All posts by jthomas

What Is Socialism?

Dr. James D. Bales Professor of Christian Doctrine, Harding College Presented to Freedom Forum, 1950, Searcy, Arkansas 72143

Socialism’s misunderstanding of human nature is revealed in their view that crime is bred by the private property system, and that it will more and more disappear as one has more and more socialism. Communists have maintained the same thing, but they not only have on their books laws against crimes just as we do, but they have many laws we do not have; and the death penalty is more widely prevalent in the Communist than in capitalist countries.

Socialism is blind to the fact that men will work harder for themselves, for their families, and for causes in which they personally believe, than they will work for the abstraction called the State. One may not like this fact, but to attempt to build an economic system on the denial of it will not make the system productive.

Walter Lippmann said: “We have renounced the wisdom of the ages to embrace the errors the ages have discarded. The road whereby mankind has advanced in knowledge, in the mastery of nature, in unity, and in personal security has lain through a progressive emancipation from the bondage of authority, monopoly, and special privilege. It has been through the release of human energy that men have lifted themselves above the primeval struggle for the bare necessities of existence; it has been by the removal of constraints that they have been able to adapt themselves to the life of great societies; it has been by the disestablishment of privilege that men have risen from the status of slaves, serfs, and subjects to that of free men inviolate in the ways of the spirit. “And how else, when we pause to ponder the matter, can the human race advance except by the emancipation of more and more individuals in ever-widening circles of activity? How can new ideas be conceived? How can new relationships, new habits, be formed? Only by increasing freedom to think, to argue, to debate, to make mistakes, to learn from those mistakes, to explore and occasionally to discover, to be adventurous and enterprising, can change be more than the routine of a recurrent pattern.”

In effect, socialism is almost unlimited trust in unlimited government. This is in contrast with our constitutional, and thus limited, government which while recognizing that government is necessary, yet does not trust it with unlimited power over the lives of the people. Socialism wants us to assume that government can be all wise, all good, all powerful, and all knowing; without at the same time being dictatorial. In fact, it cannot be all wise, all good, all powerful, and all knowing; but it is dictatorial to the extent that is socialistic.
Read more by clicking on the link below.

https://digitalcommons.acu.edu/crs_books/488/

More Teaching on Divorce

It’s refreshing to hear a renewed commitment to the sanctity of marriage. Reproduced is an article written by Daniel Jennings, M.A. “The Clear New Testament Passages On Divorce & Remarriage” (sourced below)

Everywhere we turn it seems that marriages are falling apart. There was a time when those in the church were the least likely to divorce but today, with the law allowing one spouse to divorce the other for no reason at all, both Christian and non-Christian alike have become susceptible to the heartbreak of divorce. With the increase in the American divorce rate has also come an increase in the remarriage rate. Does it matter if one remarries after a divorce? Most will tell you that it doesn’t and even encourage people who have experienced a failed marriage to seek another one in order to fill the void that came with the first break-up. With so many people choosing to remarry and so many encouraging remarriage it could not hurt at all to see what the New Testament says about this subject.

There are many passages in the New Testament which discuss divorce and remarriage and these fall into either one of two categories—Clear-cut, straight to the point passages and unclear, ambiguous passages. Strangely, when individuals are seeking to discover what the Bible teaches about remarriage after a divorce, the clear passages are usually ignored in favor of discussions upon the unclear passages in an attempt to see if they allow remarriage after divorce or not and if so under what conditions. This heavy emphasis upon the unclear passages as opposed to the clear teachings of the New Testament should lead us to ask two fundamental questions—1.) What is the purpose of the clear passages? and 2.) Is it safe to base a moral decision upon an unclear passage when you have a clear passage which tells you the heart of God on a particular issue?

We will now look at the clear New Testament passages on divorce and remarriage.

In the Gospel of Mark we read that:

And he said unto them, ‘Whoever shall put away his wife, and marry another, commits adultery against her.’ Mk 10:11

According to Jesus’ teaching in Mark, if a man divorces his wife and enters into a
marriage with another woman he commits the sin of adultery against his first wife.

And if a woman shall put away her husband, and be married to another, she commits adultery. Mk 10:12

He continues by indicating that if a woman divorces her husband and enters into a marriage with another man she also commits the sin of adultery against her first husband.

In the Gospel of Luke we read that:

Whoever puts away his wife, and marries another, commits adultery… Lk 16:18a

According to Jesus’ teachings in Luke if a man divorces his wife and marries another he commits the sin of adultery against his first wife.

…and whoever marries her that is put away from her husband commits adultery. Lk 16:18b

Jesus continues his teaching upon divorce and remarriage by reminding his listeners that if a man decides to marry a woman who has been divorced by her husband then he commits the sin of adultery by doing so.

Reading these passages we are faced with an interesting question. Jesus says that in each of these instances if a person enters into one of the above unions that he or she “commits adultery”. The question is do they “commit” adultery once (at the time when they first enter into the new marriage) or do they “commit” adultery continuously so long as they are in the new marriage? Looking at the Greek in these passages gives us the answer to this question. In each of these passages the Greek verb for “commits adultery” is in the present tense. The present tense in Greek generally indicates that something happens continuously in an on-going manner. When a Greek verb is written in the present tense it implies that it has continued from the moment that it began up until the present and is still continuing. This understanding of how the Greek present tense normally operates is well attested to by Greek scholars:

“The present tense refers to what is usually described as continuous action, sometimes called linear or ongoing action. It is action that began at some point in the undefined past and has not ended. It is “present” in the sense that it continues into the present. The picture that the present tense provides is of something occurring now. It designates action that is right now continuing as it began.” (Joseph Webb, Robert Kysar, Greek For Preachers, Chalice Press: 2002, p.46)

“The present tense is basically linear or durative, ongoing in its kind of action. The durative notion may be expressed graphically by an unbroken line (–), since the action is simply continuous.” (James Hewitt, New Testament Greek, Hendrickson Publishers: 1986, p.13)

“The Greek Present corresponds more closely in meaning to the English Present Continuous than to the Present Simple.” (John William Wenham, Henry Preston Vaughan Nunn, The Elements of New Testament Greek, Cambridge Univ. Press: 1991, p.27)

“The Present Tense Stem expresses continuous (or durative) action…” (John Thompson, Greek Grammar: Accidence and Syntax For Schools and Colleges, John Murray: 1902, .314)

“The present tense is used of present time and has a continuous type of action in view.” (J. Lyle Story, Cullen I. K. Story, Peter Allen Miller, Greek To Me, Xulon Press: 2002, p.14)

“The present expresses repetition, habit, continuance; the aorist, a single irrevocable act of surrender.” (William Webster, The Syntax And Synonyms Of The Greek Testament, Gilbert and Rivington: 1864, p.89)

“The Present marks continuity; the Aorist, a single act; the Future (very rare in the New Testament), intention or futurity; and the Perfect, a completed act.” (Samuel Gosnell Green, Handbook To The Grammar Of The Greek Testament: Together With A Complete Vocabulary, Fleming H. Revell: 1886, p.324)

“The present tense usually denotes continuous kind of action. It shows ‘action in progress’ or ‘a state of persistence.’ When used in the indicative mood, the present tense denotes action taking place or going on in the present time. (Greek Verbs (Shorter Definitions), www.ntgreek.org)♦

The implication of Jesus’ words, as attested to by the above Greek scholars, is that if two individuals enter into a marriage as described above they continuously commit adultery
every time that they have intercourse.

Looking at the Greek tense in another part of Luke’s passage above points out something else very interesting. When Luke wrote of the individual who “marries another” after putting away his first wife and of the man who “marries her” that has been put away he also uses the Greek verb for “to marry” in the present tense. In other words Luke is really
saying that:

“Whoever puts away his wife, and enters into a continuous and ongoing state of marriage with another, commits adultery continuously: and whoever enters into a continuous and ongoing state of marriage with her that is put away from her husband commits adultery continuously.”

We note above that the action of committing adultery is directly linked to the action of continuing in the new married state. In other words, so long as one continues to be married to the new partner they continue to commit adultery in an ongoing and continuous manner.

There are those who have tried to maintain that the adultery is not continuous for those who enter into the above unions but the Greek will not allow this position. The plain and simple truth is that those who have entered into unscriptural remarriages that the Bible said was adulterous are in a state of continuous and perpetual adultery.

Jesus’ words above are not the only clear passages of the New Testament upon the issue of divorce and remarriage. The Apostle Paul also discusses this issue in his first letter to the Corinthians.

In 1 Corinthians we read that:

And unto the married I command, yet not I, but the Lord, ‘Let not the wife depart from her husband (but if she does depart, let her remain unmarried, or be
reconciled to her husband)…’ 1 Co 7:10-11a

Paul here instructs the Corinthian Christians that a wife is not to leave or divorce her husband but if this does happen then she is to either remain single for the rest of her life or
be reconciled back to her husband.

…and let not the husband put away his wife. 1 Co 7:11b

Paul continues by instructing his male readers that they have been commanded by Jesus to not divorce their wives.

Further on this chapter Paul instructs that:

The wife is bound by the law as long as her husband lives; but if her husband is dead, she is at liberty to be married to whom she will; only in the Lord. 1 Co 7:39

Paul concludes his instructions to the Corinthian Christians by telling them that a wife is “bound” to her first husband until he dies and that it is only after his death that a woman is
free to get married for a second time.

So, to sum up the clear New Testament teachings on divorce and remarriage we see that:

1.) Men are commanded not to divorce their wives (1 Co 7:11b)
2.) Women are commanded not to divorce their husbands (1 Co 7:10)
3.) A man who divorces his wife and marries another becomes an adulterer (Mk 10:11, Lk 16:18a)
4.) The man who marries a woman who has been divorced becomes an adulterer (Lk 16:18b)
5.) The woman who divorces her husband and marries another man becomes an adulterer (Mk 10:12)
6.) A woman who divorces her husband is commanded to either remain single for the rest of her life or be reconciled to her husband (1 Co 7:10-11a)
7.) Only the death of the husband gives a woman the right to enter into a second marriage (1 Co 7:39)

These are the clear teachings of the New Testament upon the issue of divorce and remarriage. They are very plain and extremely direct. As I mentioned at the beginning of this article there are a few other passages that are unclear yet receive the most attention and are oftentimes given the most priority by persons who are making a decision as to whether to remarry after experiencing a divorce. It was not the purpose of this paper to discuss the unclear passages it was merely to ask two fundamental questions:

1.) What is the purpose of the clear passages? In other words, were they put there for a reason? Does God expect us to ignore His clear teachings to us regarding divorce and remarriage in favor of unclear passages? Why did God put these passages here in such a clear-cut and direct way if He intended to reverse them in other passages?

2.) Is it safe to base a moral decision upon an unclear passage when you have a clear passage which tells you the heart of God on a particular issue? In other words, is it wise to make a decision that could determine where one will spend all of eternity based upon an unclear verse when one has a clear verse telling us how God wants us to behave in a particular situation?

To simplify the above, a simple argument may be made that is convincing enough for anybody. In the Old Testament, what caused Moses to make the concession for divorce in the first place? Divorce was not allowed for adultery, nor for any reason, but it was allowed because of the condition of the people’s heart. In the beginning it was not so (no divorce). It compliments what is stated later–since in the beginning a marriage is to be made up of two who were mutually pledged for the other (virgins), then there would be no dispute. It would not be the case that a man or woman could marry another who has already been married. It is unequivocally a condition of adultery if it happens.


♦ For more on Greek verb tenses, see the following website: http://www.ntgreek.org/learn_nt_greek/verbs1.htm#INDICATIVE

This article was written byDaniel R. Jennings, M.A.

For more books & articles by Daniel R. Jennings, visit: http://www.danielrjennings.org/writings.html

The original of the above article can be viewed in PDF format at:

http://www.danielrjennings.org/TheClearNewTestamentPassagesOnDivorceAndRemarriage.pdf

IN Defense of marriage

The news of each day makes me pray more and more for our families. I’m glad we are in this together. You are a strong person and have strong beliefs. It’s an honor to have you as a friend. My prayers this morning have focused on all the freedoms that we are losing in our country. The last best hope for our society is in our families. I’m praying for a strong family. My mind took me to the “Rendezvous with Destiny” quote by Ronald Reagan. It applies to our families just as much as to our nation. “You and I have a rendezvous with destiny. We will preserve for our children this, the last best hope of man on earth, or we will sentence them to take the first step into a thousand years of darkness. If we fail, at least let our children and our children’s children say of us we justified our brief moment here. We did all that could be done.” Ronald Reagan said this in the context of our national identity. Now consider these words in the context of our families as the foundations of our rights are slowly being dismantled in our country. We must not let the foundation of family disintegrate as well. We have our marching orders. It’s time for more than a good defense. Let’s take the field, and the high places.

War of the Skies

“The Opposition of Light” A poem, by Joe Thomas

The sun is rising in the east
With expectation none the least

For prospects far too great to know
Except by God His wisdom sew

The sun will touch the sky again
The earth’s embrace cannot remain

It soon will reach the lofty height
And let the earth uncloak the night

A curious romance the earth does share
Both darkness . . . light; strange love affair

The darkness brings rest by somber respite
And patient the light, praying darkness take flight

And daily is seen this romantic reprise
Dominion is wrestled over coveted skies

And those in its witness see tumult and rage
When conflict erupts and in battle engage

The thunder, the lightning, by violence produce
What darkness would want of the light to let loose

Contented, the darkness is not with its night
It seeks to possess what is held by the light

The coveted skies in their patience do bear
The grievous afflictions of jealous despair

Yet always it happens, and proved never fails
The strife, it soon passes, and earth’s sigh exhales

Dispelling the clouds and the rain of the fears
The light beams victorious and dries up the tears

The sun then will meet in the west soon enough
Soft embrace of earth’s bosom, and daytime rebuff

Whatever the clouds, whatever the sky
If darkness should stricken, bring fear to your eye

Know this, and have hope, that the darkness will flee
It must yield to the light that a new day will be.

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More on Future Guilt

More on the complexities of the fear of your future self. In life, sometimes we feel the need to fulfill our immediate desires at the cost of our future goals. Living for the moment means that we can not reconcile ourselves to our future identity, whether it be in a home that we purchase after planning and saving, or a retirement after sacrificing our monthly spending for a future return. There are also visible indicators of abandoning future self by the great amount of credit we have accumulated on cards that satisfy us for the moment and do not secure future wealth. Our lives are lived in the blatant admission that our future years will be worse than our past and that the best and the beautiful are behind us. There is a tendency to long for yesterday where there seemed to be more security in a life where cares were lighter and responsibilities were less. We feel that a future identity with a spouse will only amplify the present pain and all thoughts are lost of any greater future existing so we seek solace from friends whose affinity, like a drug, gives us the attention and satisfaction that we feel is missing in what we have interpreted as a doomed relationship. We blame ourselves for our past decisions and see no hope in recovering from the hurt it caused. We then deny ourselves the lesson of the teachable moment and instead of gaining wisdom in overcoming the obstacles, we compete with others for sympathy. The social capital we find significant in our lives comes more from a response to struggles than the victory in achievement. More than that, we’ve made the hurt into something of a demon that we are convinced will interrupt our future progress which will only result in future hurt. It is all part of the complexities of future guilt and skewed vision of our future self. Future guilt will lead some to greater sadness as the years advance and unredeemed time is lost. Feeling remorse for what selfishly had been squandered on what ultimately was pride, the guilt is real instead of imagined as it was in the past. The fruits of life in the moment can lead one to bear the bitterness of a broken home, a broken marriage, and a broken life. Sadly, the counsel of friends who support the hope of the invested future self is not heeded, leaving the true friend with a great sense unrequited love. Love, of course, is the attitude that seeks the other’s best interest and highest good; it thinks the best and does the best for the other. The moral of the story is to seek the counsel of others who love you. Find the value of investing in the future of your church, family, home, marriage, and children. See the value in past failures as a challenge to future victory, not a future guilt that is based on a failed past. If you are in a position to live the success that others would aspire to have, live it convincingly. There can be no greater ambition and no greater satisfaction than to live in accordance with biblical principles and godliness.

Inspiration to Fathers: Old Romanian Folklore

Inspiration for FATHERS. Consider the lesson of Făt-Frumos. He is a hero of Romanian folklore, who like the prince charming of popular fairy tales, is of a knightly disposition and noble character. He possesses such essential knightly attributes as courage, purity, justness, physical and spiritual strength, cleverness, passion, and unshakable love. Făt-Frumos is also wise in the practical application of multiple disciplines, giving him an almost god-like renown as a worker of miracles. He has abilities that are eclipsed only by his total commitment to honor and the keeping of his word. In some tales, he is so precocious as to be able react emotionally by showing compassion early in life. In fact, it is believed that he wept before he is born.
Famous to the legend of Făt-Frumos is the famous crossroad he encounters early in his life. At this crossroad, he is given the option to choose between two puzzling choices. When considering which to take, he is approached by an old woman who counsels him regarding which road he should take. Her counsel is as confusing as the roads themselves. She tells young Făt-Frumos to, “Take the road to the right where you will encounter hardship. If you take the road to the left, you will encounter hardship as well.” The beauty of this story is to understand that life will have hardship no matter which road you take. Don’t expect the easy road to be the better road. Roads are lessons to test and prove the worth of our faith. Rough roads, like streams, present us with a hope of a peaceful end. What would happen if honor, integrity, honesty, fortitude, courage, resolve, and strength was personified by a father? It would mean that when caught between two choices, any path that is fill with sorrow and hardship will be traversed with success if our character remains intact. Do our lives reveal the value we place in our faith–a faith in a Kingdom greater in value than a pearl of great price? We could be our children’s SUPERHERO!

Complexity of the Psychology of Future Guilt

New thinking is developing regarding the Psychology of Your Future Self. It touches on the argument that I have made for the psychology of future guilt. There are some who display such a transciency that no prospects of a future are seen in their present plan of action. A friend who loves as if he/she is ready to pull out of life and move on in a moment’s notice, falls under what I feel is a false understanding of their future self. Expectations they feel do not apply to others, nor feel applies to themselves produce this transciency. It’s not necessarily “living for the day,” but more of a lack of vision based on such things as a past disappointment that anticipates a future disappointment. A tendency to limit our future expectations can come from failed expectations we have put on older, and once respected adults in our lives who have utterly dismantled what we perceived maturity to be, and what was ideally expected to be successful, virtuous, loving, flawless, and decent. This burden has crossed my mind that some of you may be at a point in your life when you are walking the fence when it comes to what you see in your future. You are at a crossroads in your life. You are thinking about the worthiness of continuing on as you have been and seeing a future with little hope, or a change with new aspirations with only faith to see it. It’s like, you can pull up your stakes and be gone at any time. It takes just as much faith and attention to concentrate on improving our present attitudes to improve our future lives with our current relationships. Actions and words can betray us often. We begin to focus on ourselves which causes the apprehension of separation to lessen when we interpret others as “holding us back.” “Liberation” is a rationalization for our actions. True guilt is most generally the result of succumbing to a misguided interpretation of our future self.

Friends of Feeling by Joe Thomas

Friends of Feeling-by me

Finding a love so dear as mine
Is rarer than rare in the span of all time

Unknown, strangest fortune that brought me to bliss
Coincidence or providence, was neither amiss

Unmitigated circumstance did cause this greatest feat
Undying firm devotion we do now both share, entreat

And seemed it all more vital when the friendship came to life
Both shared a common destiny, companions midst the strife

To each came pledged allegiance, understood, in silence dwelt
Codified as those preserving of their own self, dearest felt

And if perchance one friend had pain that was in fact most real
An equal hurt the pain he girt, the other friend did feel

And just as much when glee was felt and one rejoiced most high
The other friend found blessing, letting joy and rapture fly

When wind cut bold in weather cold, did not one single bite
Without a beat, so does repeat, the other, his freezing fight

So lifelong lived their days as one, though two in flesh they were
Sufficed to say, in tenderest way, sacrificed for other prefer

So lived they did, the best they hid, the bond that kept them tied
They could not run from what was done, resolved until one died

And death it came, one life to claim, and torn apart they were
The heart divided, what love confided, in loss found no succor

But soon she felt his presence dwelt again within her heart
She knew he’d gone, not far along, ahead to do his part

And still in death, as her own breath, she felt his as before
She did he feel, his joy reveal, her heart was filled once more

When precious a friend, no matter the end, even death can not steal love
Two hearts set free, pledged in love they be, are set by a seal from above

-by Joe Thomas, copyright 2017

Live No Regret-by Joe Thomas

The older I get
The more I regret
The losses I’ve squandered
While ponder beset

The time can’t return
Like a candlewick burned
And all is but ashes
Lost lessons not learned

And what have I missed?
Lost love, lips not kissed?
In my mind if I gave thought
Would comprise a great list

But to ease my heart’s ache
I’m resigned in grief’s wake
Not to let remorse hold me
Giving more time to take

I embrace the present now
To wisely use, for future vow
Time to treasure, by my pleasure
Past fields left, new rows to plow

Friendship dearest
Worthy venture, none more clearest
Held most tightly; held not lightly
Cherished greatly, drawn most nearest

One friend most certain
By grace, fairest curtain
Has blanketed me so
Calm secure, no fear hurtin’

Now brighter the time
This friendship sublime
Owing nothing but love
Reaching heights, to summit climb

The Gods of Time

“The gods of Time” by Joe Thomas

Since ancient times, there have been rhymes
‘Bout years and months and weeks

The gods, it’s said, did rest in bed,
While dawn—its coming seeks

And gods gave names, to each their day
In honor of their deeds,

The sun, the moon, and all their host
In fear, the gods, man heeds.

But man was wise, he cursed the skies
And squandered time, ‘twould seem

Each day, a day, no less, no more
Self-gratitude, his dream

“What time there is, it is my own,
I serve no other host”

“Save to my own, and glories known
It’s I and mine to boast”

With fists of rage, they did engage
And man he was assailed

Without delay, defeat gave way,
The gods of time prevailed

As seasons pass, and youth crevassed
When age has taken toll

When days are treasured, and sternly measured
As life, the time had stole

Each day like gold, reflects the old
How precious are they to him,

The gods of time, now bathed in rhyme,
Hear sonnet, lyric, and hymn.

But Friend, a day, is not a day,
With One so tried and true

One single gift, I wholly lift
The time that’s spent with You!