here’s a way to help overcome those self-made (imagined) obstacles. Bring all kinds of people in to share at your table and have them help in preparing the food. There is a place for simply serving others without their co-laboring. But I think some shared preparation opens up several possibilities to help overcome that awkwardness of a first invitation, of not knowing a person well, especially they are not at your exact socio-economic place.

  • Preparation together changes the conversation to what is naturally before you and eases you into other conversation.
  • Working together in the kitchen breaks down those imagined barriers.
  • Providing guests with a needed service (however small) provides a way for them to feel even greater acceptance.

Consider some meals that work well with shared preparation:

  • Salad – Most people can cut up vegetables (and other toppings). Some can mix herbs, oil and vinegar for homemade dressing. This can be a full meal or just the first course of a meal. We often do this by preparing some steak and/or salmon ahead of time for a chef/steak salad with a side of bread.
  • Homemade pizzas – If you can make a good crust, then great. Otherwise pre-mades are widely available. Have guests cut veggies, mushrooms, sausage, create special sauce (tomato sauce, garlic, olive oil, spices). Serve it in courses starting with a cheese pizza, then a veggie, then a classic italian, then a dessert pizza, etc. Let the guests lead on the selections. Get everyone involved and let everyone choose.
  • Hotpot – This is now my favorite such meal. It is a little like fondue without all the specialized equipment. Hotpot seems to be a pan-Asian meal that varies from region to region. It begins with a broth based soup and is very simple to make. Crock pot a chicken or a duck, strain the fat and bones. Add water and spices. We like ginger and five-spice for a truly Asian taste, but it can be bland to begin. Cook a large bowl of rice and/or rice noodles. Put the pot (on an electric burner) on the table. Let guests cut up veggies, mushrooms, shrimp, scallops, peel eggs (we like quail eggs), thinly sliced beef, tofu, etc. Everyone gets a bowl with rice. The first course is just broth on the rice. Then add an assortment of veggies (guests can select) to the pot and let them cook for a few minutes (keep adding water to it). Serve the second veggie course and notice the change in the broth. For the next course try a different assortment of veggies with mushrooms (in the pot). Then tofu, then seafood, then beef. This meal promotes conversation and a long time at the table. Remarkably, no one left stuffed after about 10 courses!

These kinds of meals provide an opportunity to share in the preparation, as well as show something about the gospel. When we welcome others into the fellowship, we share Christ and build up the Body. Many different ingredients go into the pot, but it becomes one meal. Hospitality within the Body of Christ keeps this in mind. We are not all alike, but we are like Him. We are not the same, but we belong to the same Lord. We are not much separate, but become a mighty army under our one Head, Jesus Christ.

Dr. Gregg Strawbridge is the Pastor of All Saints Church<>поисковое продвижение ов в яндексе

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Joshua’s Covenant Theology

Guest Post by Joshua Torrey

I have been on a hiatus. I have been laying off covenant issues and trying for the most part to play nice with everyone in the theological playground. But recently, I got to listen to the final chapters of my namesake, and it was within Joshua 23 & 24 that I got a profound look at the promises of God and proper Covenant Theology (CT).

There are certainly many varieties of CT. From Murray to Kline, there are great distinctions in the Reformed realm. And now with a growth of Baptist Federalists and New CT, there are large distinctions among Baptists as well. There are theological halfway points in between and on every side. But here in Joshua, I once again found one of the reasons I hold to what I do.

Principally, it is this: that between the fall of Adam and the Second Coming of Jesus Christ, God’s covenant community is made up of regenerate and unregenerate members. This is reflected in the dual nature of every covenant. Every covenant has blessings and curses, conditional and unconditional promises. Theologies that attempted to diminish this duality or embellish portions above another only do disservice to the text in the name of systematic theology. I’ll address this a little more shortly. But first the text,

“Now I am about to go the way of all the earth. You know with all your heart and soul that not one of all the good promises the Lord your God gave you has failedEvery promise has been fulfilled; not one has failed. But just as all the good things the Lord your God has promised you have come to you, so he will bring on you all the evil things he has threatened, until the Lord your God has destroyed you from this good land he has given you. If you violate the covenant of the Lord your God, which he commanded you, and go and serve other gods and bow down to them, the Lord’s anger will burn against you, and you will quickly perish from the good land he has given you.” – Joshua 23:14-16 (NASB)

Now, set aside the fact that Joshua depicts himself as about to die (this changes the context of “as for me and my house…” though doesn’t it?). Take a look at the perfect duality of God’s covenant administration. Just as He fulfills every promise so He also fulfills the curses. That I apply this duality to the New Covenant founded in Christ often bothers individuals. Hebrews seems to present this blessing/curse motif through typological means. So do many crucial portions of Romans (I’ll address a few texts from Romans shortly). So why do people take issue?

Because for many, a paradigm that permits covenant members to receive blessing or curse, seems to make salvation itself works-oriented. If it’s works-oriented, it’s not of grace. And if it’s not of grace, I’ve undermined the entire doctrine of justification. Thankfully, I don’t believe I have done this or slipped down the slope of such logic.  I don’t believe Peter and Paul are guilty of it when they require people to “call on the name of the Lord” either (Acts 2:21; Rom 10:13). The type of works-based salvation that must be rejected is the one the makes works meritorious in nature. In simple terms, it is the concept that a certain action, or set of actions, brings us into good standing with God. I do not support this perspective or this type of theology.

What I support is a theology that God provides salvation to those who have faith because of His grace. Faith is no meritorious work. But it must be done. Those who are to be saved must believe. And according to James, this faith must not be dead (found without works). So how does this impact my view of covenant membership? Let me lay a little ground work and then turn to Paul in Romans 9.

The trap most modern CT falls into is the thought that without faith we should not be counted as in covenant with God. Baptists demonstrate this with their practice of “believers” baptism. And many Presbyterians demonstrate this with their rejection of paedocommunion (waiting instead for a “confession”). But both of these perceive faith in a meritorious sense. An expression of faith brings us into the covenant benefits of God. Instead, I see the Scriptures (and consistent Reformed teaching) saying that God brings us into covenant with Him before faith. Circumcision testifies to this and we see the effects of it in the book of Joshua. It is after being brought into this covenant that the blessings and curses are laid upon the people of Israel. Those with faith receive the blessing of the covenant. And because they know this to be true and have seen it they should also know that those without faith receive the curse.

But do we see this kind of thinking in the New Testament? I think we do quite explicitly,

I am telling the truth in Christ, I am not lying, my conscience testifies with me in the Holy Spirit, that I have great sorrow and unceasing grief in my heart.  For I could wish that I myself were accursed, separated from Christ for the sake of my brethren, my kinsmen according to the flesh…But it is not as though the word of God has failed. For they are not all Israel who are descended from Israel; nor are they all children because they are Abraham’s descendants, but: “through Isaac your descendants will be named.” – Romans 9:1-3, 6-7

Here Paul is responding to the theological question of why those with the covenant blessings (Rom 9:4-5) receive curses. And Paul’s point is simple: God’s word cannot fail. Just like in the passage of Joshua, God’s covenant blessings are a reminder to the covenant people that those who shrink back from God will receive the curses. But does Paul apply this type of thinking to the church? I not only believe that he does, but I believe the only way to explain Romans 11:17-24 consistently is from this covenantal perspective. This is why Paul stresses that unbelief and faith are the criteria for this relationship in the vine (Rom 11:20, 23).

Ultimately in soteriology, our faithfulness to the covenant (the fulfillment of these faith passages in Romans 11) cannot be meritorious. Our faithfulness to the covenant is purchased in Christ. In faith we receive the blessing of the covenant because Christ received the curse of the covenant. But there remains those who enter the covenant and trample upon the faithfulness of Christ by their lack of faith (Heb 10:29).

This is where the value of Joshua’s statement comes front and center in practicality. Those seeking to disassociate God’s promises from His cruses unwittingly neglect both. Those who try and pit “conditional covenants” against “unconditional covenants” have missed the entire point. There are no covenants that God has made apart from the fulfillment of His Son. All covenants in this regard are covenants of grace. But there are covenants in which God has permitted non-elect men to attempt the conditions apart from grace. These shall fail and break the covenant bringing the curses upon themselves. And in seeing the faithfulness of God in these curses, we know the faithfulness of God in the blessings of the covenant (Josh 23:15). This is a proper covenant theology. This is Joshua’s covenant theology.<>mobi onlineпродвижение по факту

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Rosie’s Rainbow

My children regularly remind me that we are those sanctified in Christ Jesus, called to be saints together with all those who in every place call upon the name of our Lord Jesus Christ (1 Cor. 1:2), which is good, because I often forget.

 
For example, a few weeks ago after a rain, my daughter, Rose, and I were strolling down our driveway on the way to Grandma’s house. (She lives next door.) As we traveled east, the light from the sun setting behind us was broken down into a glorious arc of the visible spectrum, cast onto the sky before us. We were walking straight into an ever-increasingly visible rainbow. Instead of being suspended, it stood on the hills: two feet firmly planted on the horizon–a complete arc in between.

As we walked its brilliance steadily became more and more breathtaking. In her astonishment, Rose inquired, “Why do we have rainbows?” I, her father, her teacher, her guide, began to explain all sorts of things I knew very little about: water, light, angles of incidence and refraction, frequencies, photon packets–well, we didn’t get to photons, but I was hoping we would. She dutifully listened until I finished my very sciency sentence, and then responded, “No. I mean why did God put it in the sky? What was the promise?”

Humbled and grateful, I changed gears. We traveled back to Genesis and talked about Noah, boats, animals, sin, and finding favor in the sight of God. We discussed how God makes promises and keeps promises: that the earth will never again be destroyed by water. We talked about how God and Noah and his family were like God and Christ and the church, like Peter talks about (1 Peter 3). We talked about God redeeming creation in Christ Jesus, like Paul talks about (Rom. 8).

After my second dissertation in 5 minutes, there was a brief pause. Then she said, “I wish I could slide down it into the pot of gold at the end.” Before I jumped in and crushed her living and active imagination with another sagacious lecture, God gave grace, and I replied, “Me too, Rosie. Me too.”

Originally posted at the author’s personal blog here.<>vzlom-viberреклама про гугл

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C. S. Lewis: The Poison of Subjectivism

christian reflections“Shortly after his conversion in 1929, C. S. Lewis wrote to a friend: ‘When all is said (and truly said) about the divisions of Christendom, there remains, by God’s mercy, an enormous common ground.’ From that time on Lewis thought that the best service he could do for his unbelieving neighbors was to explain and defend the belief that has been common to nearly all Christians at all times–that ‘enormous common ground’ which he usually referred to as ‘mere’ Christianity.” Thus begins Walter Hooper’s preface to his collection of C. S. Lewis’ essays entitled Christian Reflections, published in 1966, just three years after Lewis’ death.

The essays concern sundry topics, but are united under the banner of Lewis’ pristine logic and unswerving commitment to the Christian faith. Here’s an excerpt from the essay, “The Poison of Subjectivism.”

If “good” and “better” are terms deriving their sole meaning from the ideology of each people, then of course ideologies themselves cannot be better or worse than one another. Unless the measuring rod is independent of the things measured, we can do no measuring. For the same reason it is useless to compare the moral ideas of one age with those of another: progress and decadence are alike meaningless words.

All this is so obvious that it amounts to an identical proposition. But how little it is now understood can be gauged from the procedure of the moral reformer who, after saying that “good” means “what we are conditioned to like” goes on cheerfully to consider whether it might be “better” that we should be conditioned to like something else. What in Heaven’s name does he mean by “better”?

He usually has at the back of his mind the notion that if he throws over traditional judgement of value, he will find something else, something more “real” or “solid” on which to base a new scheme of values. He will say, for example, “We must abandon irrational taboos and base our values on the good of the community” – as if the maxim “Thou shalt promote the good of the community’ were anything more than a polysyllabic variant of ‘Do as you would be done by’ which has itself no other basis than the old universal value judgement that he claims to be rejecting. Or he will endeavor to base his values on biology and tell us that we must act thus and thus for the preservation of our species. Apparently he does not anticipate the question, ‘Why should the species be preserved?’ He takes it for granted that it should, because he is really relying on traditional judgements of value. If he were starting, as he pretends, with a clean slate, he could never reach this principle. Sometimes he tries to do so by falling back on “instinct.” “We have an instinct to preserve our species”, he may say. But have we? And if we have, who told us that we must obey our instincts? And why should we obey this instinct in the teeth of many others which conflict with the preservation of the species? The reformer knows that some instincts are to be obeyed more than others only because he is judging instincts by a standard, and the standard is, once more, the traditional morality which he claims to be superseding. The instincts themselves obviously cannot furnish us with grounds for grading the instincts in a hierarchy. If you do not bring a knowledge of their comparative respectability to your study of them, you can never derive it from them.

The essay is only 10 pages long but ought not be despised for its brevity. Its main thesis revolves around an assertion of Natural Law that is common to all men everywhere in every time. He even discusses what Reformed theologians coin the ‘noetic effects of the Fall,’ though he does not use that phrase. Near the end, Lewis discusses the fact that Christianity is trinitarian and how this correct understanding of the God who is helps us reconcile the relationship between ‘God’ and ‘good.’ He surmises “that God neither obeys nor creates the moral law. The good is uncreated; it never could have been otherwise; it has no shadow of contingency..”

Lewis concludes with some examples of the practical fallout of subjectivism:

God is not merely good, but goodness; goodness is not merely divine, but God.

These may seem fine-spun speculations: yet I believe that nothing short of this can save us. A Christianity which does not see moral and religious experience converging to meet at infinity, not at a negative infinity, but in the positive infinity of the living yet superpersonal God, has nothing, in the long run, to divide it from devil worship; and a philosophy which does not accept value as eternal and objective can lead us only to ruin. Nor is the matter of merely speculative importance. Many a popular “planner” on a democratic platform, many a mild-eyed scientist in a democratic laboratory means, in the last resort, just what the Fascist means. He believes that “good” means whatever men are conditioned to approve. He believes that it is the function of him and his kind to condition men; to create consciences by eugenics, psychological manipulation of infants, state education and mass propaganda. Because he is confused, he does not yet fully realize that those who create conscience cannot be subject to conscience themselves. But he must awake to the logic of his position sooner or later; and when he does, what barrier remains between us and the final division of the race into a few conditioners who stand themselves outside morality and the many conditioned in whom such morality as the experts choose is produced at the experts’ pleasure? If “good” means only the local ideology, how can those who invent the local ideology be guided by any idea of good themselves? The very idea of freedom presupposes some objective moral law which overarches rulers and ruled alike. Subjectivism about values is eternally incompatible with democracy. We and our rulers are of one kind only so long as we are subject to one law. But if there is no Law of Nature, the ethos of any society is the creation of its rulers, educators and conditioners; and every creator stands above and outside his creation.

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