Saturday, May 31, 2008
Revival: Hodges, SC
Our friend Jim Warren from Clinton, SC, is pastor. Amanda worked with Jim years ago at Belk in Laurens, SC, when as a grown man with a family, he was working toward a bachelors at North Greenville College. Jim finished his M.Div. at Southeastern in May.
Thursday, May 29, 2008
Fall of Constantinople
Guess what happened the last time the Islamic worldview prevailed over the Judeo-Christian worldview.
Wednesday, May 28, 2008
Joshua 1:7-9 - The Secret of Joshua's Success
Saturday, May 24, 2008
Summerfest
After a biscuit this morning at Hardees in Clarksville, VA, we headed over to the Virgilina, VA Summerfest in time for the last half of the parade. We got to see a lot of friends and eat the best barbecue sandwich (cooked by Roosevelt and Margie Nelson) since we moved from South Carolina.
Friday, May 23, 2008
Romans 11 Outline
Overview: Romans 11 shows how God will fulfill His promises to the nation of Israel. Jewish “disobedience” (Romans 11:30) does not do away with God’s promises to Israel because His gifts and calling are irrevocable (Romans 11:29). Paul therefore cautions Gentile believers against anti-Semitism and false pride (Romans 11:13-26). Instead he shows us what our active role should be to hasten the salvation of the Jewish people (Romans 11:30-36).
Wednesday, May 21, 2008
Romans 10 Outline
ROMANS 9:30-10:2Notice how verse 1 is similar to Romans 9:1-4a. Paul is continuing his same line of thought. Romans 10 focuses on the salvation of Jewish individuals. Rom 11 will focus on the salvation of Israel as a whole. In verse 2, Paul affirms that zeal is good (Galatians 4:17-18; 1 Peter 3:13), but it can be abused as Paul did (Acts 7:58-8:3; 9:1-6; 22:3-4). Israel has gone astray, Paul says, because they have not understood Torah properly. Paul aims to stir up Jewish curiosity by saying they do not have proper knowledge since many Jews spend their lives studying Torah, the Word of God. In verses 3-10 he explains what he means.
ROMANS 10:3-13Verse 3 explains v. 2. Verse 4 explains v. 3. Verses 5-10 explain v. 4. Verse 3 restates Romans 9:32. The Jews have missed their Messiah because they have somehow missed the central point of the Torah and not acted on it – faith – the same kind of faith as Abraham had.
Israel regrettably did not understand that the Torah teaches trust and not self-effort, not legalism, not mechanical obedience to rules. Torah teaches that the route to righteousness is trust in God. Torah not only requires righteousness based on trust but offers that righteousness based on trust. What kind of trust?
Trust in the Messiah who is the one and only pathway to the very righteousness they seek. Even better, Messiah offers this righteousness to everyone who trusts, to Jews and to Gentiles as well (Romans 10:11-13; 3:29-4:25; 9:24-30).
Only by believing in Jesus can a person obey the Torah. Unbelief in Jesus as Messiah is disobedience to Torah, because Jesus the Messiah fulfills the Torah in every way, Torah points to Him as Messiah, and the goal of Torah is this Messiah who offers the righteousness of Torah, God’s righteousness to everyone who trusts.
Romans 10:4: The word telos is important here. Our English translations translate it as “end.” Does telos mean “end” as in “termination” or “end” as in “purpose”? Telos is used 42 times in the New Testament. In five places it means “finish, or termination” (Mark 3:26; Luke 1:33; 2 Corinthians 3:13; Hebrews 7:3; 1 Peter 4:7). Most of the time it means “aim, purpose, goal” (1 Timothy 1:5; 1 Peter 1:9) or “outcome, result, consummation (Romans 6:21-22; Matthew 26:58; Hebrews 6:8).
Christ has not brought the Torah, or God’s teaching, to an end. Remember, the Word of God is eternal. Jesus upholds the Torah (1 Corinthians 9:21; Galatians 6:2). In fact, the Good News that righteousness comes from trust in God is proclaimed in the Torah (Old Testament). That is the point of Romans 9:30-10:21. Paul already stated it in the theme verse of Romans at Romans 1:16-17 (see also Galatians 3:6ff).
Romans 10:5-10: Paul quotes from the Pentateuch, the Torah, to prove that the righteousness of God is a righteousness made of trust. In verse 5, Paul quotes Leviticus 18:5. What are the two most important teachings? Jesus said in Mark 12:28-31 what they are: Loving the Lord (Deuteronomy 6:4-5) and loving our neighbor as oneself (Leviticus 19:18). You cannot love God if you don’t trust in Him and His character. You cannot love your neighbor in God’s image without believing in the God who made both of you. Therefore Paul shows that the Torah requires trust, not works.
Verses 6-8 do not show a righteousness of Torah is different from the righteousness of belief in Jesus. Paul shows that they are the same righteousness based on the same trust, written in the same Bible, leading to the same eternal life. Verses 6-8 sharpen the meaning of verse 5 by quoting Deuteronomy 30:11-14.
The Greek word de (“but”) should be taken as “also or moreover.” What Israel is to “do” is the “word which is near you.” We “confess” or acknowledge publicly our faith in Jesus Christ (Luke 12:8). Faith in Jesus must be accompanied by a conviction in the hear that Jesus has been resurrected.
ROMANS 10:14-21
Romans 10:14-18: Calling requires trusting. Trusting requires hearing. Hearing requires a proclamation. Proclamation requires someone be sent. In this case the sender would have to be God. Blaming God for sin started in the Garden of Eden (Genesis 3:12). Verses 16-17 say that God has sent someone to proclaim and that Israel heard (see Psalm 19:1-4), but Israel has not trusted.
Romans 10:19-21: Paul quotes Deuteronomy 32:21 (regarding eye-for-eye justice) to show that Israel would be provoked to jealousy and anger by a non-nation, and it will mean Israel’s deliverance (Romans 11:11, 14). The context of Deuteronomy 32 ends with 32:43 that in the end God will forgive his people and his land. Paul concludes the second portion on Israel (Romans 9:30-10:21) the same way as the first (Romans 9:6-29), by recalling his opening verses. Isaiah 65:1-2 (vv. 20-21) sound like Romans 9:30-31.
Tuesday, May 20, 2008
Sunday a good one
Third, we had an awesome training for leaders of the Vacation Bible School which is scheduled for June 23-27. JoAnn Brewer has been working hard and with excellence on this.
And Monday night's men on mission meeting outdoors under the oak trees was a good meeting as well.
Being a pastor sometimes means your correspondence from time to time is not so nice, but it also means you get lovely notes like this one from a dear little girl named Kaleigh.
Monday, May 19, 2008
Romans 9 Outline
1. Romans 9:1-6b: The Problem: Israel’s rejection of the Gospel makes God’s promises appear to fail.
Saturday, May 17, 2008
Relax: belief in aliens OK
Vatican says It's OK to Believe in Aliens
According to an Associated Press report, "believing that the universe may contain alien life does not contradict a faith in God, the Vatican's chief astronomer said in an interview published Tuesday. The Rev. Jose Gabriel Funes, the Jesuit director of the Vatican Observatory, was quoted as saying the vastness of the universe means it is possible there could be other forms of life outside Earth, even intelligent ones. 'How can we rule out that life may have developed elsewhere?' Funes said. 'Just as we consider earthly creatures as "a brother," and "sister," why should we not talk about an "extraterrestrial brother"? It would still be part of creation.' In the interview by the Vatican newspaper L'Osservatore Romano, Funes said that such a notion 'doesn't contradict our faith' because aliens would still be God's creatures."
OH MY. I wonder if he's offering mass at a booth in Roswell's Alien Festival this summer.Wedding & Baptism
Tomorrow I will baptize Caroline Talley, who joined the church two Sundays ago with her husband, Jimmy. They have retired back to their ancestral home after a career in Richmond, VA, and Washington, NC. Jimmy grew up in the church and has moved his membership back here. Caroline grew up in the community, too, at Webbs Chapel Methodist which no longer exists. They are fine folks and have become good friends.
Romans 9-11 - Israel & God's Character
- Romans 9:1-6a: Does Israel’s rejection of the Gospel make God’s word a failure?
- Romans 9:6b-29: Is God to blame? No. He is Sovereign.
- Romans 9:30 – 10:21: Is Israel to blame? Yes. Their failure is in seeing the Law (Torah) as a book of legalistic works rather than trusting God (Rom 9:31-32; 4:1-3). This is why Israel has not receive the promises.
- Romans 11:1-32: Israel’s failure is not permanent. God will fulfill His purposes for Israel. And if Israel’s failure means salvation of the nations, then God’s fulfillment of His promises to Israel will be even more glorious. Therefore, don’t boast, you Gentiles. Salvation was for the Jew first, then the Gentiles (Rom 1:17). In fact, through Gentile Christian mercy, Israel will see their Messiah and come to salvation in Jesus their Messiah.
- Romans 11:33-36: Hymn of Praise at God’s plan for world history.
Friday, May 16, 2008
Thursday, May 15, 2008
Wednesday, May 14, 2008
Judgment upon the church
millions, and be dismissed as an irrelevant social club with no meaning for the twentieth century.
Every day I meet young people whose disappointment with the church has turned into outright disgust."
Source: "Letter from a Birmingham Jail," Martin Luther King, Jr.
Dying Churches
Dr. Frank Page believes the Southern Baptist Convention could lose half its churches by 2030 unless something changes. Page cited statistics reflecting a denominational decline. He said the reason for the downturn is not the lack of another program or convention-wide initiative.
Instead Page said the problem resides in churches that refuse to change in any way to stop their inevitable demise.
"Reflecting on the reality of many Southern Baptist churches, Page stated that “many Southern Baptist churches are small groups of white people who are holding on to the end. Not only have we not reached out to younger generations, but we have failed to reach out to other ethnic minorities who are all around us.” Rather than embracing a “whatever it takes” mentality to change and restore a local church to health, Page said many pastors and churches have “chosen to die rather than change, and they are doing it.”
Source: BSC Communications
Tuesday, May 13, 2008
Judges: Where Christ is found
Christ in Judges:
SAVIORS, PROPHETS, JUDGES: The judges were called “saviors” (2:16; 3:9, 15; verbal forms 3:31; 8:22; 10:1), the same root as the name Joshua (yashua). The term connotes a sudden and supernatural intervention. The judges were also called “prophets” (4:4; 6:8; 1 Samuel 3:20; 7:6, 15-17), anointed, led, and empowered by God’s Spirit. Judges were both statesmen and saviors, that is, both political and spiritual deliverers. Everywhere in Judges is the need for a Righteous King. The perfect Judge, therefore, would be both a Savior and a Prophet. In fact, Jephthah calls YHWH the Ultimate Judge (11:27).
GIDEON: Many scholars see Gideon as the focus of Judges. Samson is his anti-type. Gideon begins in weakness, goes to great victory, and ends in failure. Samson begins with strength, goes to great failure, and ends in victory. Gideon is the warrior who overcomes with the ram’s horn (trumpet), a light, and a shout, in a clear reminder of Joshua at Jericho (Joshua 6:5, 20), but also a foreshadowing of the Messiah to come (Matthew 24:31; 1 Corinthians 15:52; 1 Thessalonians 4:16-21). With Gideon, at the shout and trump the living die. With Christ, at the shout and trump, the dead live first (Samson is the anti-type). D.W. Gooding sees it this way.
A: Introduction I (1:1-2:5)
B: Introduction II (2:6-3:6)
C: Othniel (3:7-11)
D: Ehud-Shamgar (3:12-31)
E: Deborah-Barak-Jael (4:1-5:31)
F: GIDEON (6:1-8:32)
E’: Abimelech-Tola-Jair (8:33-10:5)
D’: Jephthah-Ibzan-Elon-Abdon (10:6-12:15)
C’: Samson (13:1-16:31)
B’: Epilogue I (17:1-18:31)
A’: Epilogue II (19:1-21:25)
Toddler food
For instance, Rachel is thrilled when she occasionally finds an old Cheerio back behind the seat cushions in the couch, especially if it's one of those new colored ones that taste like a Fruit Loop.
Last night my wife fixed breakfast for supper. Grits, cheese, eggs, bacon, biscuits. While she was in the middle of cooking everything, she turned around to find Rachel licking the inside of an egg shell she had just pulled out of the trash. Amanda about died.
After supper, we went outside to play. Rachel loves the baby, so Amanda asked her if she wanted to kiss Ava-Grace. Rachel puckered up, popped out two pieces of now-sparkling wet gravel, and kissed Ava-Grace right on the cheek.
Monday, May 12, 2008
Judges: Outline
Outline:
In Judges we see seven apostasies, seven servitudes to seven heathen nations with seven deliverances under fourteen judges. The book of Joshua begins with the death of Moses, the servant of the Lord, and Joshua, the minister to Moses (Joshua 1:1). It ends with the death of Joshua, the servant of the Lord (24:29). Judges begins with the death of Joshua (1:1), servant of the Lord (2:8). Judges is sectioned by the phrase, “Israel did evil” (2:11; 3:7, 12; 4:1; 6:1; 10:6; 13:1) up to Samson’s end (16:31). Then the sectional phrase becomes, “Israel had no king” (18:1; 19:1; 21:25).
1. JUDGES 1-3:6 – END OF AN ERA
a. Judges 1:1-2:10: Condition of Nation after Joshua’s Death
b. Judges 2:11-3:6: Preview of the Israel’s Cycle of History
(Serve God ->Forsake God -> Slavery -> Repent -> Serve God)
2. JUDGES 3:7-16:31 – ERA OF JUDGES
Scripture | Oppressions | Sin | Punishment | Instrument | Deliverer Judge |
Judges 3:7-11 | 1st Apostasy | Idolatry | 8 years | Mesopotamia | OTHNIEL |
Judges 3:12-31 | 2nd Apostasy | Immorality, Idolatry | 18 years | Moab & Philistines | EHUD & SHAMGAR |
Judges 4:1-5:31 | 3rd Apostasy | Departed from God | 20 years | Jabin of Canaan | DEBORAH & BARAK |
Judges 6:1-8:32 | 4th Apostasy | Departed from God | 7 years | Midian | GIDEON |
Judges 8:33-10:5 | 5th Apostasy | Departed from God | Civil War | Other Tribes of Israel | TOLA, JAIR, (ABIMELECH) |
Judges 10:6-12:15 | 6th Apostasy | Idolatry increased | 18 years | Philistines & Ammon | JEPHTHAH, IBZAN, ELON, ABDON |
Judges 13:16 | 7th Apostasy | Departed from God | 40 years | Philistines | SAMSON |
3. JUDGES 17-21: RESULTS OF ERA – CONFUSION
a. Judges 17-18: Religious Apostasy: Confusion over Worship
b. Judges 19: Moral Awfulness: Confusion in the Home
c. Judges 20-21: Political Anarchy: Confusion in the State
Judges begins in compromise and ends in confusion – the same as in every unsurrendered life. |
Sunday, May 11, 2008
Judges: Key Message / Verses
Key Message / Verse: Judges 2:16-19; 21:25
In stark contrast to Joshua’s victorious message, Judges is the story of repeated failure and oppression. These were Israel’s Dark Ages, when the people forsook God (Judges 2:12-13) and God forsook His people (2:20-23). Everyone did what was right in his own eyes (21:25).
MORAL RELATIVISM: Results of doing your own thing: “In those days Israel had no king; everyone did what was right in his own eyes.” (Judges 17:6; 21:25)
Backsliding & Recovery; History & Moral of the Story: Judges shows us the terrible reality of backsliding and the amazing grace of the Lord in recovering and restoring us. Isaiah presents this view of history years later in introducing his prophetic work, describing the same fatal steps downward to the captivity of Israel (Isaiah 1).
Wickedness of the Human Heart: Judges 2:11-13, 17, 19; 8:33-35; 10:6; 13:1) There was no region of Israel that was free of wickedness. It happened in the South (3:7-31), the North/Central region (Judges 6:1-10:5), the East (10:6-12:15) and the West (13:1-16:31). “All have sinned” (Romans 3:23).
God’s Delight in using Weak Things: (1 Corinthians 1:26-29).
Ehud: assassin with homemade knife (Judges 3)
Deborah: woman, considered weak in ancient culture (Judges 4; 9:53)
Gideon: from an obscure family in smallest tribe (Judges 6)
Shamgar: a redneck with a pointed stick (Judges 3:31)
Gideon’s Army: Little group armed with horns & pitchers (Judges 7)
Jawbone used by Samson (Judges 15:14-19)
Holy Spirit in Judges: (Zechariah 4:6) The Holy Spirit is active in Judges, coming upon the leaders of Israel. Othniel (Judges 3:10), Gideon (Judges 6:34), Jephthah (Judges 11:29), and Samson (Judges 13:25; 14:6; 15:14).
THREE TYPES OF JUDGES Warrior Judges: Gideon, Samson Priest Judge: Eli National Leaders: Othniel, Deborah Prophet Judge: Samuel Administrators, Mediators: Tola, Ehud, Jair Local Leaders: Shamgar, Ibzan Hardworking, unsung Judges: Elon, Abdon Rude, petty Dictator: Jephthah THE CHIEF JUDGES Deborah, Gideon, Samson, Samuel THE OTHER TEN JUDGES Othniel, Ehud, Shamgar, Tola, Jair, Jephthah, Ibzan, Elon, Abdon, Eli. Abimilech who was not called by God to judge. |
Basic Problem: Lack of Leadership (Judges 1:1; 20:18)
Philosophy of History: Proverbs 14:34: “Righteousness exalts a nation / But sin is a disgrace to any people.”
Saturday, May 10, 2008
Judges: Location and Date
Judges tells the history of the nearly powerless Israelite tribes during their first 350 years (1415 -- 1065 BC) in the hill country of Canaan. Judges (Hebrew: Shophetim, “judges,”) measures time from the end of Joshua’s Wars (1415 BC) to the Coronation of Saul (1065 BC). It records the history of Israel from Joshua to Samuel, the last of the judges and first of the prophets. It bridges the gap between Joshua and the rise of the monarchy.
The text of Judges was compiled while the Jebusites were still in control of Jerusalem (1:21), meaning that David had not yet overtaken that city (1018 BC) (2 Samuel 5:6-9). Also, Judges 1:29 refers to Canaanites living in Gezer, which did not come under Israelite sovereignty until the reign of Solomon (1 Kings 9:16f; 1 Chronicles 6:67). If one takes the reference to ‘captivity’ in Judges 18:30-31 to indicate the Philistine captivity of the Ark of the Covenant (and Psalm 78:61 supports it), one demonstrates that Judges was written after the Ark of the Covenant was removed from Shiloh (1 Samuel 4:3-11, 21) and during the period of the monarchy (Saul’s reign: 1065-1025 BC) because it mentions four times “in those days there was no king in Israel” (Judges 17:6; 18:1; 19:1; 21:25).
Some judgeships were not nationwide and overlapped; therefore the total of years served by the judges of 410 years could fit into 350. Judges mentions long periods of rest and servitude (3:11, 14, 30; 5:31; 8:28, etc.) Jephthah refers to 300 years of Israelite settlement in the Transjordan (Heshbon and Aroer – 11:26), so it covers a long period of history. Based on all this information, it seems likely that Judges was written between Saul’s coronation (1065 BC) and David’s capture of Jerusalem (1018 BC).
Friday, May 09, 2008
Judges: Authorship
The Talmud (Baba Bathra 15a) claims Samuel’s authorship of Judges.
The text was compiled after Joshua’s death (Judges 2:7) and during the monarchy because it says four times “in those days there was no king in Israel” (Judges 17:6; 18:1; 19:1; 21:25).
Judges is a philosophy of history (Proverbs 14:34). Its philosophy falls in line with Samuel’s emphasis on the Word of God or lack of it informing a culture (1 Samuel 3:1, 4, 7-10, 17 – 4:1) and the importance of consistent, steady obedience over a long period and the consequences of its absence (1 Samuel 12:1-7).
Thursday, May 08, 2008
Patrick Henry on Freedom
-- Patrick Henry