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Today is the anniversary of Blaise Pascal's night of fire.  He turned decisively from the god of the philosophers and found Jesus Christ, the true and living God:

The year of grace 1654
Monday, 23 November.
From about half past ten in the evening until half past midnight. 

Fire
'God of Abraham, God of Isaac, God of Jacob,' not of philosophers and scholars.
Certainty, certainty, heartfelt, joy, peace.
God of Jesus Christ.
God of Jesus Christ.
My God and your God.
'Thy God shall be my God.'
The world forgotten, and everything except God.
He can only be found by the ways taught in the Gospels.
Greatness of the human soul.
'O righteous Father, the world had not known thee, but I have known thee.'
Joy, joy, joy, tears of joy.
I have cut myself off from him.
They have forsaken me, the fountain of living waters.
'My God wilt thou forsake me?'
Let me not be cut off from him for ever!
And this is life eternal, that they might know thee, the only true God, and Jesus Christ whom thou hast sent.'
Jesus Christ.
Jesus Christ.
I have cut myself off from him, shunned him, denied him, crucified him.
Let me never be cut off from him!
He can only be kept by the ways taught in the Gospel.
Sweet and total renunciation.
Total submission to Jesus Christ and my director.
Everlasting joy in return for one day's effort on earth.
I will not forget thy word. Amen.

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Part two of a series of four men's breakfasts.  (Part one here).

Audio here (we only get through about 10% of the notes!).

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THREE PERSONS UNITED

Introduction

Last time we thought about the God who’s revealed in Christ alone. Jesus IS the revelation of God

Without Jesus, God is not known, whether through reason, religion or natural revelation (creation).

People often assume that Christless reason/religion/natural revelation gives some God-knowledge

But the God that’s known in these ways is the omnibeing: high on power, low on personality.

That is not the God Jesus reveals!

The bible tells us that we know the living God only in Jesus.

And when we look to Jesus we see Someone very different.

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...continue reading "Bacon, Bible and the Boys 2 – Three Persons United"

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As always I'm very encouraged by hearing about the work of Gospel for Asia.  In their newsletter today I read something I'd love to see happening in the West.

Here are some testimonies of people converted to Christ:

...The family members repeatedly and earnestly said prayers to their local gods and goddesses... "Why are the gods against us?" they wondered...  [Sager received a tract]...  At once Sager wanted to know more about this new God, so the pastor explained the love of Jesus...

...The culture of the area to which [Pastor Gurdas] had been called was dominated by traditional religions, and the people were fervent about their commitment to it... Pastor Gurdas himself was also deeply committed - but to serving the Almighty God...

...the family prayed and made sacrifices, desperately seeking healing.  But their gods were silent...

...[Then they] realized Jesus is the true God...

"All the gods of the nations are idols."  (Ps 96:5)  Perhaps this should be the first axiom of missionary engagement.  We are converting people to a new God and His Name is Jesus.

I think this would have incredible evangelistic power here in the West.  How many westerners pray to silent gods?  Yet what's our missionary strategy to them?

We tell them they've more or less got it right!!  And then we tell them that Jesus is this god incarnate.  So from the outset we've left them with an idol for the Father and then cast Jesus in that idolatrous mould!

And all our western testimonies run along the lines of: "I had always believed in god and then the evangelist convinced me that Jesus was the god-I'd-always-believed-in."

Please no.  Let's proclaim "this new God"!

Sign up to Gospel for Asia updates here.

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As always I'm very encouraged by hearing about the work of Gospel for Asia.  In their newsletter today I read something I'd love to see happening in the West.

Here are some testimonies of people converted to Christ:

...The family members repeatedly and earnestly said prayers to their local gods and goddesses... "Why are the gods against us?" they wondered...  [Sager received a tract]...  At once Sager wanted to know more about this new God, so the pastor explained the love of Jesus...

...The culture of the area to which [Pastor Gurdas] had been called was dominated by traditional religions, and the people were fervent about their commitment to it... Pastor Gurdas himself was also deeply committed - but to serving the Almighty God...

...the family prayed and made sacrifices, desperately seeking healing.  But their gods were silent...

...[Then they] realized Jesus is the true God...

"All the gods of the nations are idols."  (Ps 96:5)  Perhaps this should be the first axiom of missionary engagement.  We are converting people to a new God and His Name is Jesus.

I think this would have incredible evangelistic power here in the West.  How many westerners pray to silent gods?  Yet what's our missionary strategy to them?

We tell them they've more or less got it right!!  And then we tell them that Jesus is this god incarnate.  So from the outset we've left them with an idol for the Father and then cast Jesus in that idolatrous mould!

And all our western testimonies run along the lines of: "I had always believed in god and then the evangelist convinced me that Jesus was the god-I'd-always-believed-in."

Please no.  Let's proclaim "this new God"!

Sign up to Gospel for Asia updates here.

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1

Ron Frost on the dangers of glorifying glory

In many Christian circles we hear lots about the theme of glory as God’s ultimate goal for the creation.  But by giving such prominence to glory, glory may be getting more glory than God...

The whole thing is... well... glorious.  Read now!

Ron Frost on the dangers of glorifying glory

In many Christian circles we hear lots about the theme of glory as God’s ultimate goal for the creation.  But by giving such prominence to glory, glory may be getting more glory than God...

The whole thing is... well... glorious.  Read now!

I was in a little bible study on Hebrews 1 recently.  We were looking at v3:

The Son is the radiance of God's glory

Someone asked the excellent question: "Does this mean that God couldn't shine without Jesus?"

What would you reply?

Perhaps our knee-jerk response is to say "No of course God could shine without Jesus.  He's God after all!"  Well let's hold our horses just a minute.

Athanasius and Arius had a disagreement over a very similar issue.  They both looked at verses which called Jesus "the Wisdom of God" (e.g. 1 Cor 1:24) and it led to a similar question:  Could God be wise without Jesus?

Again... how do you instinctively want to answer that question?  Don't you want to say, "Don't be silly, God is wise, Jesus is wise, the Spirit is wise - the Father doesn't need Jesus in order to be wise.  He just is wise"

Really?  But what does the verse actually say!?

Athanasius took verses like this seriously and followed them to their conclusion.  So he argues like this:

And if the Son is the “Word” and “Wisdom” of God, how was there “a time when He was not?” It is the same as if they should say that God was once without Word and without Wisdom.  (Depostion of Arius)

Here's the argument:

1. The Son is the Wisdom of the Father.

2. It is inconceivable to have the Father without wisdom.

3. The Father must have always had the Son.

Now it doesn’t take much thought to imagine the Arian come-back.  Surely Arius could simply reply that the Father has always had wisdom in Himself, i.e. considered apart from the Son.  But this was a move which Athanasius was unwilling to make.  He just took the verse at face value - Jesus is the Wisdom of God.  Thus the logic of Athanasius’ position - without which his argument fails - is that the Father must have the Son to have wisdom.  And without the Son He is not wise.

To be clear - Athanasius assumes that the Father does not have wisdom in Himself.  Rather the Father has wisdom in His Son who is His wisdom.  But, and here's the argument for the Son's eternity, God is never without His Son, indeed He is in His Son and the Son in Him.

Therefore a time without Christ is as absurd as a Father without a Son which is as absurd as a God without wisdom.  But truly God would be without wisdom if He did not always have His Son.  That's Athanasius's thinking.

And I think it's so refreshingly different to the majority of today's sytematic theologies.  So many theology books consider the divine attributes first before discussing the Persons-in-relationship.  So they build up their statements of God's perfections (whoever this God may be): "God is wise, God is powerful, God is immense."  And then they raise the issue of triunity and introduce us to the three Persons.  Of course now that they've determined what it is to be God, they'll have to convince us that all three of these Persons qualify.  So each Person must now prove that they've individually got the full complement of divine attributes.  And then, by the end of the process, we've finally got the omni-being thrice repeated.  All hail the Unoriginate!

Yet we must prefer Athanasius here.  The Persons do not have identical CV’s of God-stuff with only the Names at the top differing.  Rather the God-stuff is, irreducibly, the communal life of different Persons inter-penetrating each other in non-reversible relations.  Each Person therefore shares in the common divine life not because they've got identical CVs but because they so belong to one another that Each has a complete share in the life of the Others.  Yet their distinct giftings are properly unique to the Persons in their distinct existences as Begettor, Begotten and Proceeding.  The Son is the Wisdom of the Father.  The Father is not wise in Himself but only in the Son and by the Spirit.

Ok, now that we're thinking about this... let's touch on that old thorny issue - the ignorance of the Son about His return. (Matt 24:36)  Well, now that we're thinking in Athanasian ways, the Son's ignorance is fine, right?  I mean, clearly we don't have to go down the tortuous road of saying "He's ignorant according to His human nature, He knows according to His divine nature."  Instead, don't we just say that the Son entrusts knowledge of that day to His Father.  Simple right?

In a certain sense He has knowledge of that day because the Father does.  But much more fundamentally He's happy to depend on His Father completely such that, considered by Himself, He is ignorant.  And this doesn't make Him less divine - it reveals His true divine nature as the Sent One who goes at the Father's inititative.

I don't see a problem with this solution.  It's no more (in fact it's much less) shocking than the fact that the Father is without wisdom when considered apart from the Son.  Father and Son depend on each other (and on the Spirit - 1 Cor 2:10f)  in order to know what they know.  The Persons are not identical and they are not self-sufficient - they really do depend on each other for everything.

So then, this has been a very roundabout way of answering a simple bible study question.  But I hope we're now in a position to give a straightforward answer: Could God shine without Jesus?

No!  So it's a good thing He's never without Him.

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From Professor Mike Heiser, Academic Editor of Logos Bible Software and author of website, The Two Powers:

For the orthodox Israelite, Yahweh was both sovereign and vice regent occupying both 'slots' as it were at the head of the divine council. The binitarian portrayal of Yahweh in the Hebrew Bible was motivated by this belief. The ancient Israelite knew two Yahwehs one invisible, a spirit, the other visible, often in human form.  The two Yahwehs at times appear together in the text, at times being distinguished, at other times not.

Early Judaism understood this portrayal and its rationale. There was no sense of a violation of monotheism since either figure was indeed Yahweh. There was no second distinct god running the affairs of the cosmos. During the Second Temple period, Jewish theologians and writers speculated on an identity for the second Yahweh. Guesses ranged from divinized humans from the stories of the Hebrew Bible to exalted angels. These speculations were not considered unorthodox. That acceptance changed when certain Jews, the early Christians, connected Jesus with this orthodox Jewish idea. This explains why these Jews, the first converts to following Jesus the Christ, could simultaneously worship the God of Israel and Jesus, and yet refuse to acknowledge any other god. Jesus was the incarnate second Yahweh. In response, as Segal's work demonstrated, Judaism pronounced the two powers teaching a heresy sometime in the second century A.D.

Here's his video on 'The Two Powers' in the Hebrew Bible

[youtube="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HAzdtt1FY3g"]

There's quite a bit on my own blog about this:

The Angel of the LORD part 1

The Angel of the LORD part 2

The Angel of the LORD part 3

Trinitarian passages in the OT

Some multi-Personal passages in more depth – Genesis, Exodus, Isaiah

But Professor Heiser says it a lot better and with a lot more learning behind him.

His website on The Divine Council is also fascinating.

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Jesus is God's Son. And there was never a time when He was not God's Son.  Equally, there was never a time when the Father was not Father of His eternal Son, Jesus.  Wind back the clock into the depths of eternity and no matter how far back you go you will always find this: The Father possessing His Son in the Spirit, The Father pouring His life into the Son by the Spirit.  The Son receiving His anointing from the Father.  The Son determined in the Spirit by the Father.  The Father and Son have existed in a Begetting-Begotten relationship eternally.  Such relationship is not simply what our God does, it's who He is.  He is this eternal fellowship of the Three.

When was Christ begotten?  The early church rightly answered He is 'Eternally begotten of the Father.  God from God.  Light from Light.  True God from True God.  Begotten not made.  Of one being with the Father.'

Well then Psalm 2 throws up an interesting issue.  Always and everywhere in Scripture Psalm 2 is said to refer to Jesus.  And no matter how you get there, I hope you'll agree that it does.  Well verse 7 is the Son speaking and He says this:

I will proclaim the decree of the LORD: He said to me, "You are my Son; today I have begotten you.

Well now, how do we cope with the Son of God saying such a thing?  What is the 'today' on which the Son is said to be begotten?  Doesn't this just collapse into Arianism?  Perhaps we think the Father should have said 'Today I declare what has always been true of You - You are My Son, eternally I beget You'?  But he doesn't say that.  He says there's a day of begetting.

Well what day is that?

Answer: Easter Sunday.  Paul correctly identifies the 'today' for us.  In Acts 13:32-33 he tells us that David's intention here is to prophesy Christ's resurrection:

We tell you the good news: What God promised our fathers he has fulfilled for us, their children, by raising up Jesus. As it is written in the second Psalm: `You are my Son; today I have become your Father.'

The resurrection of Jesus is the 'today' in which the Father begets the Son.  The Father and Son exist in a Begetting-Begotten relationship.  And Easter is the Day on which that relationship is (and here I'm reaching for words) manifest?  - too weak.  Concretized?  - closer.  Established?  - too far?

Well if we think that's too far, perhaps we also think Peter went too far in Acts 2:36.  Again speaking of the resurrection he says:

God has made this Jesus, whom you crucified, both Lord and Christ.

Jesus is made Lord and Christ through the resurrection.  He already was Lord (v34) and Christ (v31), yet the resurrection 'made' Him Lord and Christ.

One other Scripture to consider.  In Hebrews 5, the writer sees the resurrection of Psalm 2:7 as Christ's calling to the Priesthood.

No-one takes this honour upon himself; he must be called by God, just as Aaron was.  So Christ also did not take upon himself the glory of becoming a high priest. But God said to him, "You are my Son; today I have become your Father."  (v4-5)

God calls Jesus to the Priesthood by raising / exalting Him.  And yet at the same time Hebrews had introduced us to the eternal Son in already priestly terms (Heb 1:2,3).  The Son's mediation in creation, revelation and providence is already priestly, and yet He is called to this priesthood on the basis of His death, resurrection and ascension.

This co-ordination of eternal priestliness and His historical calling continues in chapter 5.  Verse 6 reminds us from Psalm 110 that Jesus is a 'priest forever in the order of [beginningless] Melchizedek'.  Yet almost straight away we are told He is 'designated' priest on the basis of His suffering perfection and exaltation. (v10).

So which is it?  Is Jesus eternally begotten or begotten on Easter morning?  Is Jesus eternally Lord and Christ or made so by resurrection?  Is Jesus eternally God's Priest or called Priest on the basis of His suffering perfection and exaltation?  The answer is yes.

How do we put words to this?  Well Ben Myers has done a pretty good job here as he summarizes the argument of Adam Eitel:

God's being can thus be described as a kind of being-towards-resurrection; the resurrection of Jesus is the goal of God's eternal self-determining action. In this historical (or better, this history-creating) event, God becomes what God eternally is - and this is just because God eternally is what he becomes in this event.

Here's the text and audio for the five sola sermons.  Then a final thought:

Christ Alone
Audio

Grace Alone
Audio

Faith Alone
Audio

Scripture Alone
Audio

God's Glory Alone
Audio

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We refocus on these fundamentals not simply as an exercise in doctrinal purity.  The point is to rediscover the true God.  Because God is the God of the Gospel.  To drift from the gospel is to drift from God Himself.

I am astonished that you are so quickly deserting the One who called you by the grace of Christ and are turning to a different gospel.  (Gal 1:6)

When a person ditches the gracious gospel in favour of a different gospel, they ditch God.  Because God is the God of the Gospel.  Conversely when a person trusts the gracious gospel they aren't just converted to a different way of approaching God, they are converted to a different God.

Therefore the experience of hearing the pure gospel should not just be, "Ohh, so that's how the God-I-always-believed-in saves people, now I'll adjust my methods of attaining salvation."

No.  When we hear the gospel, the overwhelming response should be:  "Ohh, so that's what God is like.  I had Him all wrong."

In the gospel we don't just give people a different way to God.  We give them a different God.  The God of the Gospel.  And that's liberation.  It's not the surprise of seeing the-God-we-always-believed-in relating to us via some lovely principles - grace alone and faith alone.  It's the earth-shattering shock of looking to the throne and, utterly unexpectedly, seeing that there sits the gracious, trustworthy Gospel-God.

For the Lamb at the centre of the throne will be their Shepherd; He will lead them to springs of Living Water. And God will wipe away every tear from their eyes.  (Rev 7:17)

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