All posts by jthomas

Entitlement Revisited

Read Psalm 23

God’s concern for us is beyond our comprehension. To what do we owe such love? Can we return to God anything that would merit such grace? Entitlement is a word that gets a lot of mileage these days. People feel entitled to the property (intellectual and material) of others because the opposite party is believed to be more privileged than the other, leaving the first part at a disadvantage. Because of the confusion of social justice, there is a confusion of what is “FAIR.”

There is also an emotional entitlement people may feel they deserve, like anger. The offense of another tempts us to feel we have the right to be angry or hateful of another because of the feeling of being disadvantaged by the abuse of an opposite in which the other takes advantage of that is considered as being abusive of their privilege. Some would feel entitled to be angry with God for the loss of a loved one. It can go deeper. Some even cling to the right to hate themselves to the point that they feel they do not deserve to be loved. They don’t love themselves because the privilege is not theirs and they don’t feel entitled to be loved another, especially God.

We could easily lay on God the right to be angry with us. If anybody has a right to be angry and deserving of our love, it would be God. If anyone has the right to distance himself from His creation because of the offenses committed against him and his son, it should be God. From that thinking, we’ve made an enemy of ourselves and of God.

It hurts God when we think this way. The bible tells us in exquisite detail how God had let us fumble in our own devices in order for us to hopefully awaken to His goodness. Isaiah 5 says that God only wanted to take his people and put them in the garden which he created for them, securely and safely.

Isaiah 5:2

My beloved had a vineyard on a very fertile hill.

2He dug it up and cleared the stones and planted the finest vines.

He built a watchtower in the middle and dug out a winepress as well.

He waited for the vineyard to yield good grapes, but the fruit it produced was sour!

3“And now, O dwellers of Jerusalem and men of Judah,

I exhort you to judge between Me and My vineyard.

4What more could I have done for My vineyard than I already did for it?

Why, when I expected sweet grapes, did it bring forth sour fruit?

So, a lot of talk about expectations. A lot of talk about entitlement and privilege. God has made every preparation for us to attain to our created purpose–to have a relationship with Him. Is it not right that we should receive the benefit of the love and care with which He wants to bless us? After this past year can there be any greater testimony to the fact that in this world there is NO hope.

No Redemption Found in Your Past

There’s no redemption to be found in our past so don’t keep looking for it there. You will find deliverance in your present and redemption for your future when we esteem the qualities of our better character and virtue that have come from putting wise use to the lessons of the past. We must come to love and accept ourselves in the most unconditional way possible. There has been talk in a previous article about how we should not feel entitled to hate. It is the weakness of many that they should be entitled to the love of another based on what they DO or GIVE. Some feel if they could earn another’s love, they would deserve reciprocation—they would be entitled to their love. Just like the former argument for hate, it seems like it always generates the exact opposite of that strategy’s intent. No one deserves nor are they entitled to the love of another. Unconditional love is not deserved and can not be earned. You cannot give, work, nor earn love. The purest love is given for the best interest of the other not for personal gain nor to fulfill some personal vendetta or a feeling of obligation. That is why there is a great appeal and a proverb to which we must fully agree with Scripture to owe no one anything except that we love them.

I have tried my best to love unconditionally. I have given without thought of repayment and that leaves me with an abundance of joy. Yet, sometimes I think it is the guilt from my past that drives me. I feel the appeal to find redemption from past guilt. It is my daily struggle and something in my prayer life regularly. It is a grateful heart that admits–if I got what I deserved I wouldn’t be here to talk to you.

Forged by the Hammer of God

This is the story of the blacksmith who gave his heart to Jesus:

Though living a more godly life, still he was not prospering materially. In fact, it seems that from the time of his conversion more trouble, affliction and loss were sustained than ever before. Everything seemed to be going wrong. One day a friend who was not a Christian stopped by to talk to him awhile. Sympathizing with him in some of his trials, the friend said, “It seems strange to me that so much affliction should pass over you just at the time when you have become an earnest Christian. Of course, I don’t want to weaken your faith in God or anything like that. But here you are, with God’s help and guidance, and yet things seem to be getting steadily worse, I can’t help wondering why that is.”
The blacksmith did not answer immediately, and it was evident that he had thought the same question before. But finally, he said, “You see here the raw iron  which I have to make into horse’s shoes. You know what I do with it? I take a piece and heat it in the fire until it is red, almost white with the heat. Then I hammer it unmercifully to shape it as I know it should be shaped. Then I plunge it into a pail of cold water to temper it. Then I heat it again and hammer it some more. And this I do until it is finished.” “But sometimes I find a piece of iron that won’t stand up under this treatment. The heat and the hammering and the cold water are too much for it. I don’t know why it fails in the process, but I know it will never make a good horse’s shoe.”
He pointed to a heap of scrap iron that was near the door of his shop. “When I get a piece that cannot take the shape and temper, I throw it out on the scrap heap. It will never be good for anything.” He went on, “I know that God has been holding me in the fires of affliction and I have felt His hammer upon me. But I don’t mind, if only He can bring me to what I should be. And so, in all these hard things my prayer is simply this: “Try me in any way you wish, Lord, only don’t throw me on the scrap heap.”


Author unknown

The Past and the Danger of Relapse

Relapsing suppressed memories is not a tactic that should be encouraged. Relapse brings with it bad connotations when it comes to any addiction. The mind naturally forms a barrier between that which was/is destructive and that which would promote its adaptation, health, and well being. By encouraging a resurgence of an experience that the mind has suppressed, it encourages what was once a bad experience into twice the worse experience. Who’s to say the original experience was interpreted correctly by our limited understanding or viewpoint. For instance, we may interpret our past by context of the present, we may not appreciate the context in which it was set. Today, it could be said that I lived in poverty and being poor when I was little has made me feel more entitled and accuse my parents of neglect. Depression and anxiety are the usual result of looking back at what we’ve plowed with regret and remorse.

When I travel in the Middle East, those who know me as a Christian can either judge me on my present disposition or judge me as a member of religious fanatics responsible for the Crusades. On the occasion someone finds out I am a Gulf War veteran, they can conclude that I am not a person who is anti-Muslim, or that I am a person whose past is removed from him and respectful of all Muslims and sympathetic toward their culture. I would expect anybody to judge me on what I am presently and not on the basis of anything in the past.

The past is best left out of the present and future. Grappling with it can lead to the greatest depression if not resolved properly. Those who meditate in the way of Eastern mysticism and believe in reincarnation MUST force themselves to try to rectify their past with their present condition for future benefit. It is a constant state of guilt, contrition, and agonizingly brutal debasement in their attempts to make them worthy of an elevated afterlife. Some Christians I know have so far removed themselves from the present by delving into their past, they feel they have to work through a strict system of laws to atone for the sins they feel has made them unworthy of salvation. On the other side, some Christians continue living in unrepentant sin, hurting others around them, feeling God will forgive, yet they are guilty of transgressions they will never resolve without the proper repentance. I know you know the kinds of people of whom I speak—they are hypocrites.

You see, plastering over our past is our mind’s best defense and shield that naturally occurs when we have been hurt. It is like a defensive wall where isolation from the effects of the trauma can be allowed to die. Taking the wall down is like opening up a window for light to come in and after being attended to our pain can resurface and what was dead can be allowed to grow. From there, the greater effects of the pain which is translated sometimes wrongfully into the present enters our lives and the lives of others and we feel worse.

The greatest result of counseling is to bring peace, yet most counselors bring conflict and isolation to the wrong areas of our lives separating us from where true peace can be found. True peace is found in forgiveness. It is found in acceptance. It is found in overcoming. The greatest threat to depression is to feel no regret for the past, be resolved with the present, and live the future as if it were present—meaning I live by the virtues of love. This is what we together have said about love. Love keeps no records of wrongs. It thinks the best, does the best, and has the best interest and high good in mind for the other. That way, in the future we have less of a chance of being condemned by guilt.

In the VA, there is no end to diagnoses of mental illness, most prevalent is PTSD. I have chosen to suppress the images that I retain in my mind as a result of what I witnessed during the Gulf War. I only consider that a vital and meaningful part of my life. It was a part of my life that to me was a different life. Some today live in the guilt of their past, mostly encouraged by others who recommend or set expectations that they “feel” a certain way and before long they believe it. The symptoms of depression are easily applied to them and through very little convincing evidence, a person can believe they are doomed to a condition from their past that they should have no business believing.

Why can’t we just cut off the past and after severing the root allow it to die? Well, it’s because we struggle with guilt and we struggle with unresolved accusations against us created by what we feel are from others and most damagingly—ourselves. Our character today—this day—should not be manipulated by the events of the past.

In the Bible, there is a parable about cleaning one’s house. It has to do with how we clean our minds and hearts. Sometimes when we clean out what we feel is unclean, we can open ourselves up to a worse fate. Temptation to sin acts the same way—it wipes away the guilt of our past by thinking a future act will be satisfying and in our fantasy overlook the pain of the past and open ourselves up to sin of a greater magnitude. The more we do that, the less we feel remorse and the less we feel remorse, the farther we are from true healing.

When the unclean spirit has gone out of a man, he roams through waterless places in search of rest; and finding none, he says, “I will return to my house which I left.” And when he has come to it, he finds the place swept and clean. Then he goes and takes seven other spirits more evil than himself, and they enter in and dwell there; and the last state of that man becomes worse that the first (Lk 11:24-25).

Care must be taken that we do not give an opportunity for greater damage to ourselves and others when a right end resulting in love, forgiveness, and peace are not the end game.

Another parable in the Bible has to do with a strong man guarding his house.

When a strong man, fully armed, guards his own house, his possessions are undisturbed. But when someone stronger than he attacks him and overpowers him, he takes away from him all his armor on which he had relied and distributes his plunder. (Luke 11:21, 22)

When the strong man’s armor is reduced, the affects of the stronger man to overtake him are greater.

I hope this makes a bit of sense. Your past is part of the canvas of your life’s portrait. Understanding how painting works, it is the darker background that brings out the brightness of a foreground and brighter your life will be by not mingling the dark with your brilliant radiance.

On the Sanctity of Human Life

In the book “The Science of Evil” written by Simon Baron Cohen, empathy and compassion are lost when we lose and show contempt for the sanctity of human life. This applies to both Christians and non-Christians. From that exchange begins hatred, cruelty, and suffering.

It is far too common that our pre-meditated thoughts are bent on the termination of another human life when it comes into a violation of our personal beliefs and/or standards. We think of a violent response when a person intrudes on our domicile, place of work or worship. Is this the proper perspective as it compares to Scripture relative to that response? If an act is perpetrated at our workplace, is a premeditation to murder equal to vigilantism? How far does the vigilantism go? Will we take our judgment to the point of a proactive response and terminate a life based on perceived intent? These are questions we must answer.

Typically, the Beatitudes have been something that Scripturally apply to an individual’s action and interaction with another, even one who is our enemy. Civically , institutions of law enforcement are in place to address criminal activity at large. Nationally, a military and militia are in place to ensure a righteous response by a government to preserve and protect its citizens. “Does the government bear the sword for nothing?” (Romans 13:4)

We are to encourage the kind of conduct one should expect from a government installed by God. 1 Peter 2:13ff. says, 13 Submit yourselves for the Lord’s sake to every human authority: whether to the emperor, as the supreme authority, 14 or to governors, who are sent by him to punish those who do wrong and to commend those who do right. 15 For it is God’s will that by doing good you should silence the ignorant talk of foolish people. 16 Live as free people, but do not use your freedom as a cover-up for evil; live as God’s slaves. 17 Show proper respect to everyone, love the family of believers, fear God, honor the emperor.” (NIV)

The accountability to God of our actions will weigh on a proper discernment of our expectations as a Christian.

The Condition of Grace

If you think salvation is unconditional then the conditions demanded of Christ to bring salvation will never apply to you. It was not by the grace of God that Christ suffered and was put to death. It is therefore not the grace of God to allow disobedience and faithlessness among those called the children of God. Those who encountered Jesus during his life’s ministry were faced with two choices; 1) deny themselves and follow him, or 2) deny him and follow themselves.

Love Your Neighbor

Sometimes it’s not easy to forgive ourselves. Fact is, it can be the hardest thing to do and be the greatest obstacle between a relationship with God and ourselves. The greatest commandments are: Love the Lord your God and love your neighbor as yourself. We would not resign ourselves to hell for an offense of which we condemn ourselves would we? We would desire the grace of another to help us restore a right relationship. Likewise God will not resign to hell one who has the capacity to repent. How can we resign another to hell for an offense against us?

David committed a most heinous offense. He not only committed adultery, but also murder. Nathan had every right to condemn such a one worthy to be brought before trial as a capital offense according to the Law. Yet as a representative of God, God’s prophet Nahan allowed an opportunity for David to convict himself of his own sin—a sin before God—and in repentance produce the fruits of repentance. Psalm 51 stands out as one of the greatest psalms of all time that may not have existed if David were executed.

We are told to forgive others as many times as it takes (70 x 7), even if the offense is against God Himself. An offense against us is without question commanded to be forgiven (Ephesians 4:32 and Colossians 3:13). Jesus himself offered forgiveness from the cross. Paul says in Philippians 4:8 and 9, “As you have seen me do, do likewise.” He forgave many in the church and the synagogue who provided him reason to rejoice over the offenses and sufferings he endured for the sake of Christ.

Romans 13:8—“Be indebted to no one except to owe them our love. For he who loves his neighbor has fulfilled the law.”

Defeat of Chaos

A Poem

  
Defeat of Chaos-by me


There once was a time
Before lyric and rhyme
When chaos existed unchecked


Then low and behold
Did order unfold
Repaired what was brutally wrecked


This order would seem
Was result of a dream
Of a world that was running a muck


Still labored it did
That order would bid
Farewell to the weed it would pluck


At first, miserably failed
All strategies paled
To havoc that Chaos would wreak


And order laid low
It's countenance bow
It's future, beholden, was bleak


Its effort was vain
Seemed chaos would reign
Enslaving the world to its doom


And chained to its dread
The world downward sped
More dismal its future would loom


Reduced to a dream
It's efforts did seem
A paltry and futile attempt


With fears of demise
The Chaos would rise
Holding rules of order contempt


The world almost chose
Surrender repose
Defeat in the hands of its foe


But new to the scene
To join with the team
An ally to aid in the fight


The dream fast renewed
And hope fast ensued
From darkness a faint trace of light


What Chaos had won
Would soon be undone
As Chaos had now met its match


The Chaos would stay
Being kept fast at bay
The flames of resistance did catch


Its strength quickly left
Its countenance bereft
Reduced to no consequence seem


The world in full light
Had discovered what might
Be possessed as a new found regime


Most humbled it was
As one humbly does
Give credit where credit is do


What came to the fight
To lend hope and light
Is found in a friend such as you


What brought great success
From the hopeless duress
Could not from the world ever find


The strategy clear
When Chaos is near
Is peace first engaged in the mind


But peace in the mind
Can't come from one blind
Who gives to the Chaos his life


He neither wants peace
Nor seeks its release
His heart hard as Chaos was rife


Not left to despair
Even his life repair
By occasion that peace finds by chance


When Chaos he finds
How deadly chords, Chaos binds
He gives peace a hopeful first glance


Yet peace is remiss
Requires assist
To mend all that Chaos had broke


True peace is not full
Till love has its rule
Together appeal must invoke


The same is most true
To you and me too
If Chaos convinces defeat


To find blissful peace
Surrender release
To love's great redemption complete


True beauty unfolds
What love dearly holds
As love rebukes Chaos to cease


And friends in the wake
Find blessing to take
And with it the fullness of peace

Jesus a Friend to Sinners?

“You are my friend if you keep my commandments.” (John 15:14)

Was Jesus a Friend of Sinners?

By James P. Shelly

“You are My friends if you do whatever I command you.” (John 15:14)

We read in 1 Corinthians 15:33, “Do not be deceived: ‘Evil company corrupts good habits.‘” The Greek word rendered “company” means, association, conversation, companionship, intercourse, or communion. We are here taught that evil companionships, or “friendships” with the ungodly, will have a destructive influence on our moral behavior. There is a direct correlation between a person’s character and the company he keeps. Few would disagree, even in the unbelieving world, that such is undoubtedly the case. It is, therefore, a common practice among loving parents to forbid their children from being friends with other children whom they think would be a bad influence. Would we expect our heavenly Father to have any less concern for His beloved children and not prohibit them from friendship with sinners? We read in Proverbs 13:20, “He who walks with wise men will be wise, but the companion of fools will be destroyed.” We read in 2 Corinthians 6:14, “…what fellowship has righteousness with lawlessness? And what communion has light with darkness? …Or what part has a believer with an unbeliever?” If Jesus was a friend and companion of sinners would He not, according to these and many other passages, be living contrary to Scripture and setting a dangerous and perilous example for his followers?

The Accusation of the Pharisees

The Pharisees, seeking to find fault with Christ, were proclaiming, ‘Look, a glutton and a winebibber, a friend of tax collectors and sinners!‘ ( Luke 7:34). It would make little sense, in light of their intent, to include the charge of being a friend of sinners if it were not generally recognized as being contrary to Scripture. We are told in Proverbs 12:26 that, “The righteous should choose his friends carefully, for the way of the wicked leads them astray.” In Proverbs 28:7 we read, “Whoever keeps the law is a discerning son, but a companion of gluttons shames his father.” It says in Proverbs 23:19-20, “Hear, my son, and be wise; And guide your heart in the way. Do not mix with winebibbers, or with gluttonous eaters of meat.” David says in Psalm 119:63, “I am a companion of all who fear You, and of those who keep Your precepts” which is in perfect harmony with what Christ Himself said in John 15:14, “You are My friends if you do whatever I command you.” If Christ was in fact a friend and companion of gluttons and winebibbers, tax collectors and sinners, taking pleasure in the comradeship of the wicked, as the Pharisees were claiming, then He would indeed be guilty of living contrary to the clear teachings of Scripture. However, these were nothing more than erroneous assumptions and exaggerations of what was actually occurring. Jesus tells us in Luke 14:12, 13, “When you give a dinner or a supper, do not ask your friends… But when you give a feast, invite the poor, the maimed, the lame, the blind” (emphasis added). In light of this verse, the fact that Christ ate and drank with tax collectors and sinners in no way implies that He was friends with them or guilty of any wrongdoing. The Pulpit Commentary states:

The Pharisees would have been right enough if Jesus Christ had mingled with the mercenary and the vicious only to enjoy their company….and he would have left an example that would have been better shunned than followed. For to mingle with the irreverent and the covetous, and, still more, to associate with the positively vicious, simply for the sake of passing gratification, is…to incur the serious danger of being lowered to their level. Some intercourse with the frivolous and the guilty we must have, and there is every reason why our conduct toward them should be as courteous and gracious as possible. But no wise man will establish an intimate friendship with another whose spirit is the spirit of worldliness, whose conduct is that from which purity and sobriety must shrink. Let the young especially remember that lifelong association with the unholy and the unworthy, in ninety-nine cases out of a hundred, means gradual moral degeneracy, continual spiritual decline….Our Lord mingled with publicans and sinners, not as a Companion to share their revelries, but as a Guide to lead them into other and better ways, as a Helper whose strong hand should raise them from the mire and place them upon the rock.[1]

Again, Jesus clearly tells us who His friends are in John 15:14, You are My friends if you do whatever I command you. Is this not the very antitheses of the claim, “Jesus is a friend of sinners”? He says, in essence, you are not my friends if you are sinners, i.e., those who do not do what I command them. He says in John 15:15, “No longer do I call you servants, for a servant does not know what his master is doing; but I have called you friends, for all things that I heard from My Father I have made known to you (emphasis added). James tells us, Abraham believed God, and it was accounted to him for righteousness. And he was called the friend of God (Jam. 2:23) (emphasis added). Jesus was not a friend of sinners but rather He came to save sinners, eating and drinking with the enemies of God that He might bring them the message of reconciliation, the gospel that would indeed give them the opportunity to in fact become His friends.

We read in James 4:4, “Adulterers and adulteresses! Do you not know that friendship with the world is enmity with God? Whoever therefore wants to be a friend of the world makes himself an enemy of God.” James does not say a friend of the world is a poor Christian but an enemy of God! Friendship with the world is to be in collusion with the enemy. Why would a Christian want to be friends with those who stand diametrically opposed to Christ? Who live flagrantly and unashamedly in rebelliousness to His word and are of such character as would resemble those who crucified Him? For, “…what fellowship has righteousness with lawlessness? And what communion has light with darkness? …Or what part has a believer with an unbeliever?” (2 Cor. 6:14, 15). Saints and sinners walk in two opposite directions. The one walks in the narrow and difficult way which leads to life, while the other walks in the broad way that leads to destruction (Matt. 7:13, 14). The one is a slave to righteousness the other a slave to sin (Rom. 6:15-23). The one walks in the Spirit the other in the flesh (Rom. 8:5-8). The two have nothing in common as regards to their core beliefs, interests, and lifestyles. What then would be the basis of such a friendship? According to Scripture there is none.

We are called as Christians to love our enemies, that is, to be charitable, kind, compassionate and “friendly” toward them, but not to affectionately embrace them as friends. This is a love that seeks their best interest, both physically and spiritually; not an emotional attachment to them as intimate friends and companions. Adam Clarke writes, “How strange it is that people professing Christianity can suppose that with a worldly spirit, worldly companions, and their lives governed by worldly maxims, they can be in the favor of God, or ever get to the kingdom of heaven!”[2] Matthew Henry writes, “Let us not be joined with ungodly men; but warn all around us, especially children and young persons, to shun them as a pestilence.”[3]

Obviously, we are not called to retreat from society and never associate with sinners otherwise the call to love our enemies, to be the salt of the earth, or to preach the Gospel would be meaningless, but we are warned, “Do not be deceived: ‘Evil company corrupts good habits’” therefore, “Come out from among them and be separate, says the Lord” (2 Cor. 6:17). The Apostle John says that sinners are of the devil (1 Jn. 3:8) and makes this distinction in 1 John 3:10, “In this the children of God and the children of the devil are manifest: Whoever does not practice righteousness is not of God, nor is he who does not love his brother.” To claim that the children of God can legitimately be friends and companions with the children of the devil would be, in essence, to claim that Christ could be a friend and companion of Satan and to that we would say God forbid! For, “What harmony can there be between Christ and the devil?” (2 Cor. 6:15 NLT). As God said in 2 Cor. 6:16-18:

“I will live in them and walk among them. I will be their God, and they will be my people. Therefore, come out from among unbelievers, and separate yourselves from them, says the Lord. Don’t touch their filthy things, and I will welcome you. And I will be your Father, and you will be my sons and daughters, says the Lord Almighty.” (NLT)

[In the lengthy block quote given directly below,] Matthew Henry sums it up well:

It is wrong for good people to join in affinity with the wicked & profane; these will draw different ways, and that will be galling & grievous. Those relations that are our choice must be chosen by rule; and it is good for those who are themselves the children of God to join with those who are so likewise; for there is more danger that the bad will damage the good than hope that the good will benefit the bad….We should not yoke ourselves in friendship & acquaintance with wicked men & unbelievers. Though we cannot wholly avoid seeing & hearing, and being with such, yet we should never choose them for our bosom-friends.

The apostle gives several good reasons against this corrupt mixture.

(1.) It is a very great absurdity (2 Cor 6:14-15). It is an unequal yoking of things together that will not agree together…What an absurdity is it to think of joining righteousness & unrighteousness, or mingling light & darkness, fire & water, together! Believers are, and should be, righteous; but unbelievers are unrighteous. Believers are made light in the Lord, but unbelievers are in darkness; and what comfortable communion can these have together? Christ & Belial are contrary one to the other; they have opposite interests & designs, so that it is impossible there should be any concord or agreement between them. It is absurd, therefore, to think of enlisting under both; and, if the believer has part with an infidel, he does what in him lies to bring Christ & Belial together.

(2.) It is a dishonor to the Christian’s profession (2 Cor 6:16); for Christians are by profession, and should be in reality, the temples of the living God – dedicated to, and employed for, the service of God, who has promised to reside in them, to dwell and walk in them, to stand in a special relation to them, and take a special care of them, that he will be their God and they shall be his people. Now there can be no agreement between the temple of God and idols. Idols are rivals with God for his honor, and God is a jealous God, and will not give his glory to another.

(3.) There is a great deal of danger in communicating with unbelievers & idolaters, danger of being defiled & of being rejected; therefore the exhortation is (2 Cor 6:17) to come out from among them, and keep at a due distance, to be separate, as one would avoid the society of those who have the leprosy or the plague, for fear of taking infection, and not to touch the unclean thing, lest we be defiled. Who can touch pitch, and not be defiled by it? We must take care not to defile ourselves by converse with those who defile themselves with sin; so is the will of God, as we ever hope to be received, and not rejected, by him.

(4.) It is base ingratitude to God for all the favors he has bestowed upon believers & promised to them (2 Cor 6:18). God has promised to be a Father to them, & that they shall be his sons & his daughters; and is there a greater honor or happiness than this? How ungrateful a thing then must it be if those who have this dignity and felicity should degrade and debase themselves by mingling with unbelievers![4]

God so loved the world that He sent His only begotten Son, not to His friends, but to His enemies (Rom. 5:10), that they might be reconciled to Him; That they might obtain to the glorious and awesome privilege of truly becoming His friends. This privilege is granted exclusively to his sanctified sons (and his daughters) in Christ. To express the notion to the unbelieving world that “Christ was a friend of sinners,” to assign this holy privilege to those who are yet at enmity with Him, is indeed to “give what is holy to the dogs” (Matt. 7:6).

Article found at: https://www.truthaccordingtoscripture.com/documents/christian-life/was-jesus-a-friend-of-sinners.php#.XBmQYVxKhPY

Notes:

[1] The Pulpit Commentary, Luke 7:34 (Hendrickson Pub, October 1, 1985—underlining for emphasis has been added)

[2] Adam Clarke’s Commentary on the Whole Bible, James 4:4, (Abingdon Press, 1966)

[3] Matthew Henry’s Commentary on the Whole Bible, 1 Cor. 15:33, (Hendrickson Publishers, 2009)

[4] Matthew Henry’s Commentary on the Whole Bible, 1 Cor. 6:14-18, (Hendrickson Publishers, 2009)

Barton W. Stone

Lecture on the Restoration Movement held at the Pines Christian Church, Mount Gilead, OH, 2019

Restoration Movement Symposium, October 29, 2019

The Restoration Movement, also known as the Stone-Campbell Movement, began in the early 1800s under the leadership of Barton W. Stone, Thomas Campbell, and Alexander Campbell. Stone was originally a Presbyterian minister who was inspired by the spiritual unity of the early open-air revivals held in KY under speakers like James McGready whom he came to know from North Carolina inciting him to conduct the Cane Ridge Revival (1801). He promoted reliance on the Bible alone. Meanwhile, the Campbells were espousing similar ideas within Baptist circles through the 1810s and 1820s.

We are not sentenced to the verdict of coincidence when it comes to how the events to form this Second Great Awakening transpired. By second, I mean following after a FIRST, referring to 1730s to 1770s “Awakening” known by men like George Whitefield and Jonathan Edwards. The First Great Awakening gave rise to the search and application of scriptural TRUTH and the concentration on defining the identity of the believer and his relationship to Jesus Christ. It was on the coat tail of the first “Awakening” that the second could be given an adequate stage on which to play out.

To bridge that gap to where we will concern ourselves in this evening in Kentucky, James McGready had his part in making fertile the soil for revival. In 1796, James McGready left North Carolina to preach in Logan County, KY. Having left his mark on Barton W. Stone, he continued to preach revivals in many states besides.

While on the national stage, God saw fit to transform the religious bodies separated by schisms and yet united under a newfound national liberty, to form a more perfect Christian union. Men like Rice Haggard who coincidentally was traveling from the body of O’Kellyites in VA to visit family in KY and to perhaps buy land. Rice while meeting up with his brother David Haggard who was Presbyterian circuit preacher in the area of Lexington, KY, would providentially meet Barton W. Stone and inspire Stone with taking the identity as simply “Christian.” Thus, uniting southern Christians.

In the east, Elias Smith, a preacher, and Abner Jones, a physician, would begin to stir the fires of reform in New England. By 1832, all parties had been made familiar to each other and the Restoration Movement was in full bloom.

We can not neglect the fact that the 17th century was overwhelmed in philosophical, industrial, ecumenical, institutional, economical, governmental and theological discourse. Schisms existed in almost ever discipline of thought.

Within the discipline of theology, there was a debate regarding the doctrine of the godhead which differentiated itself by rudimentary means between Unitarian and Trinitarian schools.

Arianism was a heresy named after Arius (ca. 250-336), bishop of Alexandria. Arius taught that Jesus was not God. One of his famous dictums was “there once was as a time when the Son was not,” i.e., there was a time when Jesus did not exist. The Council of Nicea convened specifically to condemn this heresy (the result of this council was the Nicene Creed of AD 325 which affirmed the deity of Christ).

Although Stone denied being an Arian, it was clear that he affirmed the heresy. In a logic chopping manner, very much like Arius, Stone spoke of Jesus as “divine” but not actually “God.” For Stone, Jesus is “divine” in the sense that the “Father dwells in him” and that the “fullness of God was in him.” Describing it further, the nature of Christ is similar to how water fills a bucket–the bucket itself is not water, but is filled with water, Jesus being the vessel. Only the “divinity in him . . . was eternal” according to Stone.

More plainly, Stone expressed his view thus: My own views of the Son of God, are, that he did not begin to exist 1820 years ago; nor did he exist from eternity; but was the first begotten of the Father before time or creation began–that he was sent by the Father 1820 years ago into the world, and united with a body, prepared for him; and that in him dwelt all the fullness of Godhead bodily. These propositions I will endeavor to establish by arguments drawn from the oracles of truth. . .it is plain, that the one God, whose name is the Father, is the only efficient cause of all things; and that the one Lord Jesus Christ, who is the Son of God, is the instrumental cause of all things. This proves that there are two distinct beings; and that the Son, the first born of every creature, existed before all worlds, angels, and men, consequently before he was united with the body prepared for him. To say the Son was very God, and yet that the Father created all things by him, is the same as to say, that one God created by another God. “But to us there is but one God, the Father.”

Here is where I must interject Soren Kierkegaard. Yes, I know, He lived a few decades after Stone, but we CAN take his interpretation of Dutch Lutheranism and apply it to the time of Barton W. Stone. Considered to be the “Father of Existentialism,” the works of Kierkegaard were not recognized by any merit until 100 years after his untimely death. French existentialism in particular articulated that there can be no essence until after existence and therefore the existential theology could not justify the church’s teaching of the God the Son being equal with God in essence because Scripture considers Him “begotten of the Father.” Only God had an eternal essence and therefore singular deity. For Christ to be a man, he must first be created a vessel to be filled. Hence, humanity, importantly the humanity of Christ, is a bucket devoid of meaning apart form what fills it by another.

For Stone, Jesus was not “equal in essence, being or eternity” with the Father. As the quote I read clearly implies, there was a time when the Son was not. Despite Stone’s denials, this is Arianism. But how would Stone know? He never read Arius’ position, as he even admits!

“I know not what the real sentiments of Arius were,” commented Stone, “having never seen his writings; nor have I seen his sentiments, but through the coloring of his enemies.”

If Stone had ever read Arius, he would have seen how closely all his arguments resembled Arius’ very own views.

Alexander Campbell found it necessary to correspond with Stone on more than a few occasions to keep in check his belief system and confirm his convictions.

1820– in Stone’s Address to the Churches, he writes:

That the Son of God was very and eternal God, and yet eternally begotten, is a doctrine to which I cannot subscribe; because the terms eternal Son–eternally begotten are not found in the Bible. As they are human inventions, by human reason they may be tried, without the imputation of impiety.

Interestingly, Stone denied not only the deity of Christ, but also the substitutionary atonement. The atonement, again, is one the foundational doctrines of the Christian faith, stating that Christ took the place of sinners to atone for their sins. Stone was very emphatic that Jesus did not take the place of sinners on the cross. In a very lengthy discussion with Alexander Campbell in the Millennial Harbinger, Stone wrote, The doctrine of vicarious, or substituted punishment, is the fundamental of orthodox divinity. Where, brother Campbell, shall we find the term substitute with application to Christ? Did he, as such, satisfy the demands of law and justice against the sinner, and reconcile or propitiate God to a sinful world? Does law or justice admit of such substituted punishment? Where is it required, or found in the Bible?

The moral influence theory of the atonement maintains that the death of Christ was not necessary as a means of removing sin. Instead, the loving sacrifice of Christ, as such a wonderful and selfless act, influences the hearts and minds of those who hear about it and moves them to repentance and trust in Christ. It was first proposed by Peter Abelard (1079-1142).

The betrayal, trial, and crucifixion of Christ is stripped of it’s atoning power and reduced to an exercise that beckons the sinner to repentance. Alexander Campbell correctly deduced the theory of Christ’s passion, as interpreted by Stone to be a belief that the, “only necessity for the death of Christ to have occurred, is its superior fitness to produce repentance.”

Considering the revival of August 1801, it must be said there is much to be commended regarding the motivation of the meeting. The Cane Ridge Revival should be commended for its ecumenicism and (evidently) preaching that led to the salvation of some, a number of those who were saved, Barton Stone says in his autobiography, “will be known only in eternity.” If the events of what happened that August of 1801 were to happen at Hillsboro Family Camp, the conduct of the attendees may be questioned as of what had been behind such “animated” behavior. Why do I say this? What was called at Cane Ridge: “religious exercises” could be interpreted as something entirely different.

People barked like dogs, fell to the ground in fits of non-stop laughter, sang songs that came from their chest, and danced and ran in such a manner that caused many to fall to the ground and cease in the ability to get up. Some people went into jerking motions, keeping both feet flat on the ground while their forehead would hit the ground in one motion and then the back of their head hitting the ground when jerking in the opposite direction. Others would cry out in loud screams and fall to the ground unconscious. Oddly, it was even said that women got pregnant. (If there is any doubt that these “exercises” occurred, one need to look no further than Stone’s autobiography in which he testifies to them.) If you read Elder John Rogers’ biography of Barton W. Stone, 1853, you will read page after page in defense of the occurrences at Cane Ridge and why so many abandoned Stone to return to Presbyterianism or another sect as even in the case of David Purvience who elected to join the Shaking Quakers for what was rumored, “to enjoy to the utmost the liberty of dancing, barking, jerking, etc.”

This was the context of the Restoration Movement, and yet the handshake of fellowship was offered for the reason of attaining unity. Even among their differences, the early frontiersman of the movement found much to celebrate and gave rise to much increase for Kingdom purposes.

Upon visiting the grave of Barton W. Stone, it is said that after pondering for a time, Mr. Alexander Campbell said: “That should read ‘A distinguished reformer.'” Mr. Rogers replied: “Before causing this inscription to be engraved, I sent a copy of it to all of the leading preachers of the Church of Christ for their criticism and suggestions, and they have returned it unaltered. What I have written I have written.” Whether or not he had the right to that distinction posterity must decide, but as far as history goes, his was the first voice that was heard in the wilderness advocating a return to the practice and teachings of the Apostles, and declaring for Bible names for Bible things. That he did not at first see the whole truth is not surprising; that sometimes he saw “men as trees walking,” is not to be wondered at, but this remains true of him: as he saw the light he followed it, let it lead where it would, and cared not for the consequences to himself or others.

“A TRIBUTE TO DEPARTED WORTH. He has gone! His wife, his children, his brethren, will see him here no more. He has gone from his labors, to his rest—from his sufferings to enjoyments forevermore in heaven. He was a good man. Goodness was his chief greatness. He was great besides his goodness ; but goodness was its crown—his glory was goodness. It was his breast-plate and strength. His bitterest opponents were constrained to say, ”-his moral character is unblamable.^” His motto was ‘-‘Christian union and the Bible, and the Bible alone.”” His Banner was the Crossly-gemmed with Bethlehem’s Star! His employment was like that of his Master, to do good to the souls and bodies of men. Kindness sat smiling on his brow. Many loved him, because he first loved them. Thus has he embalmed himself in the warm, pure affections of a great multitude ; and aided in originating, and giving impulse to a reformation wave, whose onward roll shall be commensurate and co-extensive with eternity. He was a disciple beloved of Christ; and who died, as he lived, leaning on the bosom of his Savio\ir. Speculative errors he might have held ; but let the faultless, in this respect, cast at him the next stone! And let those whose errors are, perhaps, greater than were his, be sparing of invectives and misrepresentations ; remembering, that *’with what judgment we judge, we shall be judged, and with what measure we mete, it shall be measured to us again.” Take him, all in all, his like, we fear, we shall not shortly see again. But he rests from his toils, and persecutions, and his works do follow him. Farewell! excellent spirit, till we meet in the Spirit-land ! Farewell ! philanthropist, and benefactor of thy race!!!”