Monday, February 28, 2011

We do best when all is against us

In this you rejoice, though now for a little while, IF NECESSARY, you have been grieved by various trials, so that the tested genuineness of your faith—more precious than gold that perishes though it is tested by fire—may be found to result in praise and glory and honor at the revelation of Jesus Christ.
First Peter 1:6-7

In the history of the Church. - When has she made her greatest number of adherents? When her pulpits have been filled with eloquent preachers, and her aisles crowded with fashion and wealth? No; but when she has been driven to the dens and caves of the earth, and her sons have been proscribed outcasts. The real triumphs of the early Church were in the first centuries of opprobrium and persecution; her decline began when Constantine made Christianity the religion of the State.
In the history of each earnest soul. - It is rarely the case that we make much spiritual headway when winds and currents favor us. We do best when all is against us. We grow quickest in the dark. In times of persecution we realize the security, and comfort, and joy, which are in Christ Jesus our Lord; and as God goes the round of the world, it is in chambers of pain, sickness, and bereavement, that He beholds the multiplication of the choice graces of holy character and temper. The affliction, which is for the moment, is working out an exceeding weight of glory.

F.B. Meyer

Thursday, February 24, 2011

Pastor Walther's Meditations: There Are Times...

An excellent reminder to each of us as the ruler of this fallen world, Satan presses us to despair and let loose of Christ. We have been given God's Word - Jesus Christ crucified and resurrected over Satan and anything with which he might press or crush us. Thanks be to God that this Word holds us and resurrects us daily through faith.

Pastor Walther's Meditations: There Are Times...

Monday, February 21, 2011

that ‘economy of salvation,’ ‘in which the rich, noble, righteous bridegroom Christ takes as spouse the poor, shamed, evil little whore.

An excellent excerpt from ‘Through the Son, Our Lord’: God as Mercy and Love in Martin Luther’s Theology   by Oswald Bayer  - 

“God action of salvation cannot be described in any other way; it use intense wording and takes place on the edge and the point of the rupture, as
‘[that] happy exchange, in which the rich, noble, righteous bridegroom Christ takes as spouse the poor, shamed, evil little whore[cf. Hosea 1-3] and acquits her of all evil, decorating her with all good things.  Thus it is not possible that the sins will damn her; now they lie upon Christ and have been swallowed up by him.  She thus has such a rich righteousness from her bridegroom that she can survive once again against all sins – even if they would lie upon her.  Paul speaks about this in 1 Corinthians 15:[57; 55; cf. Hosea 13:14]: “Praise and thanks to God, who has given us such a conquest in Christ Jesus, in which death is swallowed up, together with sin.”’ (WA 7:26.4-12;LW 31:352)
This passage cited from On the Freedom of a Christian is placed within a context in which Luther states three times what is meant by the unio (union) of the ‘Word of God’ and ‘soul,’ about God and the human being in faith.  …. that ‘happy transaction,’ and ‘economy of salvation,’ ‘in which the rich, noble, righteous bridegroom Christ takes as spouse the poor, shamed, evil little whore.’”

pp. 329-230

Only the Lord's Word has the power to call a thing what it is ...

CAUGHT AND NOT CAUGHT 
Monday - Epiphany 7  -  1 February 2011
from Esther 7:1-10
It seemed like a good idea when a policeman pulling second shift decided that he'd stretch out in the back seat of his police cruiser and take a little nap during his break. He fell right asleep, and slept well. When he woke up he remembered a funny thing about the back seat of police cars. The doors don't open from the inside. Sometimes people are too clever by half. They are caught by their own good plans, which don't work out so well. I had planned to use PowerPoint to make a presentation on the church's lectionary in Bible class on Sunday. However, I was thwarted by the technology that suffered a delaying glitch. So I had to ad lib the first part of the presentation without the visuals. It would have been better if I had not depended on the technology, but it seemed like a good idea at the time. We can be thwarted by our own craftiness.
Our heavenly Father thwarts the worldly wise by catching them in their own craftiness (1Co 3:19). The story of Haman in the Old Testament book of Esther certainly falls into this category.  Haman plotted an ancient Kristallnacht for the Jews of Persia to destroy them. However, his wicked plan was turned upon him when Esther, having found favor in his eyes, begged King Ahasuerus for her life and the life of her people. The very slaughter Haman had planned for the Jews was visited upon his own head. "For Haman the Agagite, the son of Hammedatha, the enemy of all the Jews, had plotted against the Jews to destroy them, and had cast Pur (that is, cast lots), to crush and to destroy them. But when it came before the king, he gave orders in writing that his evil plan that he had devised against the Jews should return on his own head, and that he and his sons should be hanged on the gallows" (Est 9:24-25). His wicked plan not only failed but was the source of his own miserable demise. If God's wise foolishness will not suffice, then your own foolish wisdom will have to do; and with predictable results. If God's strong weakness is not good enough for you, then your own weak strength will be just enough.
Yet, we find ourselves easily enamored of the world's wisdom. Look how powerful it is! Worldly wisdom has now produced a super computer that can defeat the Jeopardy champions. Soon they will say that Alex Trebek could be replaced by a computer! Worldly wisdom has created such beautiful people with plastic surgery and airbrushing that we doubt their reality, but still we are enamored of such persons, listening to their empty-headed advice and buying the worthless products for which they are shills. This kind of brilliance is not wisdom. This kind of beauty is quite shallow. Yet, in our spiritual laxity we are attracted by it and trapped by it. We can't recognize its poverty and weakness by ourselves. God, in His true wisdom must warn us of its empty power and discourage our following it. Only the divine Word can disclose the true meaning of the world's wisdom because it is the divine speech. Only the Lord's Word has the power to call a thing what it is; to call worldly wisdom foolishness. Only He rightly knows the foolishness of the seeming wise; and calls it futile. This Word must catch us if we are to avoid being caught by our own craftiness. Only the Lord Jesus Himself can catch us so that we are not caught.  
John Chrysostom    

"Paul urged men to withdraw themselves from worldly wisdom. He adds the reason, saying, 'For the wisdom of this world is folly with God' (1Co 3:19). For it not only contributes nothing, but it even hinders. We must then withdraw ourselves from it, because it is doing harm. Paul carries off the spoils of victory with a high hand, having proven that, so far from benefiting us at all, worldly wisdom is diametrically opposed to the faith.

"He is not content with his own arguments, but he has also added testimony: 'For it is written, "He catches the wise in their craftiness"' (Job 5:13). By 'craftiness,' he means their own arms get the better of them. For seeing they made use of their wisdom so that they would do away with all need for God, through this need, and no other thing, He refuted them by showing that they were especially in need of God. How and by what method? Because by human wisdom having become fools, by this worldly wisdom, as was appropriate, they were caught. For those who supposed that they did not need God were reduced to so great a difficulty that they appeared inferior to fishermen and uneducated persons; and from that time forth were unable to do without such people. Therefore he said, 'In their own craftiness' God caught them. For the saying 'I will destroy the wisdom of the wise,' (1Co 1:19) was spoken to show it introduced nothing useful; but this, 'He catches the wise in their craftiness' was spoken with a view of showing the power of God.

"Next, he declares also the mode by which God caught them, adding another testimony: 'The Lord knows the thoughts of the wise, that they are futile' (1Co 3:20; cf. Ps 94:11). Now when the Wisdom which is boundless pronounces this edict concerning them, and declares them to be such, what other proof of their extreme foolishness do you need? For human judgment, it is true, in many cases fails; but the decision of God is absolutely beyond our comprehension and is incorruptible."

John Chrysostom, Homilies on 1 Corinthians, 10.3
from Memorial Moments by Rev. Dr. Scott Murray
http://campaign.r20.constantcontact.com/render?llr=gxf7b9bab&v=001VJlu5GGZPDShskItU8JnKKVVeAoByxdfxBV_9pGctvek1K77SmouHetkSfLRJPy-u4SnEfLfouTJ77gTrdDbrO3T4VkRBqK3YhHPK7Dhx8o%3D 

Thursday, February 17, 2011

... to justify and demand that all the arrows in this world ... must point toward and be about me.

Theology during the time of the Reformation, and throughout most of the period known as “modernism," suffered from the “magisterial” use of reason. Where human reason/thinking and comprehension are given authority over the Biblical texts, there will be the limitations on what God actually is, what He actually says and what He actually does. How much has the full truth, and thus the full salvation and thus the full comfort of God been denied to those who deal with God’s Word, and thus God Himself, according to the tyranny of their human limitations.

What of the theology in our day? The human attribute of reason has been tossed to the curb in favor of another human attribute. This “magisterial” use of this human attribute has been elevated far above and beyond that of human reason. So great is the authority given to this human attribute that it can completely displace the Word of God and thus God Himself, in favor of that which satisfies the demands of this attribute.
What is this attribute? Emotion. Anything in the Scriptures, anything commanded of God, promised of God, and decreed by God, all must bow before the majestic use of emotion. Where emotion reigns, the validity of who and what God is, is determined not by what He is or says, but by how one feels about Him. Where emotion reigns, the validity of others in our lives and our responsibility to them is subject to how one feels.
Theology then becomes full blown “Meology” under the guise of “spirituality”. This meology by any other name would be called narcissism.
The “magisterial” use of emotion is just another manifestation of what St. Augustine identified as the root problem of humanity - Incurvatus in se – “curved in on itself”. What I refer to as the “magisterial” use of emotion is nothing more than an attempt to justify and demand that all the arrows in this world, all the people in one’s life, the church and even God Himself - must point toward and be about me.
Feelings are so much like Satan it is terrifying. Feelings offer us much and entice us to much, and if given completely up to them, leave us destitute.
Many would contend that our post-modern world is more open to the Gospel than ever before. I disagree. While our post-modern world has lost its love affair with reason, this same world has fallen head over heels in love what provides the feelings it wants. The opening of the Gospel will come only when one has been so ravaged and tormented by the unfaithfulness of feelings, that one loses faith in the ability of feelings to determine what is true and to rule over what really is true.
"... preach the word; be ready in season and out of season; reprove, rebuke, and exhort, with complete patience and teaching. For the time is coming when people will not endure sound teaching, but having itching ears they will accumulate for themselves teachers to suit their own passions, and will turn away from listening to the truth and wander off into myths. As for you, always be sober-minded, endure suffering, do the work of an evangelist, fulfill your ministry."  2 Timothy 4:2-5

- pmwl

Where the resurrected flesh of Christ is present, there is no room for human flesh or it's works.

An excellent post from Luther on why the fleshly resurrection of Christ is such a blessing as that same flesh is also omnipresent.  Thanks to Dr. Kilcrease for posting this.

Great Steven Paulson Quote on the Absolute Omnipresence of Christ

From his excellent book Luther for Armchair Theologians, my out teacher Dr. Steven Paulson writes on the absolute omnipresence of Christ:
"Luther is even willing to pause for a minute and talk about Christ's body being wherever Christ is- and that means everywhere present! Of course, this makes human reason and its buff, free will feel crowded out of the world."
In other words, human reason that lusts for self-justification through imaginary free will, is "crowded out" of the world when it recognizes that Christ is all-present "for you." If the gracious God found in the flesh of Jesus reigns and is present everywhere, the human person loses all their power to establish themselves before God by their good works. There is no distance from this incarnate God within which they can use their free will in order to move towards him. They can only accept in faith that Christ is all-present and gracious pro nobis.

Posted by Dr. Jack Kilcrease at 6:07 AM
http://jackkilcrease.blogspot.com/2011/02/great-steven-paulson-quote-on-absolute.html?showComment=1297953550737#c3766523589211954060

Monday, February 14, 2011

Who was St. Valentine???

Saint ValentineHe was medical doctor and priest who lived in Rome while the Emperor Claudius II ruled.  
Valentine and Marius assisted the martyrs during the persecution under Claudius II.
Valentine was captured and when he would not renouce his faith, was beaten with clubs, and afterwards, he was beheaded on February 14, about the year 270.
The church began to commemorate his death in 496 AD, when it was added to the western church's official Calendar of Remembrance.  
Tradition holds that that on the day he was executed for his faithfulness to Christ, he left a note to encourage his prison guard's son.  This not was written on an oddly shaped piece of parchment/paper.
Tradition further contends that this note of encouragment and the odd shape of the parchment/paper is where the current Valentine's Day pattern for the expressions of love, encouragment and devotion came from.
 
 

Friday, February 11, 2011

Everlasting Extras: Theology of the Cross

The difference between living by faith in God according to what God says despite what I experience (theology of the Cross) and living by a faith in God according to what my experience says God is saying (theology of Glory).

Monday, February 7, 2011

It is your philosophy that is tormenting you, not your theology ...

"With all my heart I hate those cares by which you state that you  are consumed. 
They rule your heart, not account of the greatness of the cause but by reason of the greatness of your unbelief.
The same cause existed in the time of John Hus and many others, and they had a harder time of it than we do.
Great though our cause is, its Author and Champion is also great, for the cause is not ours.
Why, then, are you constantly tormenting yourself? 
If our cause is false, let us recant.
But if it is true, why should we make Him a liar who has given us such great promises and who commands us to be confident and undismayed? ‘Cast thy burden upon the Lord,’ (Ps. 55:11) says he. ‘The Lord is nigh unto all them that call upon him.’ (Ps 145:18).
Does he speak like this for nothing, or to beasts?
It is your philosophy that is tormenting you, not your theology …
What good to you expect to accomplish by these vain worries of yours?
What can the devil do more than slay us?  Yes, what?
I beg you, who are so pugnacious in everything else, fight against yourself, your own worst enemy, for you furnish Satan with too many weapons against yourself.
Christ died once for our sins. He will not die again for truth and just, but will live and reign. 
If this be true, and if he reigns, why should you be afraid for the truth?
Perhaps you are afraid that it will be destroyed by God’s wrath.  Even if we should ourselves be destroyed, let it not be by our own hands.
He who is our Father will also be the Father of our children
God, who is able to raise the dead, is also able to uphold his cause
when it is falling, or to raise it up again when it has fallen, or to move it
forward when it is standing.
If we are not worthy instruments to accomplish his purpose, he will
find others.
If we are not strengthened by his promises, where in all the world are
the people to whom these promises apply?"

Martin Luther’s letter to Melanchton
Monday after St. John’s day, 1530
Luther: Letters of Spiritual Counsel
T.G. Tappert  -  p. 146-147



Saturday, February 5, 2011

Mercy Journeys with Pastor Harrison: "The Gospel is the end of all religions." Sasse

An excellent explanation as to why many who come into the church, quickly leave the church. To remain in the church where Christ alone is life and salvation would require and end to their own self-directed self-focused faith.

Mercy Journeys with Pastor Harrison: "The Gospel is the end of all religions." Sasse: "Under no circumstances will the world understand that the church has any other task than to bring her message to the world. In any event ..."

Mercy Journeys with Pastor Harrison: "The Gospel is the end of all religions." Sasse

An excellent explanation as to why many who come into the church, quickly leave the church. To remain in the church where Christ alone is life and salvation would require and end to their own self-directed self-focused faith.

Mercy Journeys with Pastor Harrison: "The Gospel is the end of all religions." Sasse: "Under no circumstances will the world understand that the church has any other task than to bring her message to the world. In any event ..."

Wednesday, February 2, 2011

... to lose the magnitude of the privilege of prayer

While there are many definitions and ideas about prayer, most are often high-jacked by subjective self-serving ideas. 
When people are exhorted to pray, the motive for daily prayer is often couched in terms of personal gain or advantage to the petitioner as they wrangle things out of God.
It seems as if the exercise of prayer is often carried out in the context of personal discomfort or need.  In this context prayer’s purpose is often merely a matter of describing one’s symptoms to a divine doctor, in hopes he has some miracle cure to what discomforts or inconveniences the petitioner. 
To pray according to such an understanding and practice of prayer is to lose the magnitude of what the Lord has given each believer in privilege of prayer.
To pray is put the realities of the moment into the context of eternal realities.
To pray is to put the values of the present into the context of eschatological values.
To pray is to put that which bound yet in sin into the hands of He who Son has set them eternally free.
To pray is to set the aspirations of life for the day into the context of the certain hope of eternal life.
To pray is to release that which I have no hold on into the hands that He who holds all things together.
To pray is to bring what is worldly into the Kingdom that shall have no end.
To pray is to be fully human in the presence of He who is God for us, for the sake of Jesus Christ.  Amen.

- pmwl