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October 9, 2007

Christianity and Culture

A bunch of columns appear this week on Christianity and Culture. Cal Thomas reacts on the heels of President Bush's comments that we all worship the same, universal God...

In an official transcript released by the White House, the president said, "I believe in an almighty God, and I believe that all the world, whether they be Muslim, Christian, or any other religion, prays to the same God." Later in the interview, the president repeated his statement: "I believe there is a universal God. I believe the God that the Muslim prays to is the same God that I pray to. After all, we all came from Abraham. I believe in that universality." It is one thing to try to reach out to moderate and sincerely peaceful Muslims. It is quite another to say the claims of your own faith are of no greater importance than the often contradictory claims of another faith.
 The Same God?, Cal Thomas

David Limbaugh finds that we're all quite confused these days about things that should matter to us...

...it is hard to understand how people, even our Christian president, can think that those who don't believe in the Triune God of the Bible or the deity of Jesus Christ worship the same God as Christians do. The idea flatly contradicts Christ's assertion, "I am the way and the truth and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me," and removes any incentive to evangelize. No matter what our sterile demographic statistics might tell us, it's difficult to believe that Christian ideas and values are dominant in this nation anymore.
 Confusion Everywhere, David Limbaugh

And Paul Edwards finds that our current culture's measure of a church favors quantity over quality...

Outreach Magazine is out with its list of the 100 Largest U.S. Churches for 2007. Of course, no such list appears anywhere in scripture. While it certainly could be argued that numbers mattered to the New Testament church, churches in the New Testament are nowhere ranked in terms of their numbers. Can you imagine any of the inspired writers of the New Testament ranking the church at Ephesus above the church at Philippi, and Philippi above the church at Thessalonica based solely on how many people were showing up each week?
 Who Makes Christians?, Paul Edwards

June 17, 2007

Paris Hilton's New Found Faith

Paris HiltonSpeaking from jail to ABC's Barbara Walters, Paris Hilton says she's been changed by the experience of going to jail.

I'm not the same person I was. I used to act dumb. It was an act. I am 26 years old, and that act is no longer cute. It is not who I am, nor do I want to be that person for the young girls who looked up to me. I know now that I can make a difference, that I have the power to do that. I have been thinking that I want to do different things when I am out of here. I have become much more spiritual. God has given me this new chance.

Before we get too excited about her new found faith, know that it is not classic Christianity. In jail, Paris says she's reading three books - "The Secret," "The Power of Now" and the Bible. The first two are antithetical to the bible, and based on Eleaticism, the monistic theory of being. Frank Pastore informs us that the two questionable books are Oprah recommended, which is usually a huge red flag in itself.

 Paris Tells Walters: "God Has Released Me", ABC News

 Paris Hilton's Summer Reading, Frank Pastore

 The Science of Getting Rich, Wallace D. Wattles

March 26, 2007

James Cameron's Discredited Storyline

Sometimes the media is just lazy. Without impugning their motives for covering the Cameron theories, it's just sloppy journalism. But it's easy to turn his press releases into 2 1/2 minute packages and slap them on the air. Problem is, the story was discredited years ago...

Poor James Cameron. He wanted some of that Da Vinci Code action so badly that he jumped on a 27 year old story line that everyone else in Hollywood had wisely passed on. He ignored so many early warning signs, too. When he was hav-ing trouble early on finding A, B, or even C list "scientific experts" who were willing to throw their careers away if they would only validate his silly theories - and they all continued saying no - he didn't let that slow him down one bit. He pressed on and signed the minor league guys. And later, when the best he could come up with for his advance publicity hook was to claim statistically similar names and unrelated DNA samples - He still didn't pull the plug - even though any-one who has ever seen just one episode of CSI is sharp enough to spit out the bait. More astute critics simply repeated what the original archaeologist on the scene had pointed out: that a poor family from Bethlehem could never afford a mid-dle-class tomb in which to place the ossuaries in Jerusalem, especially during a famine, and that the names on the boxes were far too common to jump to any conclusions about having found The Jesus Family Tomb.

 Continue Reading: The Lost Tomb of Jesus? Things you'd have to believe to believe James Cameron, Frank Pastore

March 25, 2007

The Moving Target of Skeptics

Skeptics are like weeds... once you get rid of some, others spring up in their place.

skeptics

February 28, 2007

On God's Omniscience in War

Here's an aspect of the capture of Saddam Hussein you won't hear on the mainstream evening newscasts:

A Christian from central Texas said that God knew where Saddam Hussein was, so Russell decided to follow his advice and pray that God would show him where Hussein was. He said he also encouraged his men to pray that God would show them Hussein's location. A turning point in the search came not long after that. A member of an important family was captured, and he said he knew where Hussein was located.

 Continue Reading: Veteran describes the capture of Saddam Hussein, The Norman Transcript

February 6, 2007

Churchgoers - How Long Will They Stay?

Many churches suffer from what I'll call a revolving door syndrome, regularly adding members to the rolls while others are dropping off for no good reason. Some churches no longer have official membership, opting instead for a defacto membership of those who are present. Outside of those who move away and transfer to another church of like faith, a significant number seem unhappy, and searching for more. A recent study looks at how long typical church attenders stick with it...

Research conducted for Facts & Trends magazine revealed that the average length of time American Protestant adults have been attending the same church is 13.7 years. However, excluding the minority who cite a very long stay at the church, a more accurate median figure, the study noted, is 6.6 years. For older adults (55 and over), the average length of attendance at the same congregation is 15 years. Overall, 13 percent of churchgoers say they have been attending the current congregations for less than a year; 16 percent have been at the same church for one to two years; 11 percent for three to four years; 18 percent for five to nine years; 16 percent for 10 to 19 years; and 26 percent for two decades or longer.

 Continue Reading: Study: How Loyal are Churchgoers?, Christian Post

January 2, 2007

Scientists Consider Free-Will

Free will - do we have it or not? That's the question scientists are now considering, rehashing the debates of philosophy and religion:

Mark Hallett, a researcher with the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, said, "Free will does exist, but it's a perception, not a power or a driving force. People experience free will. They have the sense they are free. "The more you scrutinize it, the more you realize you don't have it," he said. That is hardly a new thought. The German philosopher Arthur Schopenhauer said, as Einstein paraphrased it, that "a human can very well do what he wants, but cannot will what he wants." Einstein, among others, found that a comforting idea. "This knowledge of the non-freedom of the will protects me from losing my good humor and taking much too seriously myself and my fellow humans as acting and judging individuals," he said. How comforted or depressed this makes you might depend on what you mean by free will.

 Free Will: Now You Have It, Now You Don't, Dennis Overbye, NY Times

December 18, 2006

Christians in Military - A Security Threat?

Some are complaining about Christians in the military, particularly those at the Pentagon who openly express their faith on the job. Funny how these complainers don't express the same outrage about actual religious extremists who want to kill us all...

The Defense Department is looking into how access was granted a year ago to an evangelical Christian group that shot a promotional video inside the Pentagon. It included active duty military officers speaking on the group's behalf while in uniform. A Pentagon spokesman said Monday the Defense Department had received a letter from a religious freedom watchdog group raising questions about whether the access granted to the Christian Embassy violated the Constitution or regulations prohibiting military endorsement of any one religion or religious organization. Christian Embassy Executive Director Robert Varney said his organization was granted permission by the Defense Department... Maj. Stewart Upton emphasized several points about Defense Department policy, including that it does not endorse any one religion or religious organization; it provides free access of religion for all members of the military services...

 Inspector General Looking Into Christian Group's Film Taped at Pentagon, Fox News

 Pentagon Pentagon Evangelism Called 'National Security Threat', CNS News

December 17, 2006

Brown University Blocks Reformed Student Group

In a time when the most bizarre student groups are recognized, colleges and universities continue to fight the existence of Christian groups on campus. Brown University is one example of this, suspending Reformed University Fellowship, a Presbyterian Church in America student group from meeting on campus. Brown now says the group may be reinstated with certain conditions, though it is unclear whether these terms and conditions apply equally to all student groups:

[Brown University's Office of the Chaplains and Religious Life] OCRL derecognized RUF in September under dubious pretenses. First, OCRL claimed that Trinity Presbyterian Church had withdrawn its support for RUF; this was patently false and Trinity senior pastor David Sherwood immediately e-mailed OCRL to assert the church’s support for RUF. Then OCRL claimed that RUF had not been a recognized student organization since the previous year because RUF’s then-adviser had failed to punctually submit the proper paperwork (even though RUF’s current adviser had turned in this year’s paperwork in a timely manner). OCRL also claimed that RUF’s leadership had created a “culture of contempt and dishonesty,” but never responded to RUF’s request for specific examples of contemptuous and dishonest conduct.

 Continue Reading: Brown University Agrees to Reinstate Suspended Religious Organization, But Concerns Remain, The Torch

December 15, 2006

A God of Toys

Pig starts out thinking big...

...but rat convinces him to think small. I'm wondering how often it's that way with God and prayer. Do we pray for big things or is God just in charge of things like yo-yos?

December 10, 2006

Experiments in High-Testosterone Worship

Does faith emasculate men? Christian Evangelist Brad Stine says so, in an article written by Jenny Jarvie and Stephanie Simon of the LA Times:

"Thank you, Lord, for our testosterone!" It's an apt anthem for a contrarian movement gaining momentum on the fringes of Christianity. In daybreak fraternity meetings and weekend paintball wars, in wilderness retreats and X-rated chats about lust, thousands of Christian men are reaching for more forceful, more rugged expressions of their faith. Stine's daylong revival meeting, which he calls "GodMen," is cruder than most. But it's built around the same theory as the other experimental forums: Traditional church worship is emasculating. ..."for heaven's sakes, don't ask the guys to take the hand of the guys next to them. That scares them to death."

 Continue Reading: Manliness is next to godliness, Los Angeles Times

November 1, 2006

A God Who Will Listen?

Gator searches for a god who will listen to him...

October 5, 2006

Galatians and Justification

Rev. Charles Biggs is writing a study on Galatians dealing with some of the controversial views threatening the doctrine of justification including the New Perspective on Paul, the Federal Vision, modern Roman Catholicism and modern evangelicalism. Biggs is pastor of Ketoctin Covenant Presbyterian Church in Purcellville, VA.

If we ask "What would Jesus do?" before we remind ourselves of the gospel and ask "What has Jesus already done for me?" then we are in danger of substituting a righteousness of our own making with Christ's righteousness!

 Continue Reading: The Gospel According to Galatians, A Place For Truth

September 15, 2006

To Worship In Spirit and In Truth

While our pastor was on sabbatical, I was asked to write a column for our church newsletter's Q&A section. The question: John 4:24 states "God is spirit, and his worshipers must worship in spirit and in truth." What does John mean by this, and what is the practical application for us?


Continue reading "To Worship In Spirit and In Truth" »

August 1, 2006

Fifty-Thousand Imprisoned Christians in North Korea

Word today that a whole lot of Christians are imprisoned in North Korea, presumably because of their faith:

An international missionary organization Open Doors International asserted that of 200,000 Christians residing in North Korea, 50,000~70,000 believers are being detained in gulags. Open Doors International is an organization known for ministering to communist countries. In an interview with 'Radio Free Asia' (RFA) on the 14th, Director Estabrooks revealed "Although 200,000 Christians in North Korea may seem like an exaggerated number, in actual this figure does not even amount to 1% of North Korea's population." Open Doors International began its ministry in 1955 during the Cold War era where bibles were distributed to communist countries such as the Soviet Union, Eastern Europe and China. Last March, the organization announced the world's top 50 countries under persecution, with North Korea maintaining the lead for the past 4 years.

 Continue Reading: 50,000-70,000 North Korean Christians Detained in Gulags, Daily NK

July 8, 2006

US Pastor Slammed for Anti-Islam Rant

Clergy that criticize Islam get noticed:

- A prominent US pastor and a former advisor to President George W. Bush has drawn fire from leaders in the Muslim minority, rights activists and politicians for calling Islam a "dangerous" religion. "It appears that he doesn't have that much knowledge about Islam," Altaf Ali, executive director of the Florida Chapter of the Council of American-Islamic Relations, told The Miami Herald on Saturday, July 8. "I want a chance to respond and refute these accusations," Ali added. Appearing on the Steve Kane Radio Show, The Rev. O'Neal Dozier, a Broward clergyman and an ally of Governor Jeb Bush, criticized Islam as a "cult" religion. "The Islamic religion in my view is a cult," Dozier told the Herald Friday, July 7, when asked to recap the controversial comments he made earlier on the show. "On the show I said that Islam is a dangerous religion," he added, refusing to disavow his comments. "'I don't look for everyone to believe what I believe, because everyone is not as astute about religion as I am," added Dozier, pastor of the Worldwide Christian Center in Pompano Beach.

 Continue Reading: US Pastor Slammed for Anti-Islam Rant, Islam Online

June 1, 2006

Reforming your iPod

Jim Bublitz says he's reformed his iPod, using it to catch edifying podcasts and mp3 files from the web:

Ok, so maybe the Reformers didn't really own iPods... Pod Casting is a technology which automatically downloads your favorite radio programs or sermons, and deposits them onto your iPod for you. It saves you the step of going out on the internet to download your favorite programs on a regular basis. Just to give you an example of how this works, every day my computer downloads the latest John MacArthur MP3 for me. Then the next time I plug my iPod into my computer, it moves any new MacArthur MP3's out to my iPod for me. The only catch is, the website that you get your MP3's from has to support Pod Casting. More and more pastors, churches, and radio programs are starting to offer this however.

Jim has a list of the things on his iPod... similiar to my own list that's been on the right-column of my top page.

 Source: How To Buy and Reform Your MP3 Player, Old Truth

April 29, 2006

The Da Vinci Code - Debunked

Chip Hammond analyzes the claims of The Da Vinci Code, a work of fiction that some folks are taking way too seriously:

Dan Brown's best selling book, The Da Vinci Code, is a well-written, entertaining fiction about a quest to get to the bottom of a millennia old cover-up. It is very similar to the movie National Treasure starring Nicholas Cage. While The Da Vinci Code is amusing, it is equally as implausible as National Treasure. The story is a cloak-and-dagger adventure based around a fantastic tale of the Roman Catholic Church's suppression of the fictitious pagan worship of the Sacred Feminine. In Brown's imaginary world, the Roman Church is the only church in existence. He ignores the church in the east, where Christianity had its origins. --- This fiction sheet was written because Dan Brown has started to believe his own fiction, and is now trying to convince others of the historical veracity of it.

 The DaVinci Code - Fact Sheet, Chip Hammond

April 8, 2006

Audio Bible - without the corn

NIV Audio Bible NTI've just found an audio bible that's recorded in an ordinary voice... no music, no drama, no devilish sounding voices, no multiple-voices for parts where the people said. It's just the text, read in an ordinary voice, so I get to concentrate on the content. My son borrowed his boss's chicken car last night (another story), and his boss had this audio bible on CD. I noticed that each disc says "voice only", so I took a listen. In fact, I listened to enough to be sure they didn't get silly during the usual parts (like the temptation of Jesus in the desert, or the herd of pigs - not that those are actually 'silly parts' but that's where most audio bible recordings get silly sounding). It's the NIV Audio Bible, New Testament by Zondervan (ISBN# 0310920523). OK, it does have music during each book introduction... but not during the actual reading of each book. What a relief to find... an audio bible without the corn.

January 8, 2006

What Is A Religious Belief?

At Evangelical Outpost, Joe points out that everyone actually has religious beliefs... it's just that a lot of people don't realize it:

...everyone holds, consciously or unconsciously, a religious belief. For many of us, this will be as obvious as finding that our entire lives we've been speaking in prose. Others, though, will have a reaction similar to those who argue that while everyone else may speak with an accent, they themselves do not. Although it may be true that not everyone has a religion (a system of religious beliefs, practices, and rituals), it would be rather absurd to believe that there is anyone who does not have a religious belief. This can be shown by focusing on a theory or belief that many people mistakenly believe to be the reverse of religion: materialism. Although the idea of materialism has been around since at least the ancient Greeks, it has only recently been considered to be a non-religious idea. This is rather odd considering that it explicitly claims that matter (or some other physical entity) is unconditionally, nondependently real and draws conclusions about nature and humanity based on that belief.

Source What is a Religious Belief?, Evangelical Outpost

March 12, 2005

When You Pray for Cats

Coming to a sermon illustration near you:

It is said that a church pastor found that a kitten had climbed up a tree in his backyard, afraid to come down. The pastor coaxed, offered warm milk, etc. The tree was not sturdy enough to climb, so the pastor decided to tie a rope to his car and move the car to pull the soft tree down and grab the kitten. He moved the car slowly forward,Flying Kitty pulling the tree down, but just before it was low enough to grab the kitten, the rope broken, flinging the tree and kitten back into the air, and throwing the kitten out of the pastor's yard. He searched in nearby yards, but couldn't find the kitten. Days later, he saw a neighbor he knew to hate cats, buying cat food in the grocery store. She told him how her little girl had been begging her for a cat, but she kept refusing. She finally told her daughter, "If God gives you a cat, I'll let you keep it." Then, her daughter walked out into the yard, got on her knees, and prayed that God would send her a cat. You know the rest.

February 3, 2005

The Concept of Hell

By Dr. Michael Horton

Torture, pain, and (worst of all) feeling abandoned by every other creature and the Creator besides. These experiences of countless victims -- particularly during and since the Holocaust-can hardly be compared with the experiences of well-fed and even overfed consumers in highly developed democratic societies. Whereas the twentieth century is often regarded -- especially by those of us too young to remember most of it -- as a golden era of prosperity, it was also an epochal graveyard filled with the collateral damage of ideological tyrants. Adolf Hitler's "final solution" was the most infamous, but there was also Bosnia, and even now, at the dawn of the twenty-first century, the breathtaking evil of terrorists who regard themselves as the agents of divine judgment on the world's infidels.

Into this situation, we are supposed to announce, on God's behalf, a judgment to come that will reach its apogee in the everlasting punishment of vast numbers of people in hell. It is a difficult time in history to talk about hell. Better to play along with the national assemblies of religious leaders gathered for prayer than to play the prophet (see "Between the Times" in this issue).

Aside from the subject's indelicacy, the concept of hell is also under attack from various quarters in the Christian church. The most popular objections fall into three categories. What follows is an overview of these objections.

God's Justice Does Not Require It

Widely regarded as the definitive treatment of "conditional immortality" or "annihilationism," Edward Fudg's The Fire That Consumes: A Biblical and Historical Study of the Doctrine of Final Punishment reflects a concern to be biblical and engage in serious exegesis (see the "Free Space" interview with Edward Fudge in this issue). Whatever we make of that exegesis, Fudge's book breathes a high respect for biblical authority; consequently, we cannot dismiss him out of hand by claiming that he can only reject eternal conscious punishment if he ignores Scripture. The same is true of Anglican John Stott, the late Gordon-Conwell professor Philip E. Hughes, and others. While not committing himself to Fudge's thesis, New Testament scholar F. F. Bruce wrote the original preface to Fudge's book.

Central to Fudge's argument is the claim that the Greek doctrine of the soul's immortality has influenced the traditional Christian view more than Scripture. "Eternal" or "everlasting" death and judgment is then taken by Christians to mean unending conscious torment because they erroneously view the soul as inherently immortal. Fudge insists, however, that Scripture uses the Greek word aionios ("everlasting") with greater flexibility than traditional theology has recognized. He knows that the Protestant reformers rejected the Greek doctrine as one of Roman Catholicism's errors, but he complains that the notion that the soul is unconditionally immortal continues to undergird the traditional doctrine of hell.

But what about the biblical passages where hell is described as a place of eternal conscious torment? Surely one is not simply adopting Greek views in the face of such texts? In answer to these questions, Fudge responds to each text. (In addition to those discussed briefly below, see also Matt. 8; 10:28; 13:30, 40-43; 25:1-46; Jude 7; Rev. 14:9-12; 19:20; 20:10, 15; and 21:8.)

First, there is Matthew 3:10, 12: "The ax is already at the root of the trees, and every tree that does not produce good fruit will be cut down and thrown into the fire. . . . His winnowing fork is in his hand, and he will clear his threshing floor, gathering his wheat into the barn and burning up the chaff with unquenchable fire." Fudge comments: "As in the Old Testament, 'unquenchable fire' [here] represents a fire of judgment which cannot be stopped." And, like the Old Testament writers, John the Baptist "sees [the fire] as 'burning up' the chaff." In other words, the fire is eternal, but the chaff is not. The fire "burns up" the damned rather than sustaining them in conscious punishment.

Jesus first refers to hell, or "Gehenna," as a fiery pit at Matthew 5:29. A transliteration of "Valley of Hinnom," a "deep and yawning gorge" on the southwestern side of Jerusalem where fires consumed the city's refuse, Gehenna was an apt earthly analogy for "the fire that consumes" in the day of judgment. Fudge draws upon both Old Testament and apocryphal traditions to illuminate this place of torment. He acknowledges that intertestamental rabbis disagreed over its duration and that Jesus speaks of throwing people -- body as well as soul -- into hell (Matt. 5:29ff.), but this hardly justifies the traditional doctrine of endless punishment, he maintains.

What about the parable of the rich man and Lazarus in Luke 16? Here, it seems, is a clear example of a person in hell: "In hell, where he was in torment, he looked up and saw Abraham far away, with Lazarus by his side. So he called to him, 'Father Abraham, have pity on me and send Lazarus to dip the tip of his finger in water and cool my tongue, because I am in agony in this fire.'" The rich man even refers to his abode as "this place of torment." Yet, in spite of his pleas, Abraham replied, "Between us and you a great chasm has been fixed, so that those who want to go from here to you cannot, nor can anyone cross over from there to us."

To be sure, this is a parable, and doctrine should not to be based on parables, but what is this parable getting at that we should take seriously? Fudge does not believe that its context indicates in any way "concern with the final state of the wicked." Rather, it involves lessons concerning the rich and the poor. Jesus, he claims, is drawing on rabbinical folklore (in part imported from Greek mythology) to tell a story and to make a point -- and, as such, he is not assuming the truth of such torment itself. So "Luke 16 supplies no clear exegetical basis for any conclusions concerning the final end of the wicked."

What should we make, then, of Fudge's case against everlasting torment? He has, undoubtedly, engaged in serious exegesis. But that doesn't end the discussion. Focusing only on Fudge's treatment of Luke 16, I would say this: True, it is unsafe to build doctrines on parables, but it is difficult to believe that in the parable of the rich man and Lazarus, Jesus was merely exploiting a pagan fable in order to make a point about stewardship. Fudge himself acknowledges that many of Jesus' Jewish hearers would have understood this "fable." Granted, Jesus might exploit a fable that everyone knew to be such, but this parable (by definition a fable of sorts) seems to work precisely because Jesus and his audience agreed about the reality that the parable depicts. The parable's point is made only if the terrifying reality of hell it depicts actually exists.

Fudge does not spend a lot of time laying out philosophical arguments for the justice or injustice of his view. He obviously does not believe that God's justice requires eternal or everlasting punishment. He may also think that God's justice cannot require it, but the burden of his book is not taken up with that question. Fudge simply does not believe that the Bible teaches -- and therefore that God has planned -- the everlasting conscious punishment of the wicked. They will be annihilated once and for all, but not tormented forever, he is convinced.

God's Justice Cannot Require It

With this objection, we encounter a different approach. A growing circle of professing Christians reject the traditional doctrine on speculative rather than biblical grounds. For instance, Marilyn McCord Adams, a noted philosopher of religion, has recently written a theodicy -- that is, an attempt to explain why God has permitted the evils our world actually contains -- where she argues that it would be unjust for God to punish anyone eternally (for more on Professor Adams's views see Paul Helm's Hell and the Nature of God in this issue). Abandoning the usual reasons that we have heard from modernists with their high view of human worth, she argues that it is not that human beings are too important or morally perfect to deserve such punishment but that they are too insignificant, and, therefore, their negative actions are too insignificant to merit God's everlasting displeasure.

Although a professing evangelical, theologian Clark Pinnock has repeatedly expressed revulsion at the traditional doctrine as well. In fact, personal revulsion seems for Pinnock to take on the quality of an unassailable logical demonstration. Like Fudge, he defends "conditional immortality," but for different reasons. After rehearsing the most provocative descriptions of hell in the tradition, he concludes that they give "one the impression of people watching a cat trapped in a microwave squirm in agony, while taking delight in it." He then says this: "Hans Kung [German Roman Catholic theologian] poses a hard question: 'What would we think of a human being who satisfied his thirst for revenge so implacably and insatiably?' . . . Torturing people forever is an action easier to associate with Satan than with God, measured by ordinary moral standards and/or by the Gospel. And what human crimes could possibly deserve everlasting conscious torture?"

Here we are clearly in a different orbit than with Fudge's concerns about scriptural exegesis. This is the realm of pathos, where those who hold the traditional view must be sadists. But notice that each of Pinnock's questions give human speculation a normative role. "What would we think of a human being who satisfied his thirst for revenge so implacably and insatiably?" We would, of course, think terribly of a human being who executed everlasting punishment on other human beings. As for a "thirst for revenge," surely Scripture says that God's motive is justice and not revenge. Even God's vengeance and wrath serve his justice and righteousness; they are not instances of selfishness and caprice. Fudge argues strenuously that God really does exercise his just vengeance, but Pinnock follows modern theology more generally in demanding that no doctrine can be regarded as true if it challenges his understanding of God's love.

Pinnock claims that the traditional view "offends our moral sense." Scripture tells us that God is love and "[o]ur moral intuition agrees with this. There is a powerful moral revulsion against the traditional doctrine of the nature of hell. Everlasting torture is intolerable from a moral point of view. . . . How can one love a God like that?" But this is not argument, exegetical or otherwise. We are supposed to reject the traditional doctrine simply by the repetition of Pinnock's moral revulsion at the very idea.

God's Love Conquers All

As its leading representatives have made abundantly clear, open theism's central conviction is that God is love. Of course, no Christian can deny the significance of John's glad announcement (1 John 4:16). Yet, we must bear in mind that this scriptural truth is to be understood in the light of the rest of Scripture and not in the light of the supposedly "neutral" understandings of love and justice that are preferred by modern societies. Otherwise, whatever else God might be -- just, righteous, holy, merciful, wise, sovereign, and so forth -- the bottom line is, his love will always triumph over his other attributes.

God is simple. In other words, he is not composed of separate attributes, some of which are more definitive of who he is than others. In denying this, open theists, such as Pinnock, risk denying that God is anything other than love. But then God's love dissolves into sentimentality. Instead of worshiping God, we then risk worshiping an abstract attribute. Instead of saying, "God is love," we end up saying, "Love is God." At the end of the day, God's love trumps everything else. Perhaps this is why Pinnock nowhere wrestles seriously with key biblical passages on everlasting punishment.

But does love conquer all? Fudge strongly affirms annihilation as the destiny of the wicked. Pinnock is not so sure. In fact, he wonders out loud whether purgatory is a better answer because it "appeals to the Arminian streak in me."

We should note that, in Pinnock's view, God's love is not really "pure" love after all. Nor is it pure justice. If annihilation or purgatory await the wicked (and the latter perhaps even believers as well), then isn't this still morally offensive? For the same objections that critics of the traditional doctrine raise can again be raised if God punishes at all. For Pinnock, it seems that justice can only be restorative: after death, humans must not be judged but purged. And this implies that the doctrine of hell must be abandoned. For how can hell reform people? How can it improve their lives? Here, I suspect, is a more than modest dose of modernity. The "triumph of the therapeutic" that has transformed our view of civic punishment has also deeply affected our understanding of divine justice.

In response, we must declare frankly that there are some things that God cannot do. He cannot acquit the guilty. He cannot simply let bygones be bygones. There must be payment for sin, whether by the sinner or by a Substitute. Even if it offends our moral sensibilities, the truth is that "God is jealous, and the LORD avenges; the LORD avenges and is furious. The LORD will take vengeance on his adversaries, and he reserves wrath for his enemies; the LORD is slow to anger and great in power, and will not at all acquit the wicked. . . . Who can stand before his indignation? And who can endure the fierceness of His anger? His fury is poured out like fire, and the rocks are thrown down by him" (Nah. 1:1-3, 6). We need to remember the church father Anselm's reply to his friend Boso, when Boso questioned the propriety of an infinite punishment for sin: "You have not yet considered the greatness of your sin."

But there is good news, the news that God is love because he loves justly as well as mercifully:

Now we know that whatever the law says, it says to those who are under the law, so that every mouth may be silenced and the whole world held accountable to God. Therefore no one will be declared righteous in his sight by observing the law; rather, through the law we become conscious of sin. But now a righteousness from God, apart from law, has been made known, to which the Law and the Prophets testify. This righteousness from God comes through faith in Jesus Christ to all who believe. There is no difference, for all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God, and are justified freely by his grace through the redemption that came by Christ Jesus (Rom. 3:19-24).

The horror that Christ endured on behalf of sinners is meaningless if we as sinners are not in ourselves worthy of suffering the same fate. How could the Substitute's torture on the cross be taken seriously if those for whom he substituted himself could not be justly sentenced in the same manner? God's mercy embraces his justice at the cross. Pinnock, however, risks collapsing mercy and justice into each other and thus emptying mercy of its mercifulness. This does not by itself settle the question of whether everlasting punishment is required. But it does answer the objection that hell cannot be required. A denial of the necessity of damnation itself in any form is tantamount to a denial of the substitutionary atonement. On Pinnock's principles, we can no longer confess that our Savior "descended into hell," since infinite divine punishment cannot be just.

Is Hell Believable?

We end where we began: How can we believe in hell after the Holocaust and profound human suffering? To ask this is to forget the Son of Man hanging on the cross, crying out in dereliction. Our suffering as fallen humans may certainly be unjustly perpetrated by evildoers, as occurred in the Holocaust and on September 11, 2001. But we are all -- victims as well as perpetrators -- participants in human rebellion's tangled web. At Calvary, there was One who was no part of the mess, One who had no guilt and who yet was willing to become flesh and endure our just sentence. So great is the love of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit! It is not the Holocaust that measures human evil. It is the cross. And yet there God was reconciling the world to himself, so that "whosoever believes may not perish but have everlasting life" (John 3:16).


Article courtesy of Modern Reformation magazine. In writing this article, Professor Horton has quoted from Edward Fudge's The Fire that Consumes (Fallbrook, CA: Verdict Publications, 1982) as well as from Clark Pinnock's defense of conditional immortality in Four Views on Hell, edited by William Crockett (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1992).

Dr. Michael Horton is the chairman of the Council of the Alliance of Confessing Evangelicals, and is associate professor of historical theology at Westminster Theological Seminary in California. Dr. Horton is a graduate of Biola University (B.A.), Westminster Theological Seminary in California (M.A.R.) and Wycliffe Hall, Oxford (Ph.D.). Some of the books he has written or edited include Putting Amazing Back Into Grace, Beyond Culture Wars, Power Religion, In the Face of God, and most recently, We Believe.

February 2, 2005

What Can We Know For Certain?

What can we know for certain? How can we know anything? Dr D James Kennedy addressed this in a helpful essay he wrote years ago:

A professor of philosophy in a university was lecturing on the lack of certainty in our age. "Certainty is impossible," he said. "We can know nothing for certain." A freshman raised her hand and asked, "Professor are you sure of that?" "I'm Certain!" he replied. Yes, we live in an age of uncertainty. We're learning more and more about everything and yet we seem to know less and less for sure.

Know What You Know

However, one of the characteristics of the first followers of Jesus was their certainty. They didn't guess... or hope... or wish. They knew for certain. They were even willing to die for that certainty! They said, "We know that our sins are forgiven...we know that we are the children of God... we know that to die is to be present with the Lord... we know that nothing can separate us from the love of God which is in Christ Jesus, our Lord."

Unfortunately, most people don't have such confidence when it comes to eternal life. They hope, they wish, they would like to think, but they don't know for certain. As a result they have no confidence in the face of death, because that is tied to the certainty that we know that we have eternal life. Yet often they decide to put off thinking about death and dying until their "later years."

Knowing Makes a Big Difference

Some time ago I spoke at a meeting of a group of churches. After speaking one morning I made my way outside for some fresh air. As I passed by the church kitchen I saw a giant of a man washing dishes. "Good morning! How are you today?" I said. He returned my greeting.

We shared some small talk, then I said, "I'm in town conducting a spiritual workshop. We're talking about eternal certainties. I'd like to ask you, 'When you die, do you know for certain that you will go to heaven?" He set his jaw and looked down for quite a while. When he lifted his face he said, "No, I don't know." "Were you aware that it is possible to know that?" I asked.

"Oh, yes. You see, I'm a preacher. I work here in the daytime, but I have my own church." I shared with him about God's grace and how he could know that he had eternal life. I explained that Christ had paid for all of our sins and that if we trust in Him we can know that we are on our way to heaven. Then he and I bowed our heads to pray, and he placed his trust in Christ.

Before, he had been trusting in his own efforts to be worthy to go to heaven. He had been trusting in his life as a minister to gain acceptance with God. But that day he agreed there was nothing good enough that he could bring God, and he placed his faith in Christ.

A Common Roadblock

That reminds me of what theologian John Gerstner once said. "Christ has done everything necessary for (the sinner's) salvation. Nothing now stands between the sinner and God but...." But what? What is this
roadblock that stands between so many people and their salvation by the gracious, forgiving God? That roadblock, he continued, is "the sinner's 'good works'!" Not their sins, but their good works --- their delusion that they do not need Christ and that their own good works can satisfy God. "All (sinners) need is need. All they must have is nothing. All that is required is acknowledged guilt. But sinners cannot part with their 'virtues." They have none that are not imaginary, but (their 'virtues') are real to them."

False Assurance and Certainties

It's exactly like the Bible ---God's book to mankind --- says: "The heart is deceitful above all things, and desperately wicked: who can know it?" (Jeremiah 17:9). Unfortunately, many people don't awaken to their
error until it is forever too late. How many people in the first five minutes after death would give anything for simply one minute to get right with God...this side of eternity?

Do you have certainty about eternity? Do You know for sure?

Throw away all trust in your own goodness. Look to the cross of Jesus Christ. See Him who suffered the agony of the condemned in your place, who received from His own Father the penalty we deserve and then rose from the dead. Christ Himself "bore our sins in His own body on the tree (cross)" (1 Peter 2:24).

Transfer all of your hopes from what you have done to what He has done for you at Calvary. Place your trust in Him alone. "He that has the Son has life; and he that has not the Son of God has not life. These things have I written unto you...that you may know that you have eternal life? You can, you know.

Taken from: "How to Get to Heaven" by Dr. D. James Kennedy

February 1, 2005

What Is The Gospel?

The word gospel refers to the message concerning Christ, the kingdom of God, and salvation, as taught in the Christian scriptures (the Bible, God's Word). The Gospels (plural) refer to the first four books of the New Testament of the Bible, which tell of the life, death and resurrection of Jesus Christ. The word gospel first appeared before the 12th century in Middle English, from the Old English godspel, a translation of the late Latin evangelium.1 In classical greek literature, euangelion meant good news, as in the reward given for good tidings.2 Evangelism refers to telling or spreading the news of the gospel of Jesus Christ. It is the Christian church's mission to preach and teach the gospel, commonly referred to as the good news.

Throughout the scriptures, we read the history of men who reject God's laws, and become subject to God's punishment. Men are inclined toward pleasing their own desires, and repeatedly demonstrate their inability to live up to God's standards of perfection. God gave the Ten Commandments to his people through Moses, to demonstrate those standards, and man's inability to obey without Him. The scriptures demonstrate a need for the justice of God against evil, and point toward a plan of salvation from sin, which is any lack of conformity to God's standards.

The scriptures tell us that while our life on earth is temporary, we will be judged in the afterlife. Those who are evil will be punished by God forever, but those who are saved by faith in Jesus Christ will live forever with God. Salvation from our sins is necessary because no one is able to completely obey God's law. We have evil thoughts, desires and actions. The standards we are judged on are not relative to others on earth, but compared to the absolute perfection of God. For man, perfection is impossible! Jesus demonstrated this to a man who thought he could obey all the commandments, but failed to understand them completely. Jesus told him to give all he had to the poor, so the man went away saddened because he had great wealth, and was unwilling to "love his neighbor" to such a degree. The truth is that no one can completely obey God's laws. Jesus' followers asked, "Then who can be saved?" Jesus answered, "With man, this is impossible, but with God, all things are possible." We can not save ourselves by trying to be good - salvation is from God.

Beginning in the first book of the New Testament (Matthew, the first gospel), we read that Mary was told she would have a son, to be named Jesus, "because he will save his people from their sins." The birth of Jesus fulfilled ancient prophecy, spiritual predictions of a coming Messiah who would save God's people from their sins. God declared the penalty for our sins paid in full with the sacrifice of his own son, Jesus. Through the suffering and death of Jesus, we see the required punishment of sins, but through the resurrection of Jesus to life, we see the ability of God to raise us to life, to live in heaven for eternity, as promised in scripture.

In order to receive the salvation of Jesus, we must first acknowledge that we have sinned, and need salvation. Jesus said, "It is not the healthy who need a doctor, but the sick. I have not come to call the righteous, but sinners." To be saved, it is necessary for us to repent of our sins, which means to acknowledge our sins AND to turn from them. Jesus told his followers "there is rejoicing in the presence of the angels of God over one sinner who repents." Following genuine repentance comes the forgiveness of sins by God.

If the concept of salvation seems difficult to understand, notice that the scriptures explain it over and over again. The gospel of John states,

"For God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life. For God did not send his Son into the world to condemn the world, but to save the world through him. Whoever believes in him is not condemned, but whoever does not believe stands condemned already because he has not believed in the name of God's one and only Son. This is the verdict: Light has come into the world, but men loved darkness instead of light because their deeds were evil. Everyone who does evil hates the light, and will not come into the light for fear that his deeds will be exposed. But whoever lives by the truth comes into the light, so that it may be seen plainly that what he has done has been done through God."

Jesus said, "I tell you the truth, whoever hears my word and believes him who sent me has eternal life and will not be condemned; he has crossed over from death to life."

Jesus left his followers with a directive known as the Great Commission: "All authority on heaven and earth has been given to me. Therefore go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, and teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you. And surely I am with you always, to the very end of the age." Elsewhere Jesus said, "Go into all the world and preach the good news to all creation. Whoever believes and is baptized will be saved, but whoever does not believe will be condemned."

The scriptures record that the followers of Jesus were faithful in spreading the gospel to others. The Apostle Paul wrote, "Repent, then, and turn to God, so that your sins may be wiped out...". The scriptures also make it clear that salvation is only found in Jesus. "Salvation is found in no one else, for there is no other name under heaven given to men by which we must be saved."

Salvation by faith in Jesus Christ is not a mere one-time decision, but a lifelong change in loyalty. One must recognize their need to turn away from their selfish sins, to live a lifetime for God. One comes to know they are saved as they obey God's laws and see the evidence of a lifelong change taking place. They seek after God by reading and obeying the scriptures, by being baptized, and by joining a true, bible-believing church. Such a church will hold the teachings of scripture in high regard, as demonstrated by their faithfulness in following those teachings.

God tells us to recognize our sins, to turn from them and to ask God for forgiveness, to believe that Jesus Christ will save us from our sins, and to live each day for God, according to all that He teaches us in the scriptures.

Written by Edward Stoffel



1.
Merriam-Webster Collegiate Dictionary

2.
The New Bible Dictionary, J.D. Douglas - Editor, Eerdmans Publishing. p. 484





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