** In response to the Supreme Court's decision on gay marriage:
Okay, here's my rant-y, overly-long, and potentially incendiary post for the quarter (actually a cleverly disguised apology/call for love and understanding):
Thank you friends for being who you are. I'm proud to say that, given the recent Supreme Court judgment on gay marriage, Facebook pretty clearly shows I have friends on BOTH sides of the issue. This is a good thing (surrounding yourself only with those you agree with is not the best way to go about life). And frankly, you've all been, without any exceptions, extremely respectful and loving in every one of your posts on the subject, even when others may not be. Even the articles you share have been similar. On the one hand, you have been celebratory without being gloating or judging. On the other hand, you have been disappointed without being bitter or judging. Thank you for doing your part in making the internet and life in general a more respectful, friendlier, and generally more decent place for everyone.
In general, I get annoyed by debates over gay marriage or homosexuality in general. Not because I don't have an opinion on some matters (listen to my Cornerstone class on the Old Testament laws where I talk about biblical commands about sex) or that people don't agree with me but rather because of the tone and irrationality of the debate in most cases. Debates generally consist almost entirely in name calling, straw men, false analogies, condemnation for even making an analogy (without even considering the merits of the argument), begging the question, equivocation, ad hominems, genetic fallacies, etc.
On the debate over the legalization of gay marriage I just have a few points to make which, if taken seriously, would have at least as much chance as any in making things a bit more tolerable (though maybe not):
1) Just because someone supports the legalization of gay marriage does not mean they think it is morally permissible. You can think being a Jehovah's Witness is wrong, for instance, all the while thinking that people have a basic right to be a Jehovah's Witness. People can have rights to choose whether or not to do a bad thing.
2) Just because someone is against the legalization of gay marriage does not mean they think it is morally wrong. The majority of the legal and philosophical arguments against legalization do not depend in any way on the moral (or even religious) status of gay marriage. (Nor does anyone claim that gay marriage will harm their own personal marriage - that's a straw man) For instance, one argument is that marriage by definition excludes two persons of the same sex so that saying we should legalize same sex marriage would be akin to saying that we should legalize round squares. Whether the argument works or not, that has nothing to do with morality.
3) Similarly, just because someone thinks it's wrong doesn't mean they are against legalization and just because someone thinks it's morally permissible doesn't mean they think the law should recognize it. In other words, issues of legal rights and legal values are separate (though not always necessarily completely distinct from) issues of moral rightness and moral values. Just because it should be legal doesn't mean it's okay. Just because it shouldn't be doesn't mean it isn't. To repeat: these are distinct questions. How we relate the questions to each other will largely depend on the political and legal assumptions we adopt. It's not a matter of being a bigot or not, or being an approver of sin or not - it's about political and legal views, period. In general, Americans tend to confuse legal and moral values and jump to conclusions about one from a conviction about the other. "People should have the right to do X; it's none of your business if they do it, so mind your own business" quickly becomes "So doing X is okay"; and "Doing X is wrong" quickly becomes "We should outlaw X".
4) There's a distinction between what should or shouldn't be legal and what is or isn't constitutional. Someone can think the supreme court ruled correctly while also thinking that gay marriage should be illegal or think that it should be legal while thinking that the court ruled incorrectly. (A distinction that was lost on those who, simply because they thought it should be illegal, criticized Chief Justice Roberts for ruling in favor of "Obamacare")
5) The Bible does not explicitly and directly tell us which political and legal theories to adopt nor does it explicitly and directly speak about gay marriage, hence to say "the Bible says no to gay marriage", etc. is a bit misleading when we're talking about legal rights.
6) On the other hand, to say "The Bible says nothing about gay marriage" is also misleading since it does in fact (in my opinion) say direct things about homosexual acts and morality (note that I say "morality", not "legality"), which are topics obviously closely related to gay marriage.
Bottom line: As someone who has not chosen a specific political/legal reference point, I don't have a particular opinion on whether or not the Supreme Court made the right decision. I don't know - I haven't considered these reference points nor the arguments for and against gay marriage in enough detail to make an informed decision regarding legality. (I really can see both sides of the argument at the moment.) I make decisions based on warrant and right now I simply haven't acquired enough information. Some other people may have done this, but I haven't. I hope that's okay - it wasn't up to me to make the decision anyway. But let's be understanding of those who do not share our own views, whether of the legality or the morality of gay marriage. Let's listen and understand where they're coming from, WHY they hold the views they do, and let's see things from their point of view before we rush to condemn. Let's have empathy with others and drop the name calling, shaming, and judging. We're not enemies, we're family. We're people. Let's treat each other as such.
** In response to Kim Davis refusing to sign marriage licenses:
Not a popular opinion (feel free to disagree) - and I may be wrong about this - but I can't help but think regarding what's going on in Kentucky that recognizing that two people have met government requirements to enter into a government contract, regardless of whether entering into such a contract is sinful or unwise or otherwise inadvisable (and the clerk in question apparently has no problem recognizing other contracts she disagrees with), is in no way an endorsement or moral acceptance of such a contract. I'm a very strong supporter of religious liberty, but I don't think religious liberty has much of anything to do with what's going on here. That's just my initial reaction, though.
** In response to this bit of silliness:
Oy. Sorry, short rant: While I agree that Davis isn't doing the right thing here, I have to object to the way Huffington Post is trying to argue for that position. This is the sort of article you see again and again (not necessarily about this case, but in general), and it's really annoying since it completely ignores how biblical hermeneutics (the interpretation and application of the Bible) even works. The majority of these jobs are not "banned by the Bible". For one thing, most of the out-of-context quotes don't even match the job description given. Not eating pork, for instance, doesn't have much to do with selling other people pork (though if the former is wrong, one could argue the latter would be as well, but that doesn't follow automatically). For another, even if they did, it still wouldn't be relevant since lists like this ignore the fact that there are biblical and theological reasons why Christians follow some laws strictly and literally today and others not so much. Articles like this try to make it seem arbitrary, silly, and a case of picking and choosing. While many Christians might not be aware of the exact reasons WHY some laws are followed more strictly than others, that does not mean that there are no good reasons. This is precisely one of the many reasons why I did the Old Testament laws class I did, so people would understand biblically how to interpret these laws and how they are supposed to be applied today. Other than the psychic advisor or maybe the gossip columnist (which is kind of a scummy job to do anyway), I don't see how any of these would be a violation of biblical principles.
Showing posts with label church. Show all posts
Showing posts with label church. Show all posts
Monday, January 25, 2016
Sunday, April 27, 2014
Notes on Acts: Introduction and Chapters 1-2
ACTS
Introduction
A. Author: Luke
1. Sometimes a companion of Paul
a) Colossians 4:14; II Timothy 4:11; Philemon 1:24
b) Probably present with Paul during the “we” passages in Acts
2. Physician (Colossians 4:14)
B. Audience: Theophilus
1. Same addressee as Gospel of Luke
2. An individual or group?
a) “Theophilus” means “lover of God”
b) Standard dedication for individuals used
c) Maybe sent to an individual but meant to be used more widely as
well
C. Purpose and Core Theme
1. This is the second volume of Luke’s two-volume project, begun in the
Gospel of Luke
2. Purpose: To offer an “orderly account” of “the things that have been
fulfilled among us”, “so that you may know for certain the things you
were taught” (Luke 1:1-4)
a) Luke wants his readers to know for sure how the stories of Jesus
and the early church fit into Scripture and the story of Israel
b) Concerned to place Jesus and the church as both the fulfillment of
the Old Testament promises and the continuation of (and new
chapters in) the Old Testament story
3. Concerned throughout with the “kingdom of God”
a) Reign or rule of God
b) Jesus preached the gospel of the kingdom of God (for example,
Luke 4:43; 8:1; 16:16)
c) The gospel the church preaches is also characterized as the gospel
“of the kingdom” (Acts 8:12; cf. Luke 9:2, 60; 10:9; Acts 19:8;
20:25; 28:23, 31)
d) Brief Old Testament background
i. Humanity sinful
ii. Israel called in order to bless humanity (Genesis 12:1-3)
iii. Israel given the Law but Israel is unfaithful to God
iv. Israel is cursed and exiled
v. Prophets proclaim a return from exile, restoration of Israel, and
the fulfillment of Israel’s calling (Isaiah 40:1-5; Jeremiah
29:10-14)
vi. A physical return happens, but Israel is still sinful and not
restored
vii. Even those in Jerusalem still see themselves as in some sense
“in exile” (Ezra 9:6-9; see also Daniel 9:1-24)
viii. Restoration and fulfillment are still to come
ix. “Return from exile” used to describe Israel’s restoration (e.g.,
Isaiah 60:1-5)
e) Two ages:
The Present Age The Age to Come/Kingdom of God
Kingdoms of the world/Satan Kingdom of God/Messiah/Israel
Israel under curse/exile Israel restored/returned/forgiven
Israel under foreign rule Rule of Messiah
Israel divided Israel reunited
Enemies of God triumphant Enemies defeated
Spirit empowers select Spirit empowers all people of God
Separation from God God’s presence
Sin, Israel rebellious Faith(fulness), Israel repentant
Death, sickness Eternal life, health, resurrection
Israel God’s chosen nation All nations into God’s family
f) John the Baptist prepared for the coming kingdom in Christ (e.g.,
Luke 1:16-17; Luke 3:3-6)
g) Jesus announced and brought in the kingdom of God in his own
person, taking on Israel’s calling (Luke 1:25-32; 1:67-79; 2:38;
7:18-23; 11:20; Acts 15:13-18; see Isaiah 49:3-7; 61:1-6; Amos
9:11-15), and then throughout the world through his Spirit-
empowered church (Acts 1:8; see Isaiah 11:10-13; 44:3)
h) The ages for now overlap: the old age isn’t fully gone or the new
one fully come (e.g., Luke 17:21)
i) The finalization or consummation of the defeat of the old age and
triumph of the kingdom of God awaits Jesus’ return
j) In the meantime, the church carries on Jesus’ mission (Luke
24:45-49; Acts 1:6-8; 2:38-39)
1:1-11 Introduction and recap: The coming kingdom/restoration
A. Part two of Luke’s story (1-2)
1. In the Gospel, Luke discussed “all that Jesus began to do and teach”
(1)
2. The Gospel of Luke ends with the Ascension (2)
3. Acts will now detail further what Jesus continues to do and teach
through his Spirit-empowered people
B. Jesus teaches about the kingdom (3-8)
1. “What my Father promised” - Holy Spirit promised in the Old
Testament (4) and by John the Baptist (Luke 3:16)
2. “Restoring the kingdom to Israel” (6)
a) The disciples are wondering if the kingdom of God will now come
in full and Israel will be restored
b) Luke uses redemption words always of Israel or Jerusalem - Jesus
brings the promised restoration/return (Luke 1:68; 2:38; 24:21; cf.
Acts 3:19-21)
3. Jesus’ answer (7-8)
a) The apostles won’t know the time of Jesus’ return and the
kingdom’s consummation (7; cf. Matthew 24:36; Mark 13:31)
b) But they will experience the coming of the kingdom - the
restoration of Israel - soon enough (8)
i. Jesus is not changing the subject, but still answering their
question
ii. Jesus speaks here of their entrance into the life of the kingdom -
their restoration as Israel - through the promised Holy Spirit,
iii. Of the spread of the gospel that the kingdom has come,
iv. And the reunification of Israel, as foretold - “Judea and
Samaria”
v. “To the farthest ends of the earth” - a phrase from Isaiah 49:6,
predicting inclusion of the Gentiles in God’s people
C. Jesus ascends to the Father (9-11)
1. Jesus reigns in heaven as Lord and Messiah (see 2:33, 36)
2. He will send the Holy Spirit from heaven to continue his work on
earth
a) As Jesus took on Israel’s mission and calling, so now he continues
it through his disciples
b) His power and authority are passed on through the same Spirit
that empowered Jesus (like Elijah to Elisha following Elijah’s
ascension)
1:12-26 Preparing for the Spirit
The proper number of apostles to experience the coming of the Spirit = 12. The Twelve represent the redeemed twelve tribes of Israel - the restored people of God. Hence, Judas needed to be replaced so that all Israel might be represented.
Drawing lots (26) - an Old Testament mode of seeking divine guidance in the absence of a Spirit-inspired person. Emphasizes that the time of the kingdom is drawing near and the old time without the Spirit is drawing to a close.
2:1-41 Israel restored/returned
A. Jesus sends the Holy Spirit (see 33) and God’s people enter into the kingdom of God (1-4)
B. Jews “from every nation under heaven” present in Jerusalem for Pentecost (5-13)
1. Peter associates them with “the whole house of Israel” (14, 22, 36)
2. Echoes of Ezekiel 37:14-25, a prophecy of the restoration of Israel
3. Will scattered Israel be gathered again into a restored relationship
with God?
C. Peter proclaims Jesus as Lord and Messiah (14-36)
1. Quotes (17-21) from a prophecy of the restoration of Israel (Joel
2:28-32)
a) Prophecy, visions, dreams - examples of activities of the
empowering Spirit
b) Moses’ wish for God’s people (Numbers 11:29) is fulfilled
2. The crucifixion was not an accident or a defeat but planned by God
(22-23)
3. “You executed” (23) - Luke clearly portrays the city of Jerusalem,
including the pilgrims there for the festivals, to have rejected Jesus
(see, for example, Luke 23:13-25)
4. God’s Messiah was the first to experience the resurrection and Israel’s
restoration (24-32)
5. Jesus has been enthroned in heaven and reigns as Lord and Messiah
(33-36)
D. The scattered exiles are indeed gathered again and restored (37-41)
1. Repentance and forgiveness of sins (38)
a) In the Old Testament, Israel is restored in the form of a repentant,
faithful remnant (see especially Isaiah)
b) “Forgiveness of sins” - Israel’s restoration from the curse/exile is
here!
c) Those who repent and join the remnant represented by the
disciples will experience the gift of the kingdom - the Holy Spirit
2. “All who are far off” (39)
a) In Peter’s mouth in this context, would likely refer to scattered
Jews
b) In Luke’s writing in the larger context, Luke would likely also want
us to think of the Gentiles, who live “to the ends of the earth” (see
8)
2:42-47 New lives in the kingdom as the restored Israel
A. Restored Israel devotes itself to the apostles’ teachings just as it once
did to Moses’
1. The apostolic teaching is thus put on par with the Old Testament
Torah!
2. This authority ultimately results in our New Testament
B. God’s people are transformed by the Holy Spirit (44-47)
Wednesday, December 4, 2013
Genesis and Christmas
These are some half-formed, sometimes random, somewhat repetitive notes I made for the sermon prep study group at Cornerstone this week - enjoy!
Genesis 2-3: Israelites would have seen their own story here, the story of Genesis-II Kings (Joshua, Judges, Samuel, and Kings were written as a direct four-part sequel to the Pentateuch to form a single story ending with Israel and Judah’s exiles but with a note of hope for ultimate restoration). Like Israel, Adam was formed in a deserted place (Genesis 2:4-7), brought into a new, lush land – a garden, where they would be with God and take care of the land (2:8-15). But, like Adam, they disobeyed the commandment given to them directly by God and allow themselves to be led astray by the evil they have allowed to stay in the land and are subsequently cast out of the land, failing to find life and instead bringing on themselves curse and death (Genesis 3).
**********************************
Genesis 2-3: Israelites would have seen their own story here, the story of Genesis-II Kings (Joshua, Judges, Samuel, and Kings were written as a direct four-part sequel to the Pentateuch to form a single story ending with Israel and Judah’s exiles but with a note of hope for ultimate restoration). Like Israel, Adam was formed in a deserted place (Genesis 2:4-7), brought into a new, lush land – a garden, where they would be with God and take care of the land (2:8-15). But, like Adam, they disobeyed the commandment given to them directly by God and allow themselves to be led astray by the evil they have allowed to stay in the land and are subsequently cast out of the land, failing to find life and instead bringing on themselves curse and death (Genesis 3).
Israel was to have been the new Adam, God’s “do-over”, the
new representative and embodiment of humanity restored, who were to be the
vessels to bring life and initiate the completion of God’s creation-plan as
Adam should have done. But like Adam
(since they were in Adam themselves and hence suffered also from sin and
death), they failed in their mission. If
Israel was to be restored from its curse, its exile, and if their
mission to fulfill Adam’s mission was to be fulfilled, God would have to
intervene himself. As Adam grasped for
autonomy – to know good and evil through experience of them and doing both
rather than under God’s lordship and through his wise instruction – so Israel
also sought freedom from God, only to end in slavery. So Israel looked to God as Savior to save them from their state
of exile/curse and thus to restore all of creation through this – Israel’s restoration would mean Adam’s! This promise of restoration fills the Old
Testament. For example, Deuteronomy
30:1-10 (all quotes here from NIV):
30When all these blessings and curses I have set before
you come on you and you take them to heart wherever the Lord your God disperses you among
the nations, 2 and when you and your children return to
the Lord your God and obey him with all your heart and with all
your soul according to everything I command you today, 3 then the Lord
your God will restore your fortunes and have compassion on you and gather you
again from all the nations where he scattered you. 4 Even if you have been banished to the
most distant land under the heavens, from there the Lord your God will gather you and bring you back. 5 He will bring you to the land that belonged
to your ancestors, and you will take possession of it. He will make you more
prosperous and numerous than your ancestors. 6 The
Lord your God will circumcise your hearts and the hearts of
your descendants, so that you may love him with all your heart and with all
your soul, and live. 7 The Lord your God will put all these curses on your enemies who
hate and persecute you. 8 You
will again obey the Lord and follow all his
commands I am giving you today. 9 Then
the Lord your God will make you most prosperous in all the work of
your hands and in the fruit of your womb, the young of your livestock and the
crops of your land. The Lord will again delight in
you and make you prosperous, just as he delighted in your ancestors, 10 if you obey the Lord your God and keep his commands and decrees that are
written in this Book of the Law and turn to the Lord
your God with all your heart and with all your soul.
The longing for restoration,
for God to act as Savior, comes in many places (it also is partly captured in the first verse of “O Come, O Come,
Emmanuel”).
Here are a few – Ezra 9:6b-9:
6b“I am too ashamed and disgraced, my God, to lift up
my face to you, because our sins are higher than our heads and our guilt has
reached to the heavens. 7 From the days of our ancestors until now, our
guilt has been great. Because of our sins, we and our kings and our priests
have been subjected to the sword and captivity, to pillage and humiliation at
the hand of foreign kings, as it is today.
8 “But now, for a brief moment, the Lord our God
has been gracious in leaving us a remnant and giving us a firm place[a] in his sanctuary, and so our God gives light
to our eyes and a little relief in our bondage. 9 Though we are slaves,
our God has not forsaken us in our bondage. He has shown us kindness in the
sight of the kings of Persia: He has granted us new life
to rebuild the house of our God and repair its ruins, and he has given us a
wall of protection in Judah and Jerusalem.
Lamentations 5:
5 Remember, Lord, what has happened to us;
look, and see our disgrace.
2 Our inheritance has been turned over to strangers,
our homes to foreigners.
3 We have become fatherless,
our mothers are widows.
4 We must buy the water we drink;
our wood can be had only at a price.
5 Those who pursue us are at our heels;
we are weary and find no rest.
6 We submitted to Egypt and Assyria
to get enough bread.
7 Our ancestors sinned and are no more,
and we bear their punishment.
8 Slaves rule over us,
and there is no one to free us from their hands.
9 We get our bread at the risk of our lives
because of the sword in the desert.
10 Our skin is hot as an oven,
feverish from hunger.
11 Women have been violated in Zion,
and virgins in the towns of Judah.
12 Princes have been hung up by their hands;
elders are shown no respect.
13 Young men toil at the millstones;
boys stagger under loads of wood.
14 The elders are gone from the city gate;
the young men have stopped their music.
15 Joy is gone from our hearts;
our dancing has turned to mourning.
16 The crown has fallen from our head.
Woe to us, for we have sinned!
17 Because of this our hearts are faint,
because of these things our eyes grow dim
18 for Mount Zion, which lies desolate,
with jackals prowling over it.
look, and see our disgrace.
2 Our inheritance has been turned over to strangers,
our homes to foreigners.
3 We have become fatherless,
our mothers are widows.
4 We must buy the water we drink;
our wood can be had only at a price.
5 Those who pursue us are at our heels;
we are weary and find no rest.
6 We submitted to Egypt and Assyria
to get enough bread.
7 Our ancestors sinned and are no more,
and we bear their punishment.
8 Slaves rule over us,
and there is no one to free us from their hands.
9 We get our bread at the risk of our lives
because of the sword in the desert.
10 Our skin is hot as an oven,
feverish from hunger.
11 Women have been violated in Zion,
and virgins in the towns of Judah.
12 Princes have been hung up by their hands;
elders are shown no respect.
13 Young men toil at the millstones;
boys stagger under loads of wood.
14 The elders are gone from the city gate;
the young men have stopped their music.
15 Joy is gone from our hearts;
our dancing has turned to mourning.
16 The crown has fallen from our head.
Woe to us, for we have sinned!
17 Because of this our hearts are faint,
because of these things our eyes grow dim
18 for Mount Zion, which lies desolate,
with jackals prowling over it.
19 You, Lord, reign forever;
your throne endures from generation to generation.
20 Why do you always forget us?
Why do you forsake us so long?
21 Restore us to yourself, Lord, that we may return;
renew our days as of old
22 unless you have utterly rejected us
and are angry with us beyond measure.
your throne endures from generation to generation.
20 Why do you always forget us?
Why do you forsake us so long?
21 Restore us to yourself, Lord, that we may return;
renew our days as of old
22 unless you have utterly rejected us
and are angry with us beyond measure.
Daniel 9:1-19:
9 In the first year of Darius son of Xerxes (a
Mede by descent), who was made ruler over the Babylonian kingdom— 2 in the
first year of his reign, I, Daniel, understood from the Scriptures, according
to the word of the Lord given to Jeremiah the prophet, that the desolation of
Jerusalem would last seventy years. 3 So I turned to the Lord God and
pleaded with him in prayer and petition, in fasting, and in sackcloth and
ashes.
4 I prayed to the Lord my God and confessed:
“Lord, the great and awesome God, who keeps his
covenant of love with those who love him and keep his commandments, 5 we
have sinned and done wrong. We have been wicked and have rebelled; we have
turned away from your commands and laws. 6 We have not listened to your
servants the prophets, who spoke in your name to our kings, our princes and our
ancestors, and to all the people of the land.
7 “Lord, you are righteous, but this day we are
covered with shame—the people of Judah and the inhabitants of Jerusalem and all
Israel, both near and far, in all the countries where you have scattered us
because of our unfaithfulness to you. 8 We and our kings, our princes and
our ancestors are covered with shame, Lord, because we have sinned against you.
9 The Lord our God is merciful and forgiving, even though we have rebelled
against him; 10 we have not obeyed the Lord our God or kept the laws he
gave us through his servants the prophets. 11 All Israel has transgressed your law
and turned away, refusing to obey you.
“Therefore the curses and sworn judgments written in
the Law of Moses, the servant of God, have been poured out on us, because we
have sinned against you. 12 You have fulfilled the words spoken against us
and against our rulers by bringing on us great disaster. Under the whole heaven
nothing has ever been done like what has been done to Jerusalem. 13 Just as it is
written in the Law of Moses, all this disaster has come on us, yet we have not
sought the favor of the Lord our God by turning from our sins and giving
attention to your truth. 14 The Lord did not hesitate to bring the
disaster on us, for the Lord our God is righteous in everything he does; yet we
have not obeyed him.
15 “Now, Lord our God, who brought your people out
of Egypt with a mighty hand and who made for yourself a name that endures to
this day, we have sinned, we have done wrong. 16 Lord, in keeping with all
your righteous acts, turn away your anger and your wrath from Jerusalem, your city, your holy hill.
Our sins and the iniquities of our ancestors have made Jerusalem and your people an object of
scorn to all those around us.
17 “Now, our God, hear the prayers and petitions
of your servant. For your sake, Lord, look with favor on your desolate
sanctuary. 18 Give ear, our God, and hear; open your eyes and see the
desolation of the city that bears your Name. We do not make requests of you
because we are righteous, but because of your great mercy. 19 Lord,
listen! Lord, forgive! Lord, hear and act! For your sake, my God, do not delay,
because your city and your people bear your Name.”
In 3:15, there doesn’t seem to be any direct reference to Christ and Satan. Direct reference is to the serpent, its
children, Eve, and her children (the word used is zara‘, which is a collective noun referring to a group of
offspring, whether human, animal, or plant (seed)), but there is further,
general symbolic reference as well, since the serpent would also seem to
symbolize what is anti-God and anti-God’s-creation-purposes. The enmity described thus also describes that
between those with God’s mission – especially God’s people – and those who
oppose that mission and seek to sway others from it. The former will win in the end, but not
without struggle and wounding. In Israel’s own case, the anti-God forces came originally in
the form of the Canaanites who led them astray from God’s Law. Indeed, this is what we see in Genesis 9,
where Noah is portrayed as Adam (a man of the soil, who consumes a form of
fruit in a bad way, has his nakedness covered, etc.) and the descendants of the
villain of the story, Ham, are cursed in a similar fashion to the serpent
(referred to explicitly as Canaan). Canaan
was to function as Israel’s serpent.
This pattern, however, is ultimately fulfilled in Jesus’
victory over Satan – in Jesus, Adam and Israel’s missions are finally fulfilled
and the pinnacle of evil and temptation is defeated though Jesus is struck (and
precisely because he is struck). This is the culmination of the principle of 3:15 – the ironic victory of God’s people over evil (as in
Romans 16:20). As the
representative of God’s people, Jesus is Israel, he is the seed, who crushes
the head of evil and takes on the identity and mission of God’s people and
succeeds where they have failed (cf. Galatians where Paul identifies Jesus with
the promised seed of Abraham (God’s people) and then calls Christians the seed
– the former is head, representative, and completer of the latter). The defeat of God’s enemies – the enemies of
his people – means the removal of the obstacle to restoration and the
fulfillment of God’s creation-purposes.
In this light, Genesis 3-11
presents a long description of the continuation of humanity’s Fall that begun
in chapter 3. The solution – what I
would call the real protoevangelium of Genesis – is in 12:2-3. Blessing in Genesis represents the
fulfillment of creation-purposes – this passage outlines God’s plan in choosing
Israel and their mission as part of this, to undo chapters
3-11. But first, Israel itself would have to be restored since it too
suffered the consequences of those chapters
(Paul has a lot to say about this!).
The one who would do this – who would restore Israel and all of
creation, fulfilling Adam’s and Israel’s missions as the new Adam, the true
Israel – was, of course, God – specifically, God come in human flesh as the
promised king of Israel to usher in this restoration – Jesus Christ our Lord!
Quick note on the etymology
of “Immanuel” (“Emmanuel”, from the song, is how it was transliterated into
Latin): ‘im is the preposition
meaning “with”; with the added first person plural pronominal suffix (i.e.,
“us”), it has the form ‘immanu
meaning “with us”; ’el is the generic
word for “god”; so ’Immanuel
literally means “with us God” – that is, “with us is God”.
Saturday, August 10, 2013
Notes on Galatians 5:1-12
More study notes by me for the sermon prep:
In verse 1, Paul is drawing on the idea that the Law with
its Jewish particulars was one of the things that enslaved the Jews in a sense
(along with sin and death), separating them from other peoples until the time
of Christ (3:23-25), and cursing
them for violation of the covenant with God.
Christ, then, provided rescue from this curse and deliverance from sin
and the division between Jew and Gentile.
Jesus gave freedom – a new exodus, deliverance, or rescue of Israel
from its exile/curse of the Law, something promised in the Old Testament to
bring with it the ingathering of the nations (i.e., the Gentiles) into God’s
one family. This freedom from sin,
death, Jewish-Gentile division, and the Law’s curse on Israel,
then, belongs to those who truly belong to God’s one promised family – as
chapter 4 has it, they are the children of God’s promise to Abraham – the Sarah
people, not the Hagar people still under bondage to sin, death, division, and
curse.
In other words, Jesus came to fulfill God’s promise to
Abraham of a single family of all nations on earth by bringing God’s salvation
to the ends of the earth beginning with his exhaustion of Israel’s
curse which it had acquired for covenant disobedience. This sets up verses 2-4, as this is precisely
what the agitators are, in effect, denying by forcing Gentiles to become
circumcised – God’s family, in their thinking, was supposed to be restricted to
one nation, the Jews alone. They in
effect deny the work of Christ in bringing about God’s promises. So to go back to the old use of the Law in
dividing Jew from Gentile (as opposed to Jesus’ and Paul’s use) is to reject
what Christ has already done, to deny his work on the cross in bringing
redemption and reconciliation between the nations.
Paul’s point in verse 3, then, is that since being Jewish
means, for the agitators, following all the Law’s Jewish particulars, Gentiles
who obey the agitators (to become Jewish in order to become part of God’s
people) are not done there – Gentiles being Jewish will have to go all the way
and add to circumcision food laws, and so forth. This is not about circumcision itself per se
but the motives and theology behind why these Gentiles were becoming
circumcised (Paul circumcised Timothy and would not say these things in 2-4
about Timothy). Unfortunately, for
centuries Gentile Christians became a version of these agitators themselves
when they used this verse to deny that Jews could be Christians unless they became
Gentiles first, thus again denying the work of Christ. Even today, Christians unfortunately use
terms like “Jew” or “Jewish” as contraries of “Christian”, further pushing the
un-Pauline view that one cannot remain a Jew and be a true Christian.
In 5 and 6, Paul turns to the true marks of God’s
family. What sets them apart are not
whether they are Jewish or not but whether they have faith, which is itself
expressed outwardly in love, not necessarily in works of the Law (circumcision,
etc.) – a love which by its very nature welcomes both Jews and Gentiles. On the basis of this life led in faith, led
by the Holy Spirit (associated with freedom from sin, etc. – see, e.g., II Cor
3:17) who is the sign that the new time of faith and Israel’s rescue has come,
believers may now hope for the completion of God’s work in us, fully bringing
his kingdom and establishing his new people in his new creation, even among
Gentiles.
In verses 7-9, Paul turns from Christ’s work to that of the
agitators. These agitators are basically
trying to counteract Christ’s work in bringing together a family of both Jews
and Gentiles, free from enslavement. And
what grieves Paul most is that it seems to be working at least somewhat! False teaching, if not checked, can easily
poison the church and cause people to stumble when they are easily swayed not
to attend to the truth. It takes only a
few bad influences to start affecting the life of the whole church if they are
allowed to continue. In verse 10, Paul
is, however, confident in the Galatians’ case that they will ultimately side
with him over the agitators, no matter what is going wrong at the moment, since
it is ultimately the agitators themselves who are to blame for this mess.
The false teaching, hinted at in verse 11, was that Paul had
kept back part of the gospel and of the full Christian life from the Galatians
– the part about having to become a Jew in order to be a Christian. The position was that Paul agreed with their
version of the gospel but had been too stingy and had not given the Galatians
the whole thing. Summing up his
self-defense so far, Paul makes it clear that he does not agree with the agitators’
version of the gospel and he certainly has not left out what they wanted to put
in since it was never a part of the gospel in the first place. If he had agreed with them that Gentiles had
to become Jews, he would not be persecuted by his fellow Jews (who thought he
was betraying God and Moses with his message).
Paul concludes then in this section that cutting off part of
your body (like in circumcision) does not matter since both Jew and Gentile are
now accepted equally into a single family – why not just go all the way and be
castrated rather than stop at circumcision?
According to Paul, there is no significant religious difference. The irony here, of course, is that to be
castrated would, by the stipulations of the Law, bar one from the religious
assembly of Israel. Only the time of Israel’s rescue and the
ingathering of the Gentiles, as foretold by Isaiah, would break down that barrier
and allow eunuchs in on equal footing with others – precisely the work of
Christ that these agitators who think they are in a privileged religious
position are now denying. Paul is
therefore being even cleverer here than it seems on first glance!
Wednesday, July 24, 2013
Notes on Galatians 4:12-20
More notes prepared for the Cornerstone sermon-prep study group:
In Galatians 4:12-20, Paul draws on a common Graeco-Roman
discussion topic of true versus false friendship, showing that he and the
Galatians had had a true friendship – he is the Galatians’ true friend (and,
even greater, true family), whereas Paul’s opponents are false friends. He appeals to them on the basis of that true
and intimate relationship to be transformed into the true family of God they
were meant to be, with no divisions or exclusions between Jew and Gentile.
In verse 12, Paul echoes the common Greek idea that true
friendship involved, in some sense, equality, unanimity, and likeness –
becoming or being like the friend, sharing in their (mis)fortune. As in I Corinthians 9, Paul became like a
Christian Gentile in order to minister to them so they as Gentiles could also
become Christians. Hence they too should
be free in Christ to be Gentiles as followers of Christ. Paul shows that there are no hard feelings
and that they have had a true friendship – true friends do no true harm to one
another. Instead, they did the opposite
– despite all the reasons not to, they accepted him. In verses 13 and 14, Paul notes that they
passed the test of true friendship at the very beginning of their relationship,
where it would have been a temptation to disregard Paul as cursed or wicked
because of his illness. Instead, Paul,
as a representative of Jesus Christ, as an apostle proclaiming Jesus’ message, was
received as a messenger of God and like Jesus Christ himself.
While the relationship they had had involved blessing, in
verse 15 we have Paul questioning the continued presence of such blessing. Has so much changed? Formerly they would have done anything for
him – true friendship involves a willingness to undergo extreme sacrifice. In verse 16, he wonders if the change is
because he is speaking the truth to them, yet that should show that he is a
true friend rather than a flatterer (a common Graeco-Roman contrast is between
the true friend who is frank and truthful and the flatterer who is not). Rather than an enemy, as the opponents may
have made him out to be (since he would be seen as keeping them from becoming
“real” Christians by becoming Jews), his truth-speaking marks him out as the
complete opposite.
Verses 17 and 18 draw somewhat on the Jewish notion of zeal,
which was often applied towards the Law and the covenant between God and Israel. Unfortunately, in Paul’s time this often
ended up being twisted into a hatred of Gentiles and could be turned into
violence (the Zealots). The opponents’
misguided zeal drove them to use the Law to force the Gentiles to become Jews
lest they be excluded, and thus the opponents miss the true zeal which is for
the God who welcomes the Gentiles into his family on an equal footing with the
Jews. By threatening exclusion, the
Gentiles are forced to depend on the opponents for their spiritual status,
following their guidance and what they say in order to be proper Jews, putting
the opponents on a pedestal for revealing to them the things of the Law that
Paul had supposedly left out or kept from them.
True friends, true family, however, do not maintain their relationships
based on personal gain. They have zeal,
but it is for good things, not bad. True
friendship is reliable – in this case, it involves a zeal which always seeks
good. And this is precisely the zeal
with which Paul meets the Galatians, a zeal which involves bringing the
Galatians to meet the God who would have them as a part of his one family.
In verse 19, Paul shows how deep their relationship really
goes – Paul is family, he is like their mother still laboring painfully to give
birth to them. He cares for them,
wanting Christ to be formed in/among them.
The community is to be Christ-shaped, with Christ as true head, they as
his true body, combined together as one family in him. Yet the opponents are trying to prevent this
formation by introducing divisions and exclusions within the community in the
form of the works of the Law. In verse
20, Paul thus reiterates his true friendship, his true parenthood of them, when
he expresses his care for them, wishing to be present with them physically and
not merely through the letter – they have seemingly cast aside their good
relationship with Paul which involved truth and belonging and accepted instead
accepted a bad relationship with the opponents which involved falsity and
exclusion. Paul is bewildered that they
would opt for the latter over the former.
Labels:
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Thursday, July 18, 2013
Teaching About the Bible, Not Just Its Content
I've been thinking about writing more about apologetics, maybe book length. One major topic, though, I'm thinking of working on is that of the Bible itself. I'd like to see more education in churches about the Bible. Not just what's in the Bible but its nature, origins and prehistory, ancient context, etc. That is, we should have more that is not just about the content of the Bible but the Bible itself. There are many, many myths and misconstruals floating around about the Bible among more moderate to conservate Christians, Evangelicals, and also Fundamentalists. And I don't mean "secular" or "liberal" myths either - I mean myths perpetuated largely by traditional, orthodox-leaning Christians. (To give a couple examples: the idea that every command in the Bible is a timeless moral imperative and the Bible is basically a life handbook; the idea that there cannot be any reasonable doubt about the exact text or meaning of a passage; the idea that absolutely everything ought to be taken as completely literally and describing exact historical, scientific reality and conforming to, say, modern scientific-writing genre conventions, etc.)
The trouble is that many take these myths to be integral to the Christian view of the Bible and to the faith as a whole and when these bubbles get popped, their world comes crashing down and they must either remake their views of the Bible or reject the faith entirely. I have personally known several people who left the faith because of these myths when they could not handle their dismantlement. And these were very intelligent people; they were simply dealing with the destruction of what they had believed and likely taught to believe for most of their time as Christians.
Now, most good Evangelical biblical scholars will reject most of these myths, and often explicitly, but that just doesn't often make its way down into the church pews. Instead, most people's first brush with thinking about the Bible itself outside of these myths and outside well-worn cliches comes in the form of, say, the "facts" presented in the Da Vinci Code or some disturbing bit of modern biblical scholarship. It's all very sad and, in my mind, completely unnecessary - there are people out there who are having serious doubts about the Bible and hence their faith precisely because of what we aren't (and, sadly, sometimes what we are) teaching them.
The trouble is that many take these myths to be integral to the Christian view of the Bible and to the faith as a whole and when these bubbles get popped, their world comes crashing down and they must either remake their views of the Bible or reject the faith entirely. I have personally known several people who left the faith because of these myths when they could not handle their dismantlement. And these were very intelligent people; they were simply dealing with the destruction of what they had believed and likely taught to believe for most of their time as Christians.
Now, most good Evangelical biblical scholars will reject most of these myths, and often explicitly, but that just doesn't often make its way down into the church pews. Instead, most people's first brush with thinking about the Bible itself outside of these myths and outside well-worn cliches comes in the form of, say, the "facts" presented in the Da Vinci Code or some disturbing bit of modern biblical scholarship. It's all very sad and, in my mind, completely unnecessary - there are people out there who are having serious doubts about the Bible and hence their faith precisely because of what we aren't (and, sadly, sometimes what we are) teaching them.
Sunday, June 23, 2013
Some More In-Depth Notes on Galatians 3:1-18
Basically, this is a revised, more in-depth version of parts of this previous post, this time focusing in on the first 18 verses of Galatians 3 and with some other applications:
To understand what’s going on in this passage (and much of
the book), we have to understand the Old Testament background – the basic
narrative of the people of God – that Paul, in line with other Jewish writers
of the time, would have been presupposing as he writes. As the narrative goes, Adam and Eve messed up
and sin entered the world. God then
chooses Abraham to begin his rescue operation – to defeat sin and death and create
a new humanity, a loving family, out of all the nations on earth. The means will be through Abraham’s
descendants – they will be the beginning of that family, through which others
will also join into it, and sin will be taken care of. Once Abraham’s descendants are many, God, in
order to proceed with the rescue operation, redeems them and gives them a
covenant with instructions as to how to live within that covenant (the law) so
as to bring others into the family. But
these descendants, Israel,
fail in their vocation and suffer the consequences of violation of the covenant
– the curse of the law, which is exile and suffering. The prophets foretell that return from exile,
the lifting of the curse, is coming and that this will usher in the completion
of God’s rescue operation (the age to
come/kingdom of God/restoration of all things as it gets
variously called) – Israel’s vocation will be completed, the Spirit poured out
on God’s people, sin and death defeated, and all nations will join together in
one family along with Israel. Yet, when
they return to the land geographically, they are forced to acknowledge that the
prophecies have not been completely fulfilled – they are still in spiritual
exile, not fully restored, and God’s rescue operation has not been completed. Here the Old Testament ends. Now enter Jesus, who Paul and other early
Christians saw as the one who completed Israel’s vocation – as the true king
and earthly representative of his people (the True Israel), he took their
plight and their mission upon himself, suffering and completing their curse and
exile in his own person and thus bringing about the promised restoration, thus paving
the way for the Spirit and opening the way for all nations to come into the
family as prophesied.
The point of Galatians 3:1-14, then, is all about what time
it is – it is not the time before the coming of the restoration/kingdom of God,
for Christ has changed everything and it is now the prophesied time of the
ingathering of the nations into God’s people.
The Spirit of God is a gift of the kingdom and associated with Christ’s
time, made available by his crucifixion, and not the previous time. If it is the eschatological gift of the age
to come, then it is not associated with being a Jew (“works of the law”), which
would instead associate it with the previous epoch. The promise to Abraham was blessing for all
nations as those nations, not as Jews – a promise of a single family made of
Jews and all other nations. Since this promise
has been and has begun to be fulfilled by Jesus in his crucifixion, being a Jew
and doing the works of the law cannot be tied necessarily to the reception of
the Spirit. Instead, it is trust and
faithfulness to God that marks one out as a member of God’s people, not one’s
ethnicity since the family is to be from every ethnicity on earth.
Paul contrasts in this passage those who are “out of faith” (ek pisteos) and those who are “out of
works of the law” (ex ergon nomou). For Paul, who are the ones who are “out of
works of the law”? Israel,
of course – they are the ones to whom God gave the works of the law and who
would be living with their identity marked out by the law. However, by putting its faith in Christ,
ethnic Israel
is able to become part of those who are “out of faith” – whose identity is
determined by faith, not by ethnicity.
This begins to make sense of verses 10-14, then, since the idea here is
not an individualistic focus but one on Israel
as an ethnic group. In 3:10, we find that Israel
is under a curse – the curse of the law, the exile which the Old Testament and
Second Temple Jewish writings all declare to have ended geographically but not
spiritually or in regards to the full restoration of God’s blessings and the
ingathering of the Gentiles which was to come from this. Israel
has not been restored or come out from God’s wrath for its failure to abide by
its covenant as enshrined in the law. The
quote from Deuteronomy is, in its original context, part of a broader set of
passages about Israel’s
disobedience and the predicted result of exile.
In other words, 3:10 gives us
the following reasoning: if Israel
fails to abide by the law, it is cursed/under exile; Israel
has in fact failed in that regard (as Leviticus and Deuteronomy predict and
Joshua-II Kings (and the prophets) repeat over and over); hence, as the Old
Testament affirms, Israel
has been cursed/under exile.
In 3:11, Paul
quotes from Habakkuk. In its original
context, this quote comes again in the context of exile. Habakkuk begins with lamenting over the
deplorable state of God’s people, to which God replies that Babylon
will come and basically destroy them (Babylon
took them into exile). Habakkuk then
laments over this and God replies that Babylon
will itself receive judgment, thus presenting a glimmer of hope. In the midst of this, we find the quote
noting that the identity of the true Israelite, the one who is right with God,
by contrast with the Babylonians, will be one founded on faith. In other words, for Paul, coming out from the
curse will involve a new era of faith-based identity.
The Law belongs to the old era, however, as Paul emphasizes
in 3:12. In 3:13-14
Paul says that that era is past – the new era has come through Christ. Christ brought a new exodus (note the Exodus
word “redemption” here) – a return or restoration from the curse of the
law/Israel’s exile suffered by Israel
(“us” here refers to Paul and his fellow Jewish Christians). The blessing to the nations, which was to
flow from Abraham’s descendants, had been blocked by their own sin, which
brought the curse. But now that Christ
has exhausted the curse in his own self, taking Israel’s
exile/curse onto himself on their behalf, that has opened the way now for the
blessing to come to the Gentiles as well.
In other words, the restoration of Israel, the time of faith-based
identity, and hence the gathering in of the Gentiles into a single people of
God (and the pouring out of the Spirit) has come, and this has been fulfilled
through Christ’s sacrificial death on behalf of Israel.
3:15-18 is basically about how there was meant to be a
single people made of both Jews and Gentiles, not just Jews, and that one
should not misread the purpose of the law as if it was meant forever to exclude
Gentiles and thus cancel the promise.
The earlier promise of a single people out of both takes precedence and
is fulfilled in Christ, who takes on the role of the single people (Abraham’s
seed) as their representative and king and hence all who are in him are part of
that seed, whether Jew or Gentile (3:29 – which says that we are Abraham’s seed). That
is, God promised Abraham a single family, the promised seed, which begins with Israel. Jesus takes on Israel’s
destiny as the true Israel/seed, so that those who have him as their
representative also take on that identity as part of the people of God. This shows that the ethnic-specific aspects
of the law were never meant for God’s whole people forever.
In other words, Christ’s roles as promised seed and as curse
breaker are really the same – he is being the true Israel, taking on both
Israel’s punishment and its mission in himself and fulfilling both so that all
nations could have a place in him – that is, in his family with himself as head
and representative so that what is true of him may be true of us. We are to follow his example, bringing people
from all nations into God’s family and not excluding or ignoring based on
irrelevant factors like culture, preferred worship style, etc. It is Christ’s faithfulness, formed now in us
as our own faithfulness to God, that provides us with our identity as part of
God’s people, not any of those other things.
And as Christ took on responsibility for his people even when he did not
himself sin, so we too can follow his example and take responsibility for the
sins of our own groups, whether racial, ethnic, religious, or any other kind of
group we may belong to. This may involve
apologizing or trying to make repairs for something we were not involved in
(e.g., the legacy of slavery and racism, crusades, past misdeeds of the US,
etc.), but it is what Jesus himself modeled for us with his own ethnic and
religious group.
Friday, June 21, 2013
Why We Shouldn't Use the Word "Legalism"
Regarding my previous post, I'd like to make a qualification to my statement that Galatians 3 is not "about legalism". The qualification would be that it really depends on what we mean by "legalism". As it is normally used, "legalism" does not really have a strict definition - it is more a term of abuse - everyone says something different when asked to define what they mean by it. In actuality, it is used of anything involving rules and which we do not like. For instance: X says we should follow rule Y, but I don't like Y - legalism! X applies Y in a way I do not like - legalism! X applies Y in a way I do in fact like - ...NOT legalism....
The word therefore is not useful except to register one's disagreement and maybe to vilify what one disagrees with. It does not tell us why you disagree with it - it's simply an easy way to condemn and scorn something by sticking it with a bad name, yet without actually giving any substantive reasons why we should think it is wrong. This is argument through persuasive labeling, not actual reasoning.
But not only is using the word pretty useless, it can actually also be harmful (and, yes, I have in fact seen versions of what I'm about to describe - this isn't purely just made up). Our preacher in a sermon we listen to might define the term as carefully as he can - say, in way W - and show that something A is legalistic in that sense and then go on to say some bad stuff P about A (or those who do A) because of W applying. Now suppose we run across some new behavior B involving rules and we do not like it - we will not remember and use our "legalism" terms in way W like the preacher did but rather in the normal way as a term of abuse and will apply it to B even though, say, it doesn't fit with W. So we will apply "legalism" to B and, because of the sermon, will associate P with B even though W doesn't apply as it did with A.
Example: Suppose W has to do with trying to earn salvation apart from Christ through following certain pagan rules. And suppose P is something like lacking true salvation in Christ. We will remember, after the sermon, that "legalism" is associated with lack of salvation and, seeing someone, say, tell someone else that Christians shouldn't dance (a stance we don't like), we will be tempted to doubt that person's salvation since they are engaged in "legalism". And then, of course, someone might disagree with us and think we are legalistic and in danger of not being saved. And then someone else might disagree with them about that, and so on. So we might have a mess.
In other words, let's stop using "legalism" and actually give reasons for what we disagree with instead of vilifying people and positions with that label. (As an aside, in theology, I think "supersessionism" is another term like this - a term of vilification used for any view we don't like involving how Christians view Christian stuff in relation Jewish stuff and which puts Christian stuff in a good light)
The word therefore is not useful except to register one's disagreement and maybe to vilify what one disagrees with. It does not tell us why you disagree with it - it's simply an easy way to condemn and scorn something by sticking it with a bad name, yet without actually giving any substantive reasons why we should think it is wrong. This is argument through persuasive labeling, not actual reasoning.
But not only is using the word pretty useless, it can actually also be harmful (and, yes, I have in fact seen versions of what I'm about to describe - this isn't purely just made up). Our preacher in a sermon we listen to might define the term as carefully as he can - say, in way W - and show that something A is legalistic in that sense and then go on to say some bad stuff P about A (or those who do A) because of W applying. Now suppose we run across some new behavior B involving rules and we do not like it - we will not remember and use our "legalism" terms in way W like the preacher did but rather in the normal way as a term of abuse and will apply it to B even though, say, it doesn't fit with W. So we will apply "legalism" to B and, because of the sermon, will associate P with B even though W doesn't apply as it did with A.
Example: Suppose W has to do with trying to earn salvation apart from Christ through following certain pagan rules. And suppose P is something like lacking true salvation in Christ. We will remember, after the sermon, that "legalism" is associated with lack of salvation and, seeing someone, say, tell someone else that Christians shouldn't dance (a stance we don't like), we will be tempted to doubt that person's salvation since they are engaged in "legalism". And then, of course, someone might disagree with us and think we are legalistic and in danger of not being saved. And then someone else might disagree with them about that, and so on. So we might have a mess.
In other words, let's stop using "legalism" and actually give reasons for what we disagree with instead of vilifying people and positions with that label. (As an aside, in theology, I think "supersessionism" is another term like this - a term of vilification used for any view we don't like involving how Christians view Christian stuff in relation Jewish stuff and which puts Christian stuff in a good light)
Wednesday, May 29, 2013
Some Notes on Galatians 3
I wrote these up for the pastor doing sermon prep at my church and then discussed some of this during the weekly sermon-prep study group thing that happens at our church. Obviously, not all of this is uncontroversial (what in Galatians interpretation isn't?!), but it's the best sense I could make of the text after a long time spent wrestling through it. Perceptive readers will probably note a lot of influence from N.T. Wright and other narrative-oriented scholars here, though the interpretation at the end of the day is still my own.
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The general idea of Galatians 3, in my opinion, is this:
What time is it? Prior to Christ, the
Law had an old function but this was only to prepare for Christ. Now that Christ has come, the old function is
completed and in the past. The
Galatians, however, are treating the old function as still in play, as if
Christ had not come. This is hence
tantamount to a denial that Christ has come and brought the kingdom, fulfilling
God’s promises to bring blessing through his people to all nations – a denial
of the gospel. The old function was
necessary and needed prior to Christ but that time is past!
In other words, this does not say that the Law is bad or that
its rules were overburdensome or bad or that the Law did not reveal God’s will
or that there is no function left to the Law in governing Christian conduct or
that Christians should not have rules to follow – no first century Jew, least
of all Paul, would agree with any of that (Paul over and over endorses many
rules and even says that both Christ and believers do fulfill the Law, which in its current function he calls the “law
of Christ”), though these are “lessons” Christians often get from taking
Galatians out of context. Nor is this
about legalism or earning salvation – it is about whether we live in
acknowledgment of Christ and his work or instead live as if it has not yet
happened, as if the kingdom had not been begun by Christ on earth and the
promises of God fulfilled in him. For
the Judaizers this meant ignoring that Christ had come to make a single people
out of Gentiles and Jews in fulfillment of the promise to Abraham, requiring
that the people be confined to Jews only.
Again, this was not about rules but about ethnicity and about one’s
place in salvation history – the Judaizers were placing themselves and the
Galatians in the wrong act of the play, so to speak.
For us today this might involve denying the power of God and
the presence of the kingdom in our lives or denying that we too have been
granted the Spirit of God in accordance with his promises. We act as if we have not been redeemed or as
if we do not have the resources of God in our daily lives. We act as if the kingdom has not begun in
Christ and in us and hence put it into the future and do not take responsibility
for our part in it. Or, like the
Judaizers, we deny that Christ came to make a single family of all the families
of the earth, and require that everyone look like, act like, or talk like us.
Paul in Galatians wants the Galatians to understand what
time it is and not to live as if it was a previous time. The Spirit of God is a gift of the kingdom
and associated with Christ’s time, made available by his crucifixion, and not
the previous time, something Paul emphasizes in 3:1-14. If it is the eschatological gift of the age
to come, then it is not associated with being a Jew (“works of the law”), which
would instead associate it with the previous epoch. The promise to Abraham was blessing for all
nations as those nations, not as Jews – a promise of a single family made of
Jews and all other nations. Since this
promise has been and has begun to be fulfilled by Jesus in his crucifixion,
being a Jew and doing the works of the law cannot be tied necessarily to the
reception of the Spirit. Instead, it is
trust and faithfulness to God that marks one out as a member of God’s people,
not one’s ethnicity since the family is to be from every ethnicity on
earth.
Paul contrasts in this passage those who are “out of faith”
and those who are “out of works of the law”.
These phrases get translated in English various ways – “rely on the
works of the law”, “take their identity from works of the law”, etc. are
various alternatives in the translations of “out of works of the law”. These are fine as long as “rely on” is not
taken to mean “rely on for salvation” or “rely on to earn salvation” since that
would be an over-interpretation and does not actually fit the context, where –
if we want to speak of “relying on” at all – it is a matter of people relying on
works of the law to display their identity as God’s people (in other words,
relying on their ethnicity to show that they are members of God’s people). For Paul, who are the ones who are “out of
works of the law”? Israel,
of course – they are the ones to whom God gave the works of the law. However, by putting its faith in Christ,
ethnic Israel
is able to become part of those who are “out of faith” – whose identity is
determined by faith, not by ethnicity.
This begins to make sense of verses 10-14, then, since the
idea here is not an individualistic focus but one on Israel
as an ethnic group. In 3:10, we find that Israel
is under a curse – the curse of the law, the exile which the Old Testament and
Second Temple Jewish writings all declare to have ended geographically but not
spiritually or in regards to the full restoration of God’s blessings and the
ingathering of the Gentiles which was to come from this. Israel
has not been restored or come out from God’s wrath for its failure to abide by
its covenant as enshrined in the Law. In
other words, if Israel
fails to abide by the Law, it is cursed; Israel
has in fact failed in that regard (as Joshua-II Kings repeat over and over);
hence, as the Old Testament affirms, Israel
has been cursed. The quote from Habakkuk
comes in the context of Israel’s
unrighteousness and subsequent exile and the future need for a new identity
based on faith. So coming out from the
curse will involve a new era of faith-based identity.
The Law belongs to the old era, however, as Paul emphasizes
in 3:12. In 3:13-14
Paul says that that era is past – the new era has come through Christ. Christ brought a new exodus (note the Exodus
word “redemption” here) – a return or restoration from the curse of the
law/Israel’s exile suffered by Israel
(“us” here refers to Paul and his fellow Jewish Christians). The blessing to the nations, which was to
flow from Abraham’s descendants, had been blocked by their own sin, which
brought the curse. But now that Christ
has exhausted the curse in his own self, taking Israel’s
exile/curse onto himself on their behalf, that has opened the way now for the
blessing to come to the Gentiles as well.
In other words, the restoration of Israel, the time of faith-based
identity, and hence the gathering in of the Gentiles into a single people of
God (and the pouring out of the Spirit) has come, and this has been fulfilled
through Christ’s sacrificial death on behalf of Israel.
3:15-18 is basically about how there was meant to be a
single people made of both Jews and Gentiles, not just Jews, and that one
should not misread the purpose of the law as if it was meant forever to exclude
Gentiles and thus cancel the promise.
The earlier promise of a single people out of both takes precedence and
is fulfilled in Christ, who takes on the role of the single people (Abraham’s
seed) as their representative and king and hence all who are in him are part of
that seed, whether Jew or Gentile (3:29).
This shows that the ethnic-specific aspects of the law were never meant for
God’s whole people forever.
In 3:19-29 Paul
tells us that the law did have a legitimate function prior to Christ but that
the time for that function is over. 3:19 says that the law was added “because of
transgressions”. This cannot mean that
it was to restrain transgression since, as Paul states in Romans, there is no
transgression without the law (since transgression = sin + law). Instead, the law creates transgression, it
turns sin into law-breaking by making Israel aware of that sin as against God’s
will and turns it into explicit rebellion against God. In the words of Romans, it makes sin “utterly
sinful”. Paul picks up more on what this
means a bit further on, but maintains that this function was meant to continue
until Christ and the single people of God had come. The law came via Moses as a mediator. Verse 20 is difficult but should read
something like N.T. Wright’s translation: “He, however, is not the mediator of
the ‘one’ – but God is one!” In other
words there is only one God and hence he desires one single people – but Moses
was not the mediator of that one single people since that people was still to
come.
The law, however, is not contrary to the establishment of
that single family, despite all Paul has said so far. The bringing in of righteousness and the
establishment of God’s promises – the law could not bring these about because
of sin. Instead, the law both condemns
and incubates Israel so that, as a result of exhausting the curse laid on
Israel by the law, Christ, through his faithfulness to the covenant in doing
what Israel could not because of the sin which blocked it (3:22, in the Greek,
says “the promise by the faithfulness of Jesus Christ”, not, as in most 20th-century translations, “the promise
by faith in Jesus Christ”), brought the promise of a single family to
fulfillment, a family marked out by faith, not ethnicity. Prior to that time, as verse 23 indicates
(that is, prior to Christ, not prior to an individual’s reception of faith –
that is too individualistic of a reading here and out of context), Israel
(note the “we” here again referring to Paul and his fellow Jews) was kept
incubated or quarantined by the law. The
law made sin into transgression but also taught the people God’s will (and
actually turned sin into even more sinful transgression precisely by teaching
this) and helped to keep them separate from other nations.
But now the time of faith has arrived – the Law, which
watched over Israel
until Christ (it does not say “to lead us to Christ” – “lead us” is not in the
Greek but is read in as an individualistic, subjective reading) has reached its
goal not in marking out God’s people by ethnicity but by faith. And with faith comes the end of the old
function of the law in keeping Israel
separate to prepare for Christ. All,
Jews and Gentiles, are God’s people marked out by faith since it is now the
time of the kingdom as foretold. Christ,
the one seed, the fulfiller of all the promises, is our representative and
hence we are inheritors of those promises, the fulfillers of them – in Christ,
there is a single people of God as God intended there to be. Being Jewish or Gentile does not matter – all
are equally part of God’s family – to which, Paul also adds that gender and
social status are not determinative either.
There is one people, Abraham’s seed, marked out by faith alone – not by
denomination, not by how we decide to use the word “justification”, not by race
or ethnicity or gender or social status, not by culture or label, but by faith
pure and simple. The gospel is that
Jesus is Lord – he has brought the kingdom
of God, the new coming age, and we
should not deny that in word or action.
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