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The core beliefs of Christianity are listed below.
Unless you can locate another religion which shares these beliefs, the
answer to the question is “no.”
- The
one true God exists as three distinct, transcendent, immanent, infinite,
eternal, and immutable persons:
Father, Son and Holy Spirit.
- Jesus
Christ is God the Son. Jesus
Christ is man. Jesus Christ is one person whose divine and human natures
cannot be changed, divided, separated or mixed. Jesus Christ was resurrected bodily from the dead.
- No
human being lives a sinless life.
- Salvation,
from the consequences of sin, is possible only by (1) faith, (2) the grace
of God and (3) the substitutionary atonement of Jesus Christ.
2.
Can
God's Will be Thwarted?
Christians give two
diametrically opposed answers to this question. Christians who believe in
accordance with Augustine and Calvin say, " No;" Christians who believe
in accordance with Arminius and Wesley say, "Yes."
Calvinists
claim all reality is
interlocked in a causal chain leading back to God as the first-cause of
all things but humans are free, even though they are determined, because their
choices are executed willingly. The Calvinist defines man as a second-cause
agent incapable of choosing a path different from that which God would have him
choose. Because man doesn't know he is being manipulated, he believes
himself to be a first-cause agent making free decisions. This is
the historic Calvinist concept of "free will." It leads to the
idea that absolute determinism by
God is compatible with the exercise of free will by man which is sometimes called compatibilism or soft
determinism.
Arminians agree much of reality is
part of a causal chain but claim God does not determine the free will decisions
of men or angels. The idea that men and angels are first-cause
agents
of choice, is a central concept of Arminianism and is sometimes called libertarian freedom.
The Arminian believes "free will" makes you a first-cause agent
of decisions. The compatibilist believes "free will" makes you a second-cause
agent; you have simply been tricked into thinking of yourself as a first-cause
agent. These two definitions of free will are mutually exclusive.
Consider a man who beats
his wife, sexually abuses both his daughters and sons, steals from and abuses
his parents and subsequently
dies without confession of sin, without remorse for his brutality, without repentance
and without asking for the mercy of
God. The compatibilist claims each one of these events is God's will
because God's sovereignty requires complete determinism of all things; God from
all eternity, did, by the most wise and holy counsel of His own will, freely,
and unchangeably ordain whatsoever comes to pass. The man may think he is
acting freely but he is actually executing a sinister puppet dance, with God
pulling the strings from behind His transcendence. However, the man is
fully responsible for his second-cause sins since they were executed
willingly.
The Arminian claims not one of these sins was God's will and
God grieves deeply over each of them. Each sin represents a free will decision by
a first-cause agent and is contrary to God's will. God permits, within limits and for
a time, the consequences of rebellion but He is deeply grieved by the evil
world in which we live. The Arminian believes
the Calvinist concept of compatibilism is actually incompatible with God's attributes of holiness,
justice, goodness and truth and with the clear teaching of Scripture:
-
If God credits the
unsaved with second-cause sins then, in conflict with Scripture (Eph
2:8-10), He would credit the saved with second-cause good works.
-
A just God would not
hold a man responsible for a sin which God made him commit.
-
If salvation were
simply a matter of God exercising His free-will, then a good God would save
all men.
-
The idea that free
will can be exercised by a second-cause agent is logical nonsense.
Free will can only be exercised by a first-cause agent.
Consequently, the thesis (determinism by God is free-will by man) violates the logical rule
of contradictories (b is-not not-b). Such a statement is
called a paradox.
The historic Calvinist
responds that we must not expect the holiness, justice and goodness of God will
always make sense to our limited intellect. Furthermore, true free will
can be exercised by second-cause agents; this central concept of historic
Calvinism may be logical nonsense to man but not to God who reasons on a higher
level using a different kind of logic.
As a source of confusion
on this issue, some modern Calvinists seem to view man as a first-cause
agent of choice thereby abandoning the historic Calvinist concept of
compatibilism. Once again, however, God is viewed as operating with some
higher level of logic so the thesis (God as first-cause agent corresponds
to man as first-cause agent) only seems to be a paradox but is not a paradox to God.
Finally, the Calvinist asserts
the full weight of Scripture is on his side. However, the Arminian
believes the character of God,
which emerges from the Bible taken in its entirety as opposed to text out of
context, is inconsistent with Calvinism.
Does
the theology you adopt on this issue have any consequences for your daily
Christian walk? When the eyes of
your heart look toward the Holy Spirit, you are looking through a lens which has
been shaped by of some form of Calvinism or Arminianism. The face of the
person you see looking back is focused by that lens.
If the Triune God truly ordained
all future events before forming the universe then God may be angered by
Arminians who consider this particular view of sovereignty as inconsistent with
the Biblical presentation of God’s character.
Scripture is silent on the consequences of such a theological error.
Alternately, if Calvinism is a theological error, the consequences of
embracing and promulgating this error are given with somewhat greater clarity.
By the 1646 Westminster Confession
(God from all eternity, did, by the most wise and holy counsel of His own will,
freely, and unchangeably ordain whatsoever comes to pass) and the 1689 London
Baptist Confession (God hath decreed in himself, from all eternity, by the most
wise and holy counsel of His own will, freely and unchangeably, all things,
whatsoever comes to pass), God is the first cause of all evil.
All tragedy, suffering and sin in heaven and earth were willed by God
before anything existed except the Trinity.
The greater part of mankind was predestined to eternal damnation by
God’s decree before the universe was formed.
Matthew 12:31,32 and Mark 3:29,30
present the “unpardonable sin” of blaspheming the Holy Spirit.
Attributing, to Satan, Christ’s authenticating miracles, done in the
power of the Holy Spirit, is one path to blasphemy.
What about attributing Satan’s evil to the Holy Spirit?
Might that be another path to blasphemy?
But how could Augustine, Calvin and their theological progeny stumble
into such a grievous error? According
to John Wesley’s “Serious Considerations on Absolute Predestination”:
“This doctrine is novel.
In the first four hundred years after Christ, no mention is made of it by
any writer, great or small, in any part of the Christian Church.
The foundations of it were laid in the later writings of Augustine, when
unguardedly writing against Pelagius. It
was afterward taught by Dominicus, a popish friar, and the monks of his order,
and at last, it was unhappily taken up by John Calvin.”
Wesley goes on to say:
- This doctrine is injurious to God because it makes Him the
author of all sin and represents Him as delighting in the death of sinners,
expressly contrary to His own declaration (Ezek. 33:11; I Tim. 2:4)
.
- This doctrine makes the preaching of the Gospel mere mockery and
delusion since many of those to whom it is preached are, by an irrevocable
decree, shut out from being benefited by it.
- This doctrine makes the coming of Christ and His sacrifice upon
the cross, instead of being a fruit of God’s love to the world, to be one
of the severest acts of God’s indignation against mankind.
God only ordained a very few for salvation while hardening and
increasing the damnation of the far greater number of mankind, namely all
those who do not believe. The
cause of this unbelief is the counsel and decree of God.
In
contrast to Calvinism, Wesley affirmed that God has willed all to be saved and
sacrificed his unique Son on the cross so that the great gift of salvation would
be available to all mankind. There
is hardly any other article of the Christian faith so frequently, plainly and
positively asserted. It is that
which makes the preaching of the gospel ‘glad tidings to all.’
Had this offer of salvation been confined to a few, it would be ‘Sad
tidings of great sorrow’ to most people.
The great chasm between
Arminianism and Calvinism is threatening to split the Southern Baptist
Convention and perhaps other denominations.
Ironically, local congregations, if given a choice, almost never choose
the framework of Calvinism to define their theological beliefs.
Calvinism usually makes its way into the Church via the vehicle of a new
pastor or small group of elders infused with Calvinism by a Bible College or
Seminary. The full face of
Calvinism is never taught or preached because the greater portion of the
congregation would find it offensive. Nevertheless,
theological threads will gradually be woven into the preaching and teaching of
the church. For example, the tragic
death of a child may be framed by saying, “Although we don’t understand, we
must accept God’s will in the death of this child.”
What is the position of your
church on this issue? What is your
position?
3.
What
is the source of evil?
Why Do Bad Things Happen to Good People?
One proposed answer starts with
the theodicy premise, "If a person is righteous and God is all-powerful, just and good then
the person will not suffer" which is
of the form "if (x and y) then not-z." Taking the
contrapositive, "if z then (not-x or not-y)," yields "if a
person suffers then the person is not righteous or God is not all-powerful, just and
good." We all know persons whose godliness is genuine,
whose moral character is upright and who, though not sinless, have kept
themselves from great transgression, but who nonetheless suffer
bitterly. Since the Christian God is all-powerful, just and good, it
follows that such persons are not righteous. The problem with this logic
is the theodicy premise itself; the premise is false and all conclusions drawn
from it are false!
Another proposed answer
is that evil is God's will. The Calvinist reasons that God from
all eternity, did, by the most wise and holy counsel of His own will, freely,
and unchangeably ordain whatsoever comes to pass. This includes all kinds
of evil! When a cleric officiating at the funeral of someone who has died
a tragic death intones, "We must accept this tragedy as the will of
God," he is attributing this tragic death to the immutable will of a holy
and loving God.
Other proposed answers
include:
-
We live in a random
universe where things simply happen. But what, then, is the
explanation for intentional goodness?
-
Evil is simply the
absence of goodness. Does this describe a terrorist who kills
thousands of persons at random?
-
Evil is an illusion,
an aberration of our ignorant intellect. Try telling this to someone
who is dying of cancer or cystic fibrosis.
-
Evil is the mistaken
result of the creational activity of a finite, limited god who cannot keep
up with his runaway creation. Why would the infinite God of
Christianity have difficulty keeping up with anything?
Consider this option. God created angels and humans as first-cause agents with
the free will to choose or reject love in every situation. Within limits
and for a time, God will permit the consequences of these choices; otherwise,
free will is an illusion. God is infinitely, eternally and immutably good
and will immediately prevent any evil except that which results from the free
will decisions of angels and humans. Therefore, rebellious angels and
humans are the first-cause agents of all existing evil. Satan, the
ruler of rebellious angels, is the prince of this world and all creation groans
under his iron fist.
4.
Is Christianity Compatible with Positive Tolerance?
The conclusion that
"Jesus is God" is a natural consequence of classical logic based on
the evidence of Scripture, tradition (history) and personal experience.
Some in our time fail to be convinced by classical logic because of positive
tolerance, a concept taught in many educational institutions and through the
media. Positive tolerance is a construction of Hegelian dialectic
reasoning in which we synthesize that both a theses and its antithesis are
true. In other words, (a is b) is true and (a is-not b)
is true; (Jesus is God) is true and (Jesus is-not God) is true. This means
every individual's beliefs, values, lifestyle and truth claims are equally
valid. Not only does everyone have an equal right to his beliefs but all
beliefs are equally true. I may believe (Jesus is God) but I must also
believe (Allah is God), (Buddha is God), (Brahman is God) and (God is a
fictitious being). The concept of positive tolerance is incompatible with
logic and reason. One of God's attributes is absolute truth; positive
tolerance is absolute lie.
5. What is Holiness?
Holiness is the attribute of
God which permeates all other attributes. It
is the state of who He is and the act of what He does; it is absolute purity of
will, intellect, heart and action. Certain
words such as love, integrity, righteousness, sanctification, morality, ethics
and character, have no meaning aside from the holiness of God.
Holiness makes God perfect in being, wisdom, power, justice, goodness and
truth.
Since man is created in
God’s image, every human possesses a soul comprising a will, intellect and
heart and every human is capable of action.
As with God, holiness in man is both state and act.
My state is holy if my will, intellect and heart conform respectively to
the will, intellect and heart of God. My
acts are holy if they flow from a holy state and are the acts God would do in my
place.
Sin is all things not holy.
The state of my will, intellect and heart is either holy or sinful; my
acts are either holy or sinful. The
intersection of sin and holiness is the null or empty set.
Holiness and sin are disjoint sets or mutually exclusive events in the
sample space of all possible states and actions.
Although much of reality is
part of a causal chain, God does not determine my free will decisions and I will
not always select the path of holiness. Also,
my intellect is finite, my wisdom is flawed and I am fully capable of justifying
sin by logic and reason. Finally,
my human heart is deceitfully wicked and cannot be trusted (Gen 6:5; Ps 14:1;
Prov 12:15, 14:12, 20:9; Isa 32:6; Jer 17:9; Mat 15:19; Mark 7:21; John 5:42;
Acts 28:27). Given my flawed human
soul, how can I ever hope to be holy?
I begin by requesting an
audience with God and saying, “Father, I come into Your presence confessing I
am a sinner, having remorse in my heart, wanting to repent, asking for Your
mercy, receiving from You the far greater gift of salvation and believing I am
saved by faith, the grace of God and the substitutionary atonement of Jesus
Christ.” God responds by giving
me the gift of salvation. Part of
this gift is the regeneration or initial sanctification of my soul.
By this gift, the Holy Spirit makes known to me the will of God and
helps me discern truth from lie.
He occupies and purifies all the rooms of my heart into which He is
invited. For the first time in my life
I am not a prisoner of sin. I
am free to pursue the path of righteousness.
This is the first day of my Christian life. This new life is a daily dying to sin and living to
pursue righteousness; it constitutes a life of repentance, faith and obedience
continually reaffirmed and renewed. It
means allowing my will and intellect to become increasingly aligned with the
will and intellect of God. It
means letting the Holy Spirit occupy and purify an increasing number of rooms in
my heart.
It means works of Christian love flow
increasingly from a heart that loves God and loves my neighbor. I
am now on the path
to holiness.
6.
Are Christians Expected "to do" or Just "to be"?
Holiness
is the state of who God is and the acts that He does. A state of holiness is characterized by absolute purity
of heart, intellect and will. Acts of holiness are frequently called
"fruit of the Spirit" (Gal 5:22); they represent acts of Christian
love performed by one person and received by another. Christians are expected to reflect God's holiness since we are created in His
image (Gen 1:26). In fact, we are specifically commanded to be holy because God is
holy (Lev 11:44).
What
about the option of just "being" in a state of holiness but not
"doing" holy acts? For example, I could allocate Sundays for
worship and prayer. During the week I could concentrate on avoiding sinful
thoughts thereby maintaining the purity of my heart. I could also
participate in the church choir and read the Bible regularly. I could even
study the deep meaning of Greek and Hebrew text and become skilled at systematic
theology and Biblical exegesis. Of course with all this activity, I
wouldn't have time to minister to others or be a servant to anyone. Maybe
my daily life could serve as a role model for the unsaved but I certainly
wouldn't have time to deal with those people directly. Furthermore, my
church comprises old time "saints of God" and is just the right
size. There is no need to be discipled or to disciple others in my church;
we are beyond that sort of thing.
The
commandments in Scripture stand in sharp contrast to the option embraced in the
previous paragraph. Read the following passages and judge for yourself:
Mat 22:36-40; Rom 13:8-10; Gal 5:14; Luke 8:21; Jam 4:17; Eph 4:11-12; John
15:1-2, 8, 13, 16; Mat 7:12, 17-20; Mat 25:14-30.
7.
What is Your Theology?
Many
say, “I just believe in God! I don’t need a theology or doctrine.” If this statement encompasses your Christian beliefs then it
defines your theology by default. Unfortunately,
this statement doesn’t put much separation between you and Satan’s minions
(Jam 2:19). You may say, “I just
have faith; I don’t need more.” In
Christianity, faith must be preceded by repentance and followed by obedience.
Faith as an intellectual exercise is meaningless.
From the moment you are saved by the grace of God and the substitutionary
atonement of Jesus Christ, deeds matter (Jam 2:14-25).
Your belief system, or theology, determines your deeds.
If you need more detail in your belief system, try the following:
- The
Bible is the inspired, infallible and inerrant word of God.
- The
one true God exists as three distinct, transcendent, immanent, infinite,
eternal, and immutable persons: God the Father, God the Son and God the Holy
Spirit.
- Jesus
Christ is God the Son. Jesus
Christ is man. Jesus Christ is
one person whose divine and human natures cannot be changed, divided,
separated or mixed. Jesus
Christ was resurrected bodily from the dead.
Jesus Christ was born of a virgin.
- Every
person since Adam and Eve, except Jesus Christ, was born with a sin nature
(totally depraved) and no person, except Jesus Christ, has lived a sinless
life.
- Salvation
from the consequences of sin is offered to all persons by the grace of God
and the substitutionary atonement of Jesus Christ.
- The
grace of God that brings salvation has appeared to all persons (Titus 2:11):
(a) the requirements of the law are written by God on every heart (Rom.
2:15), (b) Jesus Christ knocks
at the door of every heart (Rev. 3:20), (c) the Holy Spirit calls and
convicts each person (John 16:8) and (d) God’s eternal power and divine
nature are evident in the world around us (Rom 1:20).
Nevertheless, many resist the grace of God.
- Each
person who responds to God’s grace and the substitutionary atonement of
Jesus Christ by confession of sin, remorse, repentance, faith and obedience
receives the great gift of salvation. Each person who resists God’s grace is condemned to
everlasting punishment.
- Faith precedes
regeneration; faith is an act of human free will responding to the grace of
God.
8.
What Gifts Does God Give You at the Instant of Salvation?
Each
person who responds to God’s grace (Titus 2:11) and the substitutionary
atonement of Jesus Christ (Rom 5:8; 1 John 2:2) by confession of sin, remorse,
repentance, faith and obedience instantly receives the great gift of salvation.
This gift includes but is not limited to the following:
- Redemption (Rom 3:24;
8:23) - You are freed from the bondage of sin for the first time in your
life.
- Forgiveness (Mat 6:9-15;
1 John 1:8-10) – You are forgiven your sins by God.
- Justification (Rom 3:24)
– You are declared righteous by God; this legal declaration is valid
because Christ died to pay the penalty for your sin and lived a life of
perfect righteousness that can in turn be imputed to you.
- Adoption (Rom 3:23; Gal
3:26; 1 John 3:2) – You are a joint heir with Jesus to the Kingdom of God.
- Regeneration (John
3:1-21) - The Holy Spirit makes known to you the will of God and helps you
discern truth from lie. He
occupies and purifies all the rooms of your heart into which He is invited.
For the first time in your life you are not a prisoner of sin.
You are free to pursue the path of righteousness.
This is the first day of your Christian life and you are a new
creature in Christ. This is the mechanism of your redemption.
- Sanctification (Heb 6:1;
1 Pet 1:13-16) - You are led by the Holy Spirit along the path toward
holiness; this is a lifetime journey.
- Reconciliation ( Eph
2:11-22) - You are reconciled with all other believers.
- Unification (3:1-11) –
You are united with all believers in the Church of Jesus Christ.
- Glorification (Rom 8:30)
– You will complete the journey along the path of sanctification when your
mission in this life is done.
9.
Why is the Protestant Church Dying in the United States?
Available
evidence suggests most denominations and individual protestant churches have
either reached a plateau or are on the decline in the United States.
This country may be only one or two generations behind Europe, Australia,
New Zealand and other regions in experiencing the essential death of the church.
Why is this happening? Is
the church afflicted with some Satanic virus for which there is neither
treatment nor cure? Is the reason for this spiral into the abyss some great
theological mystery?
Chapters
2 and 3 of Ephesians explain that all believers are reconciled with one another
and united in the Church of Jesus Christ; authorities in Heaven are observing
the church hoping to see the “manifold wisdom of God” at work on earth.
To the extent these rulers see a body of believers characterized by
·
Confession of sin, remorse, repentance,
faith and obedience
·
Spiritual unity in pursuit of the Great
Commandment (Mat 22:36-40) and the Great Commission (Mat 28:18-20),
they see the hand of God working
through His church. But what ugly
characteristics are these authorities also observing in churches across the
United States? The list includes
but is certainly not limited to the following items.
As you read these items, remember that much is expected from those to
whom much has been given (Luke 12:48) and much has been given to America; for
the United States, the bar has been raised.
·
Pastors lacking the courage of their
convictions and no longer serving the One who called them but instead serving
the ones who pay their salaries.
·
Pastors having neither leadership nor
administrative skills but refusing to delegate or relinquish control to those
who do.
·
Church leaders having neither leadership
nor administrative skills. With
regard to that old saying -- either lead, follow or get out of the way-- these
leaders choose “none of the above.”
·
Church leaders who wallow in the exercise
of power and authority. They have
forgotten that when a Christian is extruded by God into a position of
leadership, that person becomes a greater servant to all.
·
Church leaders who don’t know the
meaning of corporate prayer.
·
Church leaders and Bible scholars who
teach non-Biblical concepts such as: (1) the idea of the trinity is false; God
exists as one person with three faces or masks, (2) Jesus was not bodily
resurrected from the dead, (3) Paul exhibited latent homosexual tendencies, (4)
Jesus may have had a sexual relationship with Mary Magdalene and (5) modern
psychology and sociology supercede the Bible with regard to behavioral issues.
·
Churches exercising non-Biblical concepts
in the selection of church leaders. Most
churches would be pleased to accept John Newton or the apostle Paul as a pastor,
elder or deacon even though these men were frequently accessories to murder.
These same churches might exclude a 60-year-old Christian, having
tremendous leadership skills, because he/she was deserted by a spouse at age 19.
·
Churches substituting man made rituals
(committees, boards, councils, by-laws, membership) and non-Biblical vision
(massive building programs and extensive property ownership) for Biblical
leadership and planning.
·
Churches that are little more than
introverted, self-serving country clubs for a few families.
Service has been replaced by serve-us and “it’s all about God” has
been replaced by “it’s all about me.”
·
Churches having ritualistic, “wooden”
worship services; the Holy Spirit is not invited and would not be welcome.
·
Churches where “loving your neighbor”
is practiced but with subtle exclusivity regarding who constitutes a neighbor.
·
Churches with no burden for evangelism
because of their belief that persons elected to salvation and persons condemned
to hell were chosen by God before the universe was formed.
·
Churches where “enlarging the
fellowship” means inviting persons just like those already present but
excluding all others from country club participation.
·
Churches where “discipleship” means
re-reading the same baby-food Sunday School lessons covered for the past 30
years but never knowing exactly what Christians believe and why.
These items can all be characterized by one word:
disobedience. God usually turns his
back on the disobedient until He observes repentance. Could this be the solution to the mysterious malady
afflicting the church in America? Is
it possible that the downward spiral of the church is not so much a mystery
after all?
10.
Did God Elect Only a Few for Salvation While Condemning the Greater Part of
Mankind to Hell?
Arminians
believe much of reality is part of a causal chain but many human actions are the
result of a first-cause, human free will choice between two or more options.
Calvinists believe every event in the universe is under God’s
“sovereign” control including all actions and thoughts of men and angels.
Calvinists say you may think your choices are free but God is really the
hidden, first-cause behind every decision you make.
Calvinists believe God only ordained a few for salvation while hardening
and increasing the damnation of the far greater part of mankind, namely all
those who do not believe. The cause
of this unbelief is the counsel and decree of God.
Calvinism
would appear to undermine God’s holiness, justice, goodness and truth.
But what does Scripture teach? Read
the following verses, get a Bible, read the text around each verse and then
reach your own conclusion.
- 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. (John 3:16)
- He
is the atoning sacrifice for our sins, and not only for ours but also for
the sins of the whole world. (1 John 2:2)
- Then
Peter began to speak: "I now realize how true it is that God does not
show favoritism but accepts men from every nation who fear him and do what
is right. (Acts 10:34-35)
- They
came to him and said, "Teacher, we know you are a man of integrity. You
aren't swayed by men, because you pay no attention to who they are; but you
teach the way of God in accordance with the truth. (Mark 12:14)
- This
is a trustworthy saying that deserves full acceptance (and for this we labor
and strive) that we have put our hope in the living God, who is the Savior
of all men, and especially of those who believe. (1 Tim 4:9-10)
- This
is good, and pleases God our Savior, who wants all men to be saved and to
come to a knowledge of the truth. (1 Tim 2:3-4)
- The
Lord is not slow in keeping his promise, as some understand slowness. He is
patient with you, not wanting anyone to perish, but everyone to come to
repentance. (2 Pet 3:9)
- Do
I take any pleasure in the death of the wicked? declares the Sovereign LORD.
Rather, am I not pleased when they turn from their ways and live? (Ezek
18:23)
- Yet
you say, ‘The way of the Lord is not just.’ Hear, O house of Israel: Is my way unjust?
Is it not your ways that are unjust? (Ezek 18:25)
- Say
to them, ‘As surely as I live, declares the Sovereign LORD, I take no
pleasure in the death of the wicked, but rather that they turn from their
ways and live. Turn!
Turn from your evil ways! Why
will you die, O house of Israel?’ (Ezek 33:11)
- For
he does not willingly bring affliction or grief to the children of men. (Lam
3:33)
- For
the LORD your God is God of gods and Lord of lords, the great God, mighty
and awesome, who shows no partiality and accepts no bribes. (Deut 10:17)
- Now
let the fear of the LORD be upon you. Judge carefully, for with the LORD our
God there is no injustice or partiality or bribery. (2 Chron 19:7)
- Is
he not the One who says to kings, ‘You are worthless,’ and to nobles,
‘You are wicked,’ who shows
no partiality to princes and does not favor the rich over the poor, for they
are all the work of his hands? (Job 34:18-19)
·
For God does not show favoritism. (Rom 2:11)
·
And masters, treat your slaves in the same way. Do not threaten
them, since you know that he who is both their Master and yours is in heaven,
and there is no favoritism with him. (Eph 6:9)
11.
Is Satan Alive and Well?
The outcome of
the great war between good and evil was decided by the substitutionary atonement
of Jesus Christ. But few would
claim Jesus has already repossessed and repaired his corrupted creation.
For a time and within limits, Jesus continues to permit the consequences
of rebellion and the brutal corruption of all life.
Look around. Did
our good, omnipotent God create the inherently violent and terrifying system we
see in nature, a system rife with sickness, suffering and death – a system red
in tooth and claw? Does nature
itself appear to operate contrary to the character of God?
Does the world at every level appear to be at war?
Does the world appear to be permeated and corrupted at all levels by an
evil influence? Did Jesus believe
that someone else had been given authority over this world and Jesus Himself
must repossess and repair?
- Three times, Jesus referred to Satan as the prince
of this world.
Now is the time for judgment on this world; now
the prince of this world will be driven out. (John 12:31)
I will not speak with you much longer, for the prince
of this world is coming. He has no hold on me, but the world must learn that I
love the Father and that I do exactly what my Father has commanded me.
"Come now; let us leave. (John
14:30-31)
When
he comes, he will convict the world of guilt in regard to sin and
righteousness and judgment: in regard to sin, because men do not believe in
me; in regard to righteousness, because I am going to the Father, where you
can see me no longer; and in regard to judgment, because the prince
of this world now stands condemned. (John 16:8-11)
·
Jesus accepted the concept that Satan had been given authority
over this world.
The devil led him up to a
high place and showed him in an instant all the kingdoms of the world. And he
said to Him, "I will give you all their authority and splendor, for it
has been given to me, and I can give it to anyone I want to.
So if you worship me, it will all be yours."
Jesus answered, "It is written: Worship the Lord your God and
serve him only.” (Luke 4:5-8)
·
Jesus addresses the evil prince as the
leader of a unified army of spirit beings.
"Then he will say to those
on his left, Depart from me, you who are cursed, into the eternal fire
prepared for the devil and his angels.”
(Mat 25:41)
·
Scripture confirms that Satan has been given control of this
world.
We know that we are
children of God, and that the whole world is under the control of the evil
one. (1 John 5:19)
The god of this age has
blinded the minds of unbelievers, so that they cannot see the light of the
gospel of the glory of Christ, who is the image of God.
(2 Cor 4:4)
As for you, you were
dead in your transgressions and sins, in which you used to live when you
followed the ways of this world and of the ruler of the kingdom of the air,
the spirit who is now at work in those who are disobedient.
(Eph 2:1-2)
Be
self-controlled and alert. Your enemy the devil prowls around like a roaring
lion looking for someone to devour. (1
Peter 5:8)
For this reason, when I
could stand it no longer, I sent to find out about your faith. I was afraid
that in some way the tempter might have tempted you and our efforts might have
been useless. (1 Thes 3:5)
And
no wonder, for Satan himself masquerades as an angel of light.
(2 Cor 11:14)
For
our struggle is not against flesh and blood, but against the rulers, against
the authorities, against the powers of this dark world and against the
spiritual forces of evil in the heavenly realms.
(Eph 6:12)
- The
entire creation has been subjected to bondage and decay.
For the creation was
subjected to frustration, not by its own choice, but by the will of the one
who subjected it, in hope that the creation itself will be liberated from its
bondage to decay and brought into the glorious freedom of the children of God.
We know that the whole creation has been groaning as in the pains of
childbirth right up to the present time.
(Rom 8:20-22)
Jesus’ earthly ministry
reflected the belief that the world had been seized by a hostile, sinister lord.
Jesus came to begin the process of repossession and repair.
According to Scripture the universe was originally good and the glory of
God is still evident in it (Rom 1:20).
But something else – something frightfully wicked – is evident in it
as well. Of their own free will,
Satan and other spiritual beings rebelled against God in the primordial past and
now abuse their God-given authority over certain aspects of creation.
Satan, who holds the power of death (Heb 2:14) exercises a pervasive,
structural, diabolical influence to the point that the entire creation is in
bondage to decay. The pain-ridden,
bloodthirsty, sinister and hostile character of nature should be attributed to
Satan and his army, not to God.
12.
What are the Attributes of God?
The attributes of God can be
characterized by a finite list of words and phrases so long as we agree that
when a word or phrase is applied to God, the true depth of meaning cannot be
fathomed. Here are a few attributes
arbitrarily grouped in seven categories. Feel
free to add or rearrange.
- Being: Transcendence, Immanence, Infinitude, Eternalness,
Immutability
- Wisdom: Exhaustively Definite
Foreknowledge, Omniscience,
Resourcefulness, Patience, Perseverance, Persistence, Discipline, Prudence,
Understanding, Discernment, Stewardship, Courage
- Power: Omnipotence, Humility, Meekness,
Gentleness, Obedience/yieldedness, Endurance,
Long-suffering/Forbearance, Respect, Responsibility, Dependence, Devotion,
Surrender, Commitment
- Holiness: The state
of who You are and the acts that You do; Holiness in being and Holiness in
action;
Absolute purity of heart, will, intellect
and action; Perfect
love, integrity, righteousness, morality, ethics, character;
Perfect being, wisdom, power, justice, goodness, truth
- Justice: Punishment for Sinners; Substitutionary
Atonement; Redemption; Forgiveness; Justification; Adoption; Regeneration;
Sanctification; Reconciliation; Unification; Glorification
- Goodness: Love, Mercy, Grace, Compassion, Kindness,
Benevolence, Charity, Faithfulness, Trustworthiness, Peace, Joy,
Fulfillment, Fruitfulness, Faith, Hope, Reconciliation, Healing,
Encouragement, Comfort, Strength
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