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First there was this extract from a sermon...

Then, the following year, we hastily filmed a poetic version. The sound didn't work at the time, which is why we had to dub the voice later...

10ofThose then released a kinetic-typographied version...

And here's a new live version:

Please share it on Facebook and/or use it in your Christmas services this year.

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Thanks to Fanny Crosby

Three tethered togather forever as one,
The Father and Spirit embracing the Son,
Before and beyond and beneath and above,
Our God is a Family united in love.

Praise the Lord, Praise the Lord,
Let the earth hear His voice!
Praise the Lord, Praise the Lord,
Let the peoples rejoice!
O come to the Father, through Jesus the Son,
Be filled by the Spirit with all Christ has done.

The world is a story that’s written by two:
King Adam fell badly, King Jesus renewed.
First Adam brought darkness and death and a curse,
But Jesus came second – the fall to reverse.

Praise the Lord, Praise the Lord,
Let the earth hear His voice!
Praise the Lord, Praise the Lord,
Let the peoples rejoice!
O come to the Father, through Jesus the Son,
Be filled by the Spirit with all Christ has done.

First born into Adam but now we can be
United to Jesus, adopted, set free.
As one with the Son we are given new birth,
His Father, His Spirit and heaven on earth!

Praise the Lord, Praise the Lord,
Let the earth hear His voice!
Praise the Lord, Praise the Lord,
Let the peoples rejoice!
O Come to the Father, through Jesus the Son,
Be filled by the Spirit with all Christ has done.

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In 1776 Thomas Jefferson introduced the Declaration of Independence with these words:

We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.

This bold and attractive vision of human flourishing is articulated in the context of some very specific views of God, of humanity and the good life.  Yet without this framework it's difficult to imagine anything less self-evident than the truth that "all men are created equal."  If you divorce this conviction from its theological foundations, it's one of the  most instantly falsifiable "self-evident" truths going!  When you look at the mass of humanity born in such differing circumstances, with such differing opportunities and capacities, who on earth are the "we" who are able to see "equality" when all that's really "self-evident" is endemic inequality?

The answer is that the "we" who hold this vision of equality have soaked for long centuries in a view of God, the world and humanity which has been completely alien to the rest of thinking people.

Take Aristotle in Politics:

For that some should rule and others be ruled is a thing not only necessary, but expedient; from the hour of their birth, some are marked out for subjection, others for rule...

Aristotle took inequality to be the thing "self-evident."  He repeatedly called slaves "living tools" and was quite comfortable with that arrangement.  Same with Plato:

...nature herself intimates that it is just for the better to have more than the worse, the more powerful than the weaker; and in many ways she shows, among men as well as among animals, and indeed among whole cities and races, that justice consists in the superior ruling over and having more than the inferior. (Gorgias)

According to these brilliant pagan minds, equality is not taught by nature.  The very opposite.  Whatever "human nature" was, clearly some humans conformed closer to the ideal than others.  So who could object if some were given more human "rights" than others?

The point is this: if observations of "nature" were all we had to go by, who on earth could disagree with the inequitable status quo?  Of course nature produces more powerful and less powerful creatures, superiors and inferiors.  If nature is our teacher why not endorse a class of rulers and a class of the ruled?  Why not support the inequalities which nature clearly intends?  Why fight it?  On what grounds?  With what justification?  From where could you get an alternative vision of humanity?  The only humanity we've ever observed has been one of profound inequalities!

Thus it seemed absolutely right to have a perilously steep hierarchy of being - the emporer at the top, the slaves at the bottom, with every subject knowing their place.  Who could possibly object?

Except that the ancient Scriptures kept speaking of another way.  The God who gets dirt under His fingernails forming humanity (Genesis 2), who wants to walk with His creatures in the cool of the day (Genesis 3).  The Saviour who would fight for us and take the blow (Genesis 3:15).  The Son who would give Himself in atoning death (Genesis 22).  The LORD who is Servant and Sacrifice (see Isaiah 42; 49; 50; 53).

And then He comes to a humble "servant" (Luke 1:48) as a humble servant (Philippians 2:5-11).  The whole pyramid is subverted as God becomes a Slave!  And He becomes a Slave so that we, the slaves of sin and Satan, might become sons and daughters in His royal family.  He descends to the depths and raises us to the heights so that now we might all feast at the same table - royals and commoners, masters and bond-servants.

And through this divine stooping, Christ shows us a radically different way of assessing "human nature."  The Son "became flesh" - just common or garden humanity.  He became a Jewish pauper with nothing in His appearance that we should desire Him (Isaiah 53:2).  Whatever might be deemed "ideal humanity" had nothing to do with the properties inherent in it.  The Man Jesus was valuable not because of the attributes of His humanity but only because the Son had chosen this flesh to be.  Thus a Christian account of "human nature" does not look to the properties and capacities of particular persons but declares that humans as humans are inherently valuable.  From there it's a hop, skip and a jump to declaring their "unalienable rights".

But wait - doesn't the bible (particularly the OT) endorse slavery?  Well distinguish Hebrew slavery from Greco-Roman practice and distinguish both from the Trans-Atlantic slave trade of the 16th-19th centuries.  Hebrew slavery was nothing like that which Wilberforce fought.

Certainly the Western mind has difficulty with the idea of selling oneself into slavery for a limited period (we prefer other forms of economic slavery), but those OT provisions were always temporary arrangements.  In everyone's lifetime Jubilee was always just around the corner (Leviticus 25) - and the great hope was the Messiah who would bring ultimate and eternal liberation (Isaiah 61; Luke 4:16-21).

In the NT, Paul counselled slaves (in this new Greco-Roman context) to seek their freedom if they could (1 Cor 7:21-24) and declared slave-trading to be sinful (1 Tim 1:10) thereby cutting the jugular of the whole practice.  But really, it was the intellectual revolution of the gospel that was so much more subversive than any 'revolt of the slaves' could be.

And it's a revolution that we need to continue today.  It's estimated that there are 27 million slaves in the world right now and so often it is Christians who continue to be at the forefront of the fight against human-trafficking.  Why?  Because Christians actually have an anthropology that treats each human with "unalienable rights" rather than as "living tools".  Anyone who seeks to take some high-ground on the issue of slavery must produce an account of human nature that will actually protect the weak and the vulnerable from being used.  But on what grounds will they justify such a stand?

I live in a country that kills 200 000 of the weakest members of our species every year because of the will of the strong.  Our culture can claim no high ground in protecting the "unalienable rights" of all people.  We have our own hierarchies based on the properties and capacities of individuals and we discriminate with extreme prejudice.  If we want real equality we must return to the only true foundation: the Master who became Slave.

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He's the Judge of the world, the Revelation of God and a gentle, lowly Rest-Giver: Matt 11:20-30. #EnjoyYourDay

Many bow to the Son of God: Moses, Joshua, Isaiah, Jeremiah, Daniel, Peter, Paul, John. He receives it, then sets them all on their feet.

If you want to take on a theology, take on its Doctrine of God. Otherwise you're tinkering at the edges.

No I won't be taking part... Because if I started now it would take me about 6 months... Yeah and Mo-pril doesn't have the same ring.

Original sin asserts that no-one stands apart from the human condition. We're all a part of the problem.

"Born sick, commanded to be well" is how Hitchens understood original sin. In reality it's "Born hungry, offered Bread."

Your sorrows He carries, your infirmities He takes up, your sins He bears. (Is 53) Your weaknesses only draw Him closer #EnjoyYourDay

Evangelist's Reality Check: Scripture's most beautiful chapter on Christ and His cross begins with the line "Who has believed our message?"

First 4 beatitudes: empty beggars before the King. Last 4: royal ambassadors to the world. There's a flow 2 the life of the kingdom

A deeply theological Soapbox by @RealDMitchell  We need a narrative to live in the moment. A happy ending is best too!

To characterise our sin as basically self-rule (eg 'climbing on the throne of our lives') is far too flattering a picture of human nature...

...Scripturally we are dominated subjects in Satan's kingdom, whores besotted with terrible lovers, sheep following after bad shepherds...

...As Luther said we are beasts ridden either by the devil or God. Ironically it's a kind of hubris to diagnose our problem as self-rule.

You know the tree of life in the garden of God? That's not just for religious art. That's for *you* to eat from (Rev 2:7) #EnjoyYourDay

Someone's asked how 2 answer Qs on Adam's historicity in evangelism. Goto 1 Cor 15 & say 'If Jesus rose, Adam fell. Let's see if Jesus rose'

Is no-one concerned our Archbishop is a JW?

<<Do I need to point out that this was a pun of the order of (but slightly superior to) previous Twitter jokes on the 'Could Well by' motif?

You see Justin Welby = JW. Initially I thought it was hilarious... (Again that's a pun. A play on words, because it's about INITIALS) *sigh*

Don't preach to fortify the weary. Preach to raise the dead.

Reading Luke afresh. Jesus is fiercely, resolutely, relentlessly downwardly mobile. Just astonishing

Many call the cross 'primitive scapegoating'. But it's different when the one at the top is scapegoat. It's 'carrying the can'. #Entwistle

No greater love: An illustration of sacrifice (Thanks to John Percival's remembrance day sermon this morning)

"You are my Beloved Child, I'm thrilled with you" - the Verdict we all want from the Father we all crave. And it's ours in Jesus #EnjoyYourDay

Only *sinners* love (Luke 7:36-50). Therefore every sin is an opportunity to know yr indebtedness and the forgiveness of Jesus #EnjoyYourDay

"God wants relationship with u" doesnt say much. Everything has a relationship w God. Q is Which God & therefore: What kind of relationship?

"My child, get up" He will say. And u will rise 2 feasting joy, complete astonishment & face-to-face with Jesus (Luke 8:40-56) #EnjoyYourDay

Who qualifies 4 Christ's Kingdom? The powerless, the wicked, the little children: Lk18:1-17. Don't reach up, receive where u r #EnjoyYourDay

Here's a tip for anyone who fears using 'Christian' phrases in evangelism (like Lamb of God or Trinity)... Explain them. #WorksATreat.

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[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6HTt6QJqzxk]

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iGArBZ_v7qQ]

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GBBVnu877Mg]

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lIorjslBgJk&feature=relmfu]

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?annotation_id=annotation_942857]

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Some deeply theological truths in there!!

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Why is it that faith saves?  What's so special about faith that it brings such benefits?

Because here's how the whole deal is usually set up:

First we insist that God does not save us by our works.  No sir, we believe in 'justification by faith alone.'  Therefore it's not that God is armed with a clipboard and some binoculars waiting for an external moral act in order to flick the 'justification' switch.  How ridiculous.  No, no.  Instead we imagine God (with clipboard and brain scanner) eagerly seeking for a certain mental act within us.  And then He'll zap righteousness into our account.

Yeah.  That's much more reformed...

But honestly, for many, that is the doctrine of justification by faith alone in a nut-shell.

Yet for the thoughtful who've been reared on such teaching it raises big questions.  Like, why faith?  Is it just that 'faith' keeps us humble and God simply wants to remind everyone who's Boss?  In which case why give us Christ's righteousness at all?  Why not just leave us in a sort of righteousness limbo forever - that'd keep us humble right?  And what's the link between this act of mental assent and that imputation of saving stuff??  It all seems so arbitrary.

And it would be completely arbitrary so long as we keep Christ out of the discussion.  But once Jesus is central - and by that I mean the Person of Jesus (not just the Provider of a Perfect Righteousness) then things start to fall into place.

Because faith is receiving Jesus Himself (John 1:10-12).  He gives Himself to the world in life and death, He pledges Himself to us (marriage style) in the gospel.  When we hear the gospel rightly we are swept off our feet by such a proposal and find ourselves saying "Yes."   That is faith.  And by faith we are united to Christ.  In that union we have our salvation because salvation is all in Jesus.

So there's nothing at all arbitrary about the connection between faith and salvation.  Because there's nothing arbitrary about the link between a marriage vow and marriage union. Once we are united to Christ by faith, then of course we instantly have His name, His wealth, His family connections.  Of course then instantly we have the righteousness of Christ imputed.  But it's not an impersonal imputation in response to an impersonal faith!

Justification by faith alone does not mean "being zapped simply because of mental assent."  But we'll never get that unless we put union with Christ at the centre.

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This post is continued from here.

I've been pleased that, in the last month, the 321 video has been shared so widely.  It's meant that I've been able to interact online with a handful of people who have raised questions about the presentation.  I'd say the reservation people have had is this: "Where's repentance?"  In fact it's pretty much the only objection I've heard so far.

I was bracing myself for Trinitarian discussions. I was gearing up to present robust defences of Adam's historicity.  None of that has come up.  Yet.

But a good 8 or 10 times someone has said "This is a deficient gospel because there's no summons to repent."

There are a number of ways to respond to this.  One is simply to say "This is only a 5 minute summary.  You can't say everything."

Another is to say "the word 'repent' is not magic.  John's Gospel, for one, gets along fine without it."

Another is to say: "Repentance is not, properly speaking, a part of the good news.  The good news is the announcement of Jesus - His dying, rising, enthronement and return.  The gospel is not about us, it's about Him.  Repentance is the response to the good news."

Those things are true and they need saying at some point.  But in most cases I've responded with a question of my own.  Roughly speaking I've asked "Since 321 presents humanity as lost in Adam with no spiritual life in ourselves and no ability to produce life... and since the new life is presented as coming entirely from beyond us in Jesus... and since the new life of Jesus is presented as an all-embracing, marriage-like oneness with Jesus... what does the command to "be one with Jesus" lack which using the word "repent" would add?"

I've asked that kind of question many times but I've not yet received an answer.  So let me ask it more generally...

If we proclaim the renunciation of self in Adam and the receiving of new life in Christ, what more do we want in our definition of repentance?

I know that no-one in these discussions wants to question salvation by "faith alone." But I do fear that - in wanting something more - 'faith alone' is exactly what's in jeopardy.

In some evangelistic presentations I see a desire to present salvation as a discrete series of steps.  There tend to be a sling of synonyms made into stages.  The unbeliever is told to confess and profess and turn and surrender and trust and repent and submit and admit and believe and commit and do.  It's not the seven sacraments of the Catholic Church.  It's more stream-lined than that.  And it's about internal, mental hoops to jump through.  But still, so often it's a system we offer to people rather than the simplicity of offering the Son.

Have you ever heard a "close the deal" evangelistic talk in which Jesus Himself is not presented or offered? Perhaps the preacher has simply piled up illustration upon illustration - "There's a line... cross the line.  Jesus has given you a cheque... bank the cheque.  In the Matrix there's a red pill and a blue pill... which pill will you take?" What might begin as a call to "simply trust Jesus" becomes an exhortation to adopt this attitude or that, this resolution or that, and then...  Well the thing is, when repentance is this discrete thing then the sinner who repents is only really left with their discrete repentance.  They've "made the step", or whatever, but they're in great danger of leaving the meeting with a resolution not a redeemer.

All of which is to say - Offer Christ.  The new life is in Him.  And if a non-Christian hears this offer and says "I'm not sure I have it in me to repent", tell them:

"You definitely don’t have it in you. But God has given it to you in Jesus. Have Him!"

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