Friday, January 24, 2014

True Wisdom

Summary: In Book 1, Chapter 1 of the Institutes of the Christian Religion, John Calvin explains the essence of true wisdom under five ideas: two parts of true wisdom, true knowledge of self requires acceptance of the biblical teaching of creation and the fall of man, consequence of the fall, self-ignorance, and the standard to measure knowledge of ourselves. 

For John Calvin, true wisdom consists in the knowledge of God and of ourselves. Since the knowledge of God is now a days unknowable according to the belief of most people, it therefore follows that from the vantage point of Calvin, true wisdom these days is very rare for it lacks the first half of such wisdom. And the absence of such knowledge also distorts the second half. Therefore, if Calvin is right then many ideas today paraded as "true wisdom" are in actuality the display of human follies. 

Moreover, for Calvin, the knowledge of self includes a recognition of at least two facts - that we are God's creatures and the reality of our fallenness in Adam. Denial of only one of these facts would distort our knowledge of ourselves. Calvin got these two ideas directly from the Bible. Of course many today would claim to be wiser than Calvin, and that would mean that in terms of human reasoning, you cannot trace any recognition of creaturehood. What is widespread today is that man reasons on his own, as if, he is his own creator. Another feature of contemporary philosophical discussion is the absence of the acceptance of the biblicality of the fall of man. Man thinks that his reason is normal particularly in relation to spiritual matters and there is no such thing as sin that will make his reasoning sinful. 

Another interesting insight we can learn from chapter 1 is that for Calvin, man has been plunged into a world of misery due to the revolt of the first man and and at the same time, a world of misery exists in man since we ethically lost the image of God. I understand this that for Calvin a "world of misery" is both external and internal in man. This is the outcome of the fall.

Self-ignorance is the fourth idea I encountered in reading this short chapter. If ever man's path is not leading him to God, it shows that he is not aware of his shortcomings and sinfluness. He is satisfied in himself, and he can manage on his own. Such a man is ignorant of his misery. As a result of such ignorance, man renders himself inaccessible to a life of fullness in God. For unless man give up his own strivings to attain a happy life, he will never seek the aid that comes from God. Knowledge of our shortcomings and sinfluness is a prerequisite knowledge that will lead us to the knowledge of God.

The mentioned ignorance only results due to absence of realization of the perfect character of God where man is bound to conform. This is to say that the kind of awareness that Calvin emphasizes, the recognition of our own sinfulness only results from a previous encounter with God. In encountering God, we see how far we have fallen. In His word, we find his perfect righteousness that serves as the standard for us to conform our lives. Measuring ourselves on the basis of such standard, our righteousness turns into wickedness, our wisdom into foolishness, and our power into impotence. This is the common experience of holy men of God in biblical narrative. Expressions like "We shall die, for we have seen the Lord" and 'We are but dust and ashes" are common among those who encountered God. 

Sunday, January 12, 2014

The Benefits of Obedience Validate the Law

Now in Chapter 10 of Dr. Greg Bahnsen's book, By This Standard: The Authority of God's Law Today we read the second ethical argument for the continuing validity of biblical law. This time it's the consequential perspective of Christian ethics.

Summary of the Three Ethical Perspectives

Let us compare the consequential perspective to the other two ethical perspectives - the normative and the motivational. The normative concerns itself with ethical standard of right and wrong. The motivational is about intentions. And the consequential is about results of one's decision and action. From this perspective, if the result is good, the decision and action are also considered morally good. 

All these three ethical perspectives are taught in the Bible. The focus of the book is the normative. In previous chapter, we learned that in the motivational perspective, the ethics of grace and love actually validate the law. The present article summarizes the consequential perspective. 

The Biblicality of Consequential Perspective

Consequences of our actions are clearly taught in the Bible. Take for instance the apostle Paul's admonition in Galatians 6: 7 to 9. Commenting on the passage, Dr Bahnsen said: 
"Paul communicates this well in saying that we would have to be deceived to think God could be mocked. Evil living will not bring about happiness and blessing, for then the justice and holiness of our God would be a mockery....Those who live according to their rebellious nature will suffer corruption, while those who live by God's Spirit will gain eternal life....It is noteworthy here that Paul focuses on the benefits which will accrue to us if we engage in welldoing" (pp. 80-81). 
So the consequential perspective is related to the "the thought of reward for righteous living" (p.81). It concerns about benefits that God bestows "as an incentive for moral living" (ibid.). Other biblical texts that teach this include Matthew 6:33; 1 Timothy 4:8, and Malachi 3:10. Basing on Pentateuch, Dr. Bahnsen summarized:

"....Moses, had written that obedience to the Lord would result in blessings on the society's children, crops, rain, herds, cities, and fields; it would bring peace to the people from without and prosperous economy and health from within (Deut. 7:12-15; 11:13-15; 28:1-14; 30:15, 19; Lev. 26:3-12)" (pp. 81-82). 
So this ethical perspective is all about making a serious consideration of the outcome or the end of our decisions and actions. This tells us that "Doing the right thing or having a proper attitude will result in benefits" (p. 82). 

Thinking of Benefits

Now, is thinking of the benefits for our actions selfish? Is it self-serving? In this discussion about the consequential perspective, Dr. Bahnsen explained the nature of this benefit. He believes that thinking about personal benefits, the benefits of others, and the benefits of the society as a whole have their own proper place, but subordinate to the kingdom of God as the top priority. He cites passages like Matthew 22:39, 2 Corinthians 8:9, Ephesians 5:28-29, and Philippians 1:24 to prove his point. However, he is careful to distinguish personal concern, which he describes as "egoism" from "egotism" (ibid.). For him, both egoism and altruism have their own appropriate places "in Christian ethics, as does a concern for the wider collection of people in one's society" (ibid.). Moreover, as already mentioned, "all of these interests are subordinate to the one supreme goal for all of our actions: the kingdom of God" (ibid.). He thinks that within the kingdom of God, "the varying interests of one's self, the other, and the many are all harmonized" (ibid.). As for me, I consider these two sentences as a conclusion of this point:
"The kingdom of Christ is to have top priority when we contemplate the consequences of our actions, for Christ has pre-eminence over all (Col. 1:18). It will be for our good, our neighbor's good, and our society's good if all of our actions and attitudes are governed by an interest in the kingdom of Jesus Christ" (pp. 82-83). 
The Way to Pursue God's Kingdom

After understanding the proper place of benefits, how about the procedure to pursue to them? In discussing this procedure, Dr. Bahnsen reintroduced his main thesis - the continuing validity of divine law. The way to pursue the kingdom of God is through obedience, and it only makes sense in connection to the law of God. Dr. Bahnsen explains: 
"Biblical law is a pathway to divine benefits - not an ugly, dour, painful course for believers. It is not only a demand, it is something to desire! As John said, "His commandments are not burdensome" (1 John 5:3). They are the delight of the righteous man who receives God's blessing (Ps. 1). If we wish to have a morality which promises blessed consequences, then our morality must be patterned after the law of God" (p. 83).
The Benefits of Obedience (ibid.) 

And the list of benefits of obedience to divine law that Dr. Bahnsen gave is very encouraging: 
  • Life and well-being (Deut. 30:15-16)
  • Blessing and a strong heart that does not fear (Ps. 119:1-2; 112:5-7)
  • Peace and security (Ps. 119:28, 165, 175; Prov. 13:6; Luke 6:46-48)
  • Enjoying the Lord's loving-kindness (Ps. 103:17-18),
  • Walking in liberty (Ps. 119:45; Jas. 2:25)
  • Prosperity with respect to all of our daily needs and interests (cf. Joshua 1:7)
  • Blessing upon a society (Prov. 14:34), giving it health, food, financial well-being, peace, and joyous children. 
Conclusion

The consequential perspective cannot be separated from the normative. They work together. Dr. Bahnsen concludes: 
"We see again why the validity or authority of God's law cannot be dismissed today. Without that law we would be lost when it comes to pursuing the beneficial consequences for ourselves, others, and our society in all of our moral actions and attitudes. As God clearly says, He has revealed His law to us for our good (Deut. 10:13). Opponents of God's law, therefore, cannot have our good genuinely in mind; they wittingly and unwittingly mislead us into personal and social frustration, distress, and judgment (Prov. 14:12)" (p. 84).

Source: Bahnsen, G. L. (1985). By This Standard: The Authority of God's Law Today. Tyler, Texas: Institute for Christian Economics. 

Friday, January 10, 2014

Grace and Love Validate the Law

Biblical Passages to Read: Romans 7:9; 2 Corinthians 3:6-7; Titus 3:5-7; Galatians 3:11; Ephesians 2:8; Romans 3:28; 5:19; 2 Corinthians 5:21; 2 Corinthians 1:12; 1 Timothy 6:12.

In chapters 6 to 8 of Dr. Greg Bahnsen's book, "By This Standard: The Authority of God's Law Today," we learned the trinitarian arguments about the continuing validity of God's law. In this chapter and the next, chapters 9 and 10, we will explore two additional arguments; this time from the other two ethical perspectives. Since the book focuses on the normative ("deontological") aspect of Christian ethics, the remaining two ethical arguments are the motivational (also called "existential") and consequential (technically known as "teleological"). In the summary of the present chapter, we will just confine ourselves with motivational ethics. 

The motivational perspective of Christian ethics is related to the influence of grace and love to our obedience to the law. Understanding this is so important especially these days where the mindset that the ethics of grace and love have canceled out the law of God is prevalent. This kind of thinking says Dr. Bahnsen is "unbiblical" and "antinomian" (p. 72).

The Ethic of Grace Validates the Law of God

Dr. Bahnsen repeatedly emphasized that it is a misconception to associate the argument of the continuing validity of divine law with salvation by means of our obedience to it. He has already established that no one can completely meet the law's demands for it is an expression of God's perfect character. And so salvation is based purely on God's act of grace and is received by faith. 

The law of God showed us that we are sinners and in need of a Savior. It shows the kind of life God requires from us, and that is perfect obedience. No man can fulfill such requirement except Jesus. And so only Jesus is qualified to save us from the power of sin. 

The Bible consistently teaches that those who experience the grace of God would now have the will, the desire and the power to keep the law of God. Grace is the backround for Christian obedience. And not only that, the operation of both grace and law cannot be separated in the new life. At this point, let me just enumerate the insights made by Dr. Bahnsen concerning the relationship between law and grace (pp. 73-76):

  • God's grace operates within the parameters of His law-in justifying His people, God does not violate His own justice (Rom. 3:26). 
  • God's law is gracious (Ps. 119:29). 
  • Both grace and law support each other: the law promotes the fulfillment of God's promise (Rom. 5:20-21), and God's grace works to fulfill the law (Rom. 8:3-4). 
  • When Paul says that we are saved by grace through faith, he immediately adds that as God's, workmanship we are expected to walk in good works ( Eph. 2:10). 
  • Although it is popular today to look upon the law as an intolerable burden for modern man, the beloved apostle wrote that for the believer God's law is not burdensome (1 John 5:3).
  • When the Psalmist reflected upon the loving kindness of the Lord, he longed to be taught His statutes and rose at midnight to render thanks for His righteous ordinances (Ps. 119:62-64).
  • Moses viewed the giving of God's law as a· sure sign of his love for the people (Deut. 33:2-4).
  • All of God's people, throughout both testaments, have a heart which longs to obey the commandments of the Lord, for the law is established against the background of God's mercy toward His people (for example, Ex. 20:2). 
  • The first-hand experience of God's redemption is a strong motive for keeping the law (Deut. 7:10-11). 
  • The grace of God, that is, brings men to exclaim: "I long for Thy salvation, 0 Lord, and Thy law is my delight" (Ps. 119:174). 
  • Paul wrote, "I delight in the law of God after the inward man" (Rom. 7:22). God's law, you see, had been graciously written upon his heart (Heb. 10:16). 
  • In Romans 6, Paul discusses the implications of being under God's grace. He begins by asking whether we should continue in sin (law-breaking) so that grace might abound; his answer is a dramatic "God forbid!" (vv. 1-2). Those who have had their old man crucified with Christ, those who are united with Christ in his death and resurrection, those who have risen with Him must walk in newness of life, no longer in bondage to sinful living (vv. 3-11). So Paul exhorts us, "let not sin reign in your mortal body so that you should obey its lusts; neither present your members unto sin as instruments of unrighteousness." Those who are saved by grace from the power of sin should be finished with violating God's law. Instead they must, having been made alive from the dead, present their members as instrumeI)ts of righteousness (vv. 12-13). Why is this? How can it be that we are obliged to obey the righteous requirements of God's law if we are saved by grace? Paul answers: "Because sin shall not have dominion over you: you are not under law, but under grace" (v. 14). Ironically, although many groups have used this declaration out of context to support release from the law's demand, the verse is one of the strongest biblical proofs that believers must strive to obey the law of God! Because we are no longer under the curse of the law and shut in to its inherent impotence in enabling obedience - because we are under God's enabling grace, not under law - we must not allow violations of the law (i.e., sin: 1John 3:4) to dominate our lives. It is in order that the righteous ordinance of the law may be fulfilled in us that God has graciously put His Spirit within our hearts (Rom. 8:4). "So then, shall we sin because we are not under law but under grace? God forbid!" (Rom. 6:15). 
  • "The grace of God has appeared unto all men, bringing salvation, instructing us to deny ungodliness and worldly desires and to live sensibly, righteously and godly in the present age," for Christ has "redeemed us from every lawless deed" (Titus 2:11-14). 
  • God's grace upholds His law. It is to be expected, therefore, that Paul would ask the following question and supply the obvious answer: "Do we then nullify the law through faith? May it never be! On the contrary we establish the law" (Rom. 3:31). 
  • Faith which does not bring obedient works-that is, faith which is divorced from God's law - is in fact insincere and dead James 2:14-26). This kind of faith cannot justify a man at all. 
  • The Westminster Confession of Faith (1646) is true to Scripture when it teaches that "good works, done in obedience to God's commandments, are the" fruits and evidences of a true and lively faith" (XVI:2). By saving faith, the Confession says, a man will yield obedience to the commands of Scripture (XIV:2). Genuine saving faith always is accompanied by heart-felt repentance from sin and turning unto God, "purposing and endeavoring to walk with Him in all the ways of His commandments" (XV:2). 
Conclusion: "We conclude, then, that the Christian's life of grace and faith is not one which is indifferent or antagonistic to the law of God. God's grace and saving faith establish the validity of the law" (p. 76). 

The Ethic of Love Also Validates the Law of God

Similar truth is applicable to the ethic of love. Instead of invalidating the law of God, love in fact endorses it. Let us see what Dr. Bahnsen has to say about this (pp. 76-77): 

  • Because God has shown His love toward us, we are now to live in love to Him and our neighbor (Eph. 5:1-2; 1John.4:7-12, 16-21). On these two love commandments - toward God and toward our neighbor (as taught in the Old Testament [Deut. 6:5, Lev. 19:18])-hang all the law and the prophets, said Jesus (Matt. 22:37-40). Indeed, "love is the fulfillment of the law" (Rom. 13:10). But in the thinking of Jesus and the apostles, does this mean that Christians can dispense with the law of God or repudiate its details? Not at all. Moses had taught that loving God meant keeping His commandments (Deut. 30:16), and as usual Jesus did not depart from Moses: "If you love me, you will keep my commandments" (John 14:15). 
  • The love which summarizes and epitomizes Christian ethics is not a vague generality or feeling that tolerates, for instance, everything from adultery to chastity. John wrote: "Hereby we know that we love the children of God, when we love God and do His commandments. For this is the love of God, that we keep His commandments" (1 John 5:2-3). 
  • Love summarizes the law of God, but it does not abrogate or replace it. As John Murray once wrote, "the summary does not obliterate or abrogate the expansion of which it is a summary."
  • God's commandments give the specific character and direction to love as exercised by the believer. Rather than being a law unto itself (autonomous), love is a reflection of the character of God (1 John 4:8) and must therefore coincide with the dictates of God's law, for they are the transcript of God's moral perfection on a creaturely level. 
Conclusion: "God has loved us in that He saved us by grace through faith. Accordingly the Christian life ought to reflect the principles of grace, faith, and love; without them it is vain and insignificant. However, far from eliminating the law of God, a gracious ethic of faith and love establishes the permanent validity of-and our need for-the Lord's commandments" (p. 77). 

Source: Bahnsen, G. L. (1985). By This Standard: The Authority of God's Law Today. Tyler, Texas: Institute for Christian Economics.

Christianity's Response

In Part 1 of "Christianity and the Class Struggle," I understand that Abraham Kuyper proposed a "form" of Christian social consciousness using the antithesis between nature and human will. However, he stated that human failed in its task to bring peace and happiness due to error and sin. In the 2nd part of his book, Dr. Kuyper explained how Christianity addressed the social problem caused by error and sin. In this article, I just want to share my overview and reflection on Kuyper's paper about the disintegration of the Roman Empire, the nature of Jesus' response to social problems, the meaning of usury, the assessment of Jesus' contribution, the role of the church, and the failure of the church. 

The Disintegration of the Roman Empire

Dr. Kuyper opened the 2nd part of his book by recalling the downfall of the Roman Empire. He saw similar symptoms that caused the collapse of the Empire, which were also evident in his generation. He described those symptoms as follows: 
"....the balance between the classes was lost: there was defiant luxury next to crying need; immense accumulations of capital and beggarly poverty concealed in the slums of Rome; and, necessarily following, there was corruption in government ; sensuality rather than morality setting the tone of public opinion; and the masses, carried away by need and passion, ready at any time for rebellion, murder and plunder" (p. 25). 
The Kind of Hope that Jesus Offered

While such imperial disintegration was occuring, the hope for humanity dawned in Bethlehem through the person of the Son of God who took a human form. Dr. Kuyper explained the nature of this hope so as to distinguish it from the misapprehension of the socialists and the revolutionaries. Jesus was neither a "social reformer" nor a preacher of revolution. "Savior of the world was his higher and much richer title" (p. 26). 

The hope that Jesus offered to humanity was important both for the future and the present life, though the primary emphasis was always on the importance of eternal life (p.26). In relation to combating error and sin, Jesus opposed them by truth and by giving up His life. Dr. Kuyper explained this kind of social response: 
"And if you ask then what Jesus did to bring rescue in the social need of those days, here is the answer. Since he knew that such defiant abuses arose from the evil roots of error and sin, he placed the truth over against this error, and He broke the power of sin by shedding His blood for this sin and pouring out His Holy Spirit unto His own" (p. 26).
Dr. Kuyper further explained the social response of our Savior in terms of "moral motivation" and his "personal life." Jesus had a word for both the rich and the poor. He did not hate the wealthy. What he hated was the corrupt means in obtaining wealth. 

"In Jesus' heart there dwelt no hatred against the rich, but rather a deep sympathy for their pitiable state....Only when possession of money leads to usury and harshness is Jesus angry..." (p 27). 
What is Usury?

I just want to expand this idea about corrupt means to attain wealth. Kuyper specifically mentioned "usury," and He asserts that Jesus is angry with such financial practice. Usury is commonly defined as charging excessive interest to a loaned money. Granted that Kuyper's assertion is correct, then Jesus would be very angry with the existing monetary system since it is far worst than usury. I think it is Edward Griffin who coined a new definition of usury. To him, the existing fiat money is actually made out of thin air, and then it is loaned as debt to earn interest. If charging an excessive interest to an actual and existing loaned money is usury, how will you describe the interest asked from a money made out of nothing?

Following the information Abraham Kuyper shared in the first part of his book about the influence of the intellectuals and the wealthy using the government "to build systems which licensed injustice" (p. 20), I cannot avoid to think that the existing monetary system is one of those systems. I first heard this idea of "licensed injustice" from Frederic Bastiat, a classical liberal political economist, but he used a different term, "legal plunder" and applied it in not to the financial but to the legal system. These systems that Kuyper, Griffin, and Bastiat described during their time are still prevailing up to our time. And we wonder now why the global economy is like this?

Now if Jesus is angry with such a usurious and "licensed injustice," how come the contemporary church is not? Does it mean that the church lost its connection from her head? Or does it mean that the church believes that a neutral ground exists in this matter? What should take place before the church will realize that the myth of neutrality never exists?

An Assessment of Jesus' Contribution

Dr. Kuyper mentioned other details that require longer attention. I agree with most of his statements except for at least three that I think need further clarification. Subjects, which I have reservation are related to capital accumulation, the understanding that Jesus is on the side of the poor, and about the financial life of the apostles. What does Kuyper mean by "to cease his accumulating of capital...?" Are all kinds of capital accumulation prohibited by Jesus? Is Kuyper biblically correct? How about economically? If all types of capital accumulation is wrong, how can we reconcile this with biblical material teaching about wealth as outcome of God's blessing? Surely capital accumulation is a legitimate way to attain such wealth. Weren't there specific historical factors that we need to take into consideration? How about the status of those poor? Doesn't the Bible qualify those who are "poor in spirit"? Were the poor during Jesus' time the same with modern day poor? How about the financial situation of the apostles? Are they temporal or permanent? Are they normative or descriptive? Do modern day ministers have to follow their financial lifestyle?

Dr. Kuyper mentioned another feature of Jesus' response that though brief, is worthy of attention. This is related to his explanation of fighting error and sin with truth and the life of the Lord. As already mentioned, the nature of Jesus' response was classified as a kind of "moral motivation" both through his teaching and his personal life. Connected to this are his qualities of "devotedness, self-denial," and "divine pity" (p. 29). As a whole, this is Dr. Kuyper's assessment of Jesus contribution:

"Such a presence, such a preaching, such a death, would already have exercised an influence for good in social relations. The overthrow of the idol of Mammon and the transplanting of the purpose of existence from earth to heaven must even by itself bring about a complete revolution in the self-consciousness of the peoples" (pp. 29-30). 
The Role of the Church

The response of the Lord Jesus Christ to the social problems was not confined in his teaching and personal life. It is also done through the ministry of the church. Dr. Kuyper identified at least three: ministry of the Word, organized ministry of charity, and instituting the equality of brotherhood. He explains: 
"But Jesus did not stop with this. Jesus also organized. Did He not cause His church to go out among the nations; a church which was destined to triply influence the life of society? First, through the ministry of the Word, insofar as the Word constantly fought against greed for money, comforted the poor and oppressed, and in exchange for the suffering of the present time pointed to an endless glory. Then, second, through an organized ministry of charity, which in the name of the Lord, as being the single owner of all goods, demanded community of goods to this extent, that in the circle of belivers no man or woman was to be permitted to suffer want or to be without the necessary apparel. And, third, by instituting the equality of brotherhood over against difference in rank and station, through abolishing all artificial demarcations between men, and by joining rich and poor in one holy food at the Lord's Supper, in symbol of the unity which bound them together not only as "children of men," but, more importantly, as those who have collapsed under the same guilt and have been saved by the same sacrifice in Christ" (p.30).
As a result of the presence and ministry of the church, society experienced great trasnformation compared to its previous condition. For Dr. Kuyper, this is an established fact: 
"And indeed it is a fact that, as a direct consequence of the appearance of the Christ and of the extension of His church among the nations, society becomes markedly different from what it was in the pagan dispensation. The Roman society of that time was strikingly like what Jesus once called a "whited sepulchre which on the outside is beautiful, but inside full of dead bones," and that whited sepulchre crashed into ruins. And without wishing to say that the new social order which arose as though spontaneously from these ruins corresponded in any sense at all to the ideal cherished by Jesus, we may nevertheless gratefully acknowledge that more tolerable social conditions were born. Earthly welfare no longer weighed heaviest in public estimation; eternal well-being also had weight. Slavery was broken at its root, and underwent a moral criticism which demolished it as an institution. Men began to be concerned about the care of the poor and of orphans. The accumulation of too much capital was checked by the opposition to usury. Higher and lower classes approached each other on a footing of freer association. And while the contrast of surplus and scarcity was not erased, the antithesis between overweening luxury and pinching poverty was not so sharp" (pp.30-31). 
The Failure of the Church

Unfortunately, the church lost her way since the time that she gained influence and affluence through the conversion of Constantine the Great. Dr. Kuyper reminisced such lost opportunity:
"Man had not yet arrived at an ideal state, but at least he was started on a better path; and had not the Church gone astray from her simplicity and her heavenly ideal, the influence of the Christian religion on the state and on social relationships soon would have become dominant" (p.31).
Dr. Kuyper narrated further how the witness of the church started to deteriorate: 
"But, first of all, the Christianization of Europe went too quickly, and the folk-groups which had to be assimilated were altogether too massive. And the conversion of Constantine was for the Church the signal to wed itself with the power of the world, thereby cutting the nerve of her strength, and from then on there was in consequence an infiltration again of the world into the church. Instead of disciples who went out without purse or food, richly endowed princes of the church, housed in magnificent palaces ; and as the heirs of the Galilean fisherman at the head of the Church, a series of popes displayed a royal pomp, and in a Julius II or a Leo X seemed more bent on paganizing Christianity than on Christianizing the life of the world. So the salt lost its savour; and social corruption regained its ancient strength; a corruption which was checked, but not conquered, in the lands of the Reformation ; and in that portion of Europe remaining Catholic, speedily spread in such fashion that finally royal absolutism and aristocratic pride evoked the unbearable social tension which issued in the French Revolution, revolution, therefore, which broke out on Catholic territory"(pp. 31- 32).
Dr. Kuyper discussed in the next part of his book the lessons we can learn from French Revolution. 

Source: Kuyper, A. (1950). Christianity and Class Struggle. Grand Rapids, Michigan: Piet Hein Publishers.

Thursday, January 9, 2014

The Spirit's Power for Living

My initial impression in reading the 8th chapter of "By This Standard: The Authority of God's Law Today" is as if I am taking a pneumatology class. The only difference is the wealth of biblical references and is particularly focused on Christian behavior. 

Chapter 8 is the third and last part of Dr. Greg Bahnsen's trinitarian approach in proving the continuing validity of God's law. In this chapter he provided the summary of the previous two chapters. After providing the summary, Dr. Bahnsen shifts to the role of the Holy Spirit by explaining the common work of the Triune God, the meaning of life by the Spirit, sanctification, the law of God, the prevailing attitude towards the law of God, and the real answer to legalism. 

Summary of the Last Two Chapters
"We have seen previously that God's holy character, of which the law is the transcript, is unchanging and beyond challenge; accordingly God's holy law cannot be altered today or brought. into criticism by men's traditions. We have also observed that Christ's perfect obedience, which is the model for the Christian's behavior, was rendered to every detail and facet of God's commandments; accordingly, every believer who makes it his aim to imitate the Savior must be submissive to the law of God as honored by Christ. The character of God the Father and the life of God the Son both point to the law of God as morally binding for Christians today" (p. 62).
The Trinity Work as One (pp. 62-63)
  • The work of God the Spirit cannot be viewed as in any way detracting from our obedience to God's law; otherwise the unity of the Triune Godhead would be dissolved and we would have three gods (with separate wills and intentions, diverse attitudes and standards) rather than one. 
  • The truth is, as presented by Scripture, that the Holy Spirit is the Spirit "of God" (1 Cor. 2: 12) and is given by the Father (John 14:16; 15:26; Acts 2:33). 
  • He is likewise designated the Spirit "of the son" (Gal. 4:6; cf. Phil. 1:19; Rom. 8:9) and is sent by Christ (John 15:26; 16:7; 20:22; Acts 2:33). 
  • The Holy Spirit does not work contrary to the plans and purposes of the Father and Son but rather completes them or brings them to realization. The harmony of His workings with the Father and Son is illustrated in John 16:15, where we read that everything possessed by the Father is shared with the Son, and in turn whatever is possessed by the Son is disclosed by the Spirit. 
  • The Father, Son, and Holy Spirit work as one. They are not in tension with each other. Consequently, we should not expect that the work of the Holy Spirit in our lives would run counter to the character of the Father and the example of the Son. We should not expect that this Spirit, who inspired the writing of God's holy law, would work contrary to that law by undermining its validity, replacing its function, or leading us away from obedience to it. 
Life By The Spirit (pp. 63-64)

Dr Bahnsen summarized Biblical ethics as living a "Spirit-filled," or "Spirit-led" life or simply "living by the Spirit." And then he enumerated the qualities of this kind of life:
  • The Holy Spirit gives new life to us (John 3:3-8), renews us (Titus 3:5-6), and enables us to make profession of faith in Christ (1 Cor. 12:3); pp. 63-64
  • Without the work of the Spirit, a person cannot be a Christian at all (Rom. 8:9; Gal. 3:2). 
  • The Holy Spirit illumines the believer (Eph. 1:17), leads him (Rom. 8:14), and writes God's word upon his heart (2 Cor. 3:3); 
  • By the Spirit we can understand the things freely given to us by God (1 Cor. 2:12-16). 
  • The Spirit seals the believer (Eph. 1:13; 4:30), indwells him with inner refreshment as an ever-flowing river of living water Uohn 14:17; Rom. 8:9; 1 Cor. 3:16; John 7:38-39), and constitutes the down payment from God on our eternal inheritance (Eph. 1:14). 
  • The "Spiritual" man - the believer as subject to such influences of God's Spirit - will show the dramatic effects or results of the Spirit's ministry in his life. By the Spirit he will put to death the sinful deeds of his body (Rom. 8:13), for the Spirit produces holiness in the lives of God's people (2 Thess. 2:13; 1 Peter 1:2). 
  • Being filled with the Spirit (Eph. 5:18), the believer's life will manifest worship, joyful praise, thanksgiving, and submission to others (vv. 19-21). 
  • Christians are to walk by the Spirit (Gal. 5:16), thereby evidencing the harvest of love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control (vv. 22-24). 
Sanctification (pp. 64-65)

The other biblical term to describe the Christian life is sanctification. 
  • The believer in Christ is not only saved from his moral guilt before God, but he is also saved from the moral pollution in which he formerly lived. Christianity is not merely a matter of believing certain things and anticipating eternal comfort; it does not start and end with forgiveness for our sins because we have come to Christ as Savior. Christianity likewise requires living continually under the Lordship of Christ, eliminating indwelling sin, and walking righteously before God. 
  • The Christian is one who has been freed not only from the curse of sin but from the bondage of sin as well. Christian experience extends beyond the moment of belief and pardon into the daily exercise of pursuing sanctification without which no one will see God (Heb. 12:14). 
  • It entails life in the Holy Spirit, which can only mean progressive holiness in one's behavior. We are saved by grace through faith (Eph. 2:8-9)-unto a life of obedience: "we are His workmanship created in Christ Jesus unto good works" (v. 10). 
  • If living by the Spirit indicates that salvation must bring sanctification, then it means that salvation produces a life of glad obedience to God's law.
Leading of the Holy Spirit and the Law of God (pp. 64-66)
  • Salvation frees one from sin's bondage so that he can walk lawfully (James 1:25; Gal. 5:13-14), which is to say lovingly (cf. 1 John 5:1-3), for the leading evidence of the Spirit's work in one's life is love (Gal. 5:22). 
  • Those who have been saved by faith must be diligent to exercise the good works of love (Titus 3:5-8; James 2:26; Gal. 5:6), and the standard of good behavior and loving conduct is found in God's revealed law (Ps. 119:68; Rom. 7:12,16; 1 Tim. 1:8; John 14:15; 2 John 6). p. 65
  • The Holy Spirit works in the believer to bring about conformity to the inspired law of God as the pattern of holiness. The "requirement of the law" is "fulfilled in us who do not walk according to the flesh, but according to the Spirit" (Rom. 8:4). 
  • When God puts His Spirit within a person it causes that person to walk in the Lord's statutes and keep His ordinances (Ezk. 11:19-20). 
  • Therefore, since salvation requires sanctification, and since sanctification calls for obedience to the commandments of God, the New Testament teaches us that Christ "became the author of eternal salvation unto all those who obey Him" (Heb. 5:9). This does not contradict salvation by grace; it is its inevitable outworking.
Undermining God's Law (pp. 66-67)
  • Sadly, the church today often tones down the demands of God's law out of a misconceived desire to exalt God's grace and avoid any legalism wherein salvation is grounded in one's own law-works. 
  • Rather than finding the proper place for God's law within the plan of salvation and pursuing its function within the kingdom of Christ, the church frequently promotes an "easy believism" which does not proclaim the need for heart-felt repentance, clearly manifest the sinner's utter guilt and need of the Savior, or follow up conversion with exhortation and discipline in righteous living. 
  • Without the law of God which displays the unchanging will of God for man's attitudes and actions in all areas of life, there is a corresponding de-emphasis on concrete sin for which men must repent, genuine guilt which drives men to Christ, and specific guidelines for righteous behavior in the believer. 
  • Taking Paul out of context, some churches and teachers would make their message "we are not under law but grace." They would present evangelism and Christian nurture as though mutually exclusive of concern for God's righteous standards as found in his commandments. They would focus on the extraordinary work of the Spirit in a supposed second blessing and the charismatic gifts. 
  • As a result, the whole of the Biblical message and Christian life would be cast into a distorted, truncated, or modified form in the interests of a religion of pure grace. 
  • However, God's word warns us against turning" the grace of God into an occasion or cause of licentious living (Jude 4); it insists that faith does not nullify God's law (Romans 3:31). One has to be deceived, Paul says, to think that the unrighteous could possibly inherit the kingdom of God (1 Cor. 6:9-10). Those who demote even the slightest requirement of God's law will themselves be demoted in the Lord's kingdom (Matt. 5:19).
The Answer to Legalism (pp. 67-69)
  • The answer to legalism is not easy believism, evangelism without the need for repentance, the pursuit of a mystical second blessing in the Spirit, or a Christian life devoid of righteous instruction and guidance. 
  • Legalism is countered by the Biblical understanding of true "life in the Spirit." In such living, God's Spirit is the gracious author of new life, who convicts us of our sin and misery over against the violated law of God, who unites us to Christ in salvation that we might share His holy life, who enables us to understand the guidance given by God's word, and who makes us to grow by God's grace into people who better obey the Lord's commands. 
  • The precise reason that Paul asserts that we are under grace and therefore not under the condemnation or curse of the law is to explain how it is that sin does not have dominion over us-to explain, that is, why we have become slaves to obedience and now have lives characterized by conformity to God's law (Rom. 6:13-18). 
  • It is God's grace that makes us Spiritual men who honor the commandments of our Lord.
  • The answer to legalism is not to portray the law of God as contrary to His promise (Gal. 3:21) but to realize that, just as the Christian life began by the Spirit, this life must be nurtured and perfected in the power of the Spirit as well (Gal. 3:3). 
  • The dynamic for righteous living is found, not in the believer's own strength, but in the enabling might of the Spirit of God. We are naturally the slaves of sin who live under its power (Rom. 6:16-20; 7:23); indeed, Paul declares that we are dead in sin (Eph. 2:1). However, if we are united to Christ in virtue of His death and resurrection we have become dead to sin (Rom. 6:3-4) and thus no longer live in it (v. 2). Just as Christ was raised to newness of life by the Spirit (1 Tim. 3:16; 1 Pet. 3:18; Rom. 1:4; 6:4,9), so also we who have His resurrected power indwelling us by the life-giving Spirit (Eph. 1:19-20; Phil. 3:10; Rom. 8:11) have the power to live new lives which are freed from sin (Rom. 6:4-11). The result of the Spirit freeing us from sin is sanctification (v. 22). 
  • The gracious power of the new and righteous life of the Christian is the resurrection power of the Holy Spirit. Here is the antidote to legalism. We must observe in this regard that the Holy Spirit does not replace the law of God in the Christian's life, nor does He oppose the law of God in our behavior. The gracious Spirit who empowers our sanctification does not speak for Himself, giving a new pattern for Christian behavior (John 16:13). Rather He witnesses to the word of the Son (John 14:23-26; 15:26; 16:14). The Spirit is not an independent source of direction or guidance in the Christian life, for His ministry is carried out in conjunction with the already given word of God (cf. 1 Cor. 2:12-16).
  • In terms of our sanctification this means that the Spirit enables us to understand and obey the objective standard of God's revealed law. It does not mean that Christians who are indwelt by the Spirit become a law unto themselves, spinning out from within themselves the standards by which they live. What the Spirit does is to supply what was lacking in the law itself- the power to enforce compliance. "What the law could not do, weak as it was through the flesh God did: sending His own Son in the likeness of sinful flesh and as an offering for sin, He condemned sin in the flesh in order that the requirement of the law might be fulfilled in us, who do not walk according to the flesh, but according to the Spirit" (Rom. 8:3-4).
Conclusion
"God's law is still the blueprint for sanctified behavior. This is completely unaffected by the Spirit's ethical ministry in the believer. The Holy Spirit does not oppose that law in the slightest degree but, instead, empowers obedience to it. "I will put My Spirit within you and cause you to walk in My statutes, and you will be careful to observe My ordinances" (Ezk. 36:27). Whereas the letter of the law brought death to man because he was unable of himself to comply with it, the Spirit of God enlivens men so that they can conform to God's standards (2 Cor. 3:6). Therefore the sure test of whether someone has the Spirit abiding in him or not is found in asking if he keeps the commandments of God (1 John 3:24). A Biblical view of the work of the Holy Spirit reinforces the validity of God's law for the Christian, showing how the law (as pattern) and the Spirit (as power) are both indispensable to sanctification" (p. 70). 

Source: Bahnsen, G. L. (1985). By This Standard: The Authority of God's Law Today. Tyler, Texas: Institute for Christian Economics.

A Reformed Christian Social Consciousness

Abraham Kuyper's "Christianity and the Class Struggle" was published by Piet Hein Publishers in 1950. Though 64 years away from us, I find the message of the first chapter relevant to contemporary social issues. In it, he dealt issues like economic inequity, socialism and state interventionism (of course he did not use this last term but the essence is there). In this article, I just want to share the growing recognition during Kuyper's time for the lack of social consciousness among Christians, Kuyper's lament for delayed response, and his suggested form of Christian social consciousness. 

Absence of Social Consciousness

John Gritter honestly accepted that many Christians including the Reformed community "seem to realize absolutely nothing of the implications of their religion in the social realm" (p. 7). This is despite of their zeal for Christian Education and Christian Mercy. He believed that "the application of Christian principles to the social problems is sorely needed!" (ibid.). He was not alone in that conviction. Many intelligent young people who were "impressed with the beauty and the urgency" of Calvinism confirmed that the absence of such application was indeed a serious situation (ibid.). And so for John Gritter, the appearance of Abraham Kuyper's book was timely. 

"In the political sphere we are doing almost nothing; in the matter of social justice we are not doing much better. We have a principles also in the social sphere, will have to start again from the bottom up. We are as yet pretty much at sea as to just how we are to proceed. We are baffled by many practical questions to which we have no answer. In seeking such answers Kuyper can help us. The thoughts expressed in this book were first set forth almost sixty years ago, but they are today as fundamental as they were at that time. Many of the practical questions which Kuyper faced are with us now" (pp. 8-9). 
It was Gritter's prayer that this little book would find its way to receptive readers and would somehow result into a movement for social change. 

"May it be widely read and earnestly studied. May the assimilation of it produce an urgent consciousness of our calling, our God-given duty, to apply the truth of God also in the social sphere. May it blossom forth in a strong movement to fling out the banner of our Lord also in that domain of life" (p. 9).
Kuyper's Lament for Late Response

In the opening pages of the first part of the book, Kuyper described the gathering of Christian leaders in the Netherlands to discuss the economic issues of that time. Kuyper acknowledged that none of the delegate was an expert in economics. However, despite of their limitation, their goal was to seriously tackle what they should do about the social ills of their time. His regret was that compared to Christian leaders in other parts of Europe, their response in Netherlands was delayed. 

Christian leaders outside Netherlands held their own meetings in search for solution to the social challenge. Instances of these were the meetings of Christian Workers Party in Berlin, Christian Socialists in London under certain Rev. Headlam, Christian Society for Social Economy in Geneva and the Catholic initiative under the influence of Le Play and Von Ketteler. They held series of congresses in Germany, France and Belgium. Also Pope Leo XIII issued an encyclical about this issue. 

And then Kuyper recalled the past. He reminded the delegates that delayed response was not a usual feature of Dutch Christianity. Under the intellectual contribution of Bilderdijk, Da Costa and Groen van Prinsterer, they had always been ahead when there was a social problem. Bilderdijk, an advocate of traditional liberalism, exposed the false theory of charity as early as 1825. Kuyper quoted him saying, "'Whenever a people is destined to perish in sin. It's in the church that the soul-leprosy begins'" (p. 15). Da Costa, in his Song of 1840, denounced Plutocracy, the "'rule of money'" (ibid.). For him, Luxury turns into a "'sap-destroying like a cancer, and as it were, destroying the balance between the classes'"(ibid.). He actually lead a meeting for this issue "at London in 1864 a quarter of a century before Karl Marx" (ibid.). Groen van Prinsterer in 1853 called Dutch Christians to extinguish the fire of socialism believing that "'socialism finds its source in the French Revolution'" and "'is conquerable only by Christianity'"(p.16).

Kuyper continued his lament that Dutch Christian leaders had been positioned in the "rear guard" not only by other Christian leaders in other parts of Europe but also "by the Socialists themselves, who constantly appeal to Christ in support of their Utopias..." (ibid.). He described these Socialists as continually holding "serious mottoes from the Holy Word..." and had "not hesitated to present Christ Himself as the great prophet of Socialism..." due to what they believe to be a strong bond between "the Socialist need and the Christian religion..." (ibid.). 

And then Kuyper expressed the uneasiness of a certain Adolphe Naquet also from a traditional liberal school the way Socialism is advancing Christianity. Naquet said, "'You do the work of religion. . . when you put in the foreground exactly those problems in whose solution Christianity is so closely involved'" (p.17). Kuyper saw in this statement a commendation of the power of Christianity to aid the social ill. 

Kuyper then introduced a most illuminating statement from Fichte.
"'Christianity conceals in its womb a much greater treasure of rejuvenation than you surmise. Until now it has exerted its power only on the individual and only indirectly on the state. But anyone who, as believer or as unbeliever, has been able to spy out its secret dynamic, must grant that Christianity can exert a wonderful organizing power on society also; and not till this power breaks through will the religion of the cross shine before the whole world in all the depths of its conception and in all the wealth of the blessings which it brings'" (ibid.).
Dr. Kuyper concluded his litany by embracing the undeniability of the connection between the social question and the Christian religion. He affirmed, "...Christian religion and the social question, are intertwined. The conviction that such a relation exists is not enough. It must also take on form and shape for us. Only so can it speak to our consciousness." Again, his only regret was that the Dutch Christian leaders have not spoken louder and have not acted earlier. He was so ashamed for such inactivity. 

The Need for a Christian Social Consciousness

Kuyper then started to expound about his idea of a "form" or "shape" social Christian consciouness by explaining the "antithesis" between nature and art. He ascribes power to both. By nature, he meant the power that lies beyond human reach. By art, he meant the power derived from human will to properly utilize nature. He gave several examples of this such as the breeding of horses, irrigation and the education of our children. The goal is "to unlock the power concealed in nature," (p. 19). and he believes that God is pleased with such exercise of the will. 

Unfortunately, man did not properly use this higher power derived from human will. Instead of experiencing peace and happiness through the appropriate use of such art, its misuse brought countless miseries. Kuyper describes this misuse as "series of misdirected actions" (p. 20) originating from "two-fold unchanging cause, error and sin" (ibid.). 

Concerning error, Kuyper explains, "Error insofar as there was ignorance as to the essence of man and his social attributes, and ignorance equally as to the laws which govern on the one hand human association and on the other, the production, distribution and use of material goods" (ibid.). And regarding sin, Kuyper mentions greed and ambition. These two "disturbed or opposed the sound growth of human society, whether through force or through vicious custom and unjust law, and sometimes for centuries abetted a very cancerous development" (ibid.). And then through time, both error and sin "joined forces to enthrone untruthful principles, which did violence to our human nature ; and out of these false principles to build systems which licensed injustice . . ." (ibid.).

Kuyper described such social ills with another name, "reckless play" (p. 21) that is done by the intellectuals and the wealthy, and through their influence, found way through the government. From this point, we read that Abraham Kuyper was not uninformed about the evils of statist interventionism though he did not use the term. 
". . . . actually there has never been a government in any land of the world which did not in various ways dominate both the course of social life and its relations with material wealth. It did this through the various enactment of civil laws ; through trade laws ; and indirectly through its criminal law and penal code; and as far as concerns the relation to material wealth, more particularly through inheritance laws, through the system of taxation, through regulation of exports and imports, codes for purchase and rent, agrarian regulations, colonial rule, control of coinage, and much more" (ibid.).
Kuyper further described the social and economic results from such a "fixed rule" (p. 22) used by those who are stronger for their own advantage. 

"The ineradicable inequality between men gave the stronger an advantage over the weaker, and as though an animal rather than a human society were involved, produced a world in which the fixed rule prevails that the stronger devours the weaker; and the stronger, almost without exception, have always known how to bend every usage and magistral ordinance so that the profit was theirs and the loss was for the weaker. Men did not literally eat each other like the cannibals, but the more powerful exploited the weaker by means of a weapon against which there was no defense. And whenever the magistrate did come forward as a servant of God to protect the weaker, the more powerful class of society soon knew how to exercise such an overpowering influence on the government that the governmental power which should have protected the weaker became an instrument against them. And this was not because the stronger class was more evil at heart than the weaker; for no sooner did a man from the lower class rise to the top than he in his turn took part just as harshly, and indeed more harshly, in the irreligious oppression of those who were members of his own former class" (ibid.). 
Kuyper ended the first chapter of his book with a solemn warning based on Biblical material.
"No, the cause lay in this, that men regarded humanity apart from its eternal destiny, did not honor it as created in the image of God, and did not reckon with the majesty of the Lord, who alone is able to hold in check, through His grace, a race sunk in sin. This unjust situation was already born in ancient times of which the Preacher so movingly complains (Eccl. 4:1) : "So I returned and considered all the oppressions that are done under the sun: and behold the tears of such as were oppressed, and they had no comforter; and on the side of the oppressors there was power, but they had no comforter. " It is a situation like that when Naboth was murdered so that Jezebel might add his acre to the royal park of Ahab; or, if you will, a state of affairs once and for all typified by our Lord in the parable of the rich man and the poor Lazarus; and against which James hurls his apostolic ban when he writes: "Go to now, ye rich men, weep and howl for your miseries that shall come upon you. Your riches are corrupted and your garments are moth-eaten. You gold and silver is cankered, and the rust of them shall be a witness against you, and shall eat your flesh as it were fire. Ye have heaped treasure together for the last days. Behold, the hire of the laborers who have reaped down your fields, which is of you kept back by fraud, crieth; and the cries of them which have reaped are entered into the ears of the Lord of Sabaoth' (p.23). 

Kuyper, A. (1950). Christianity and Class Struggle. Grand Rapids, Michigan: Piet Hein Publishers.

Wednesday, January 8, 2014

The Model Righteousness of Jesus

Reading the 7th chapter of By This Standard: The Authority of God's Law Today, is like having a crash course in Christology, biblical law, and Christian ethics. This is the 2nd part in Bahnsen's trinitarian approach to prove the continuing validity of biblical law. 

After reading the chapter, I was impressed with the wealth of exegetical insights and biblical material. I think this is a good material for teaching the adult Sunday School. And so I decided to reorder this chapter into an outline format. In doing this, I place a couple of paragraph here and there under the section, which I think is most suitable. 

The theme of the whole chapter is Jesus' model of righteousness. Dr. Greg Bahnsen structured the chapter's content under three major divisions:

  • The centrality of Jesus throughout the Bible
  • Jesus' life is in complete conformity to the law of God
  • Christian life understood as imitating Christ means following the same moral standard

The Centrality of Jesus Throughout the Bible


1. From creation to the promise of His coming as the Messiah

  • He was as the Word of God, active at the creation of the world (John 13)
  • He providentially upholds all things by the word of His power (Hebrews 1:3). 
  • He was the seed of the woman who would crush the serpent's head (Genesis 3:15). 
  • The entire Old Testament prepares for His coming as the prophet (Deut. 18:15-19), priest (Ps. 110:4), and king (Isa. 9:6-7).

2. The New Testament speaks of the centrality of Jesus. 

  • The Gospels tell of His life and saving ministry
  • Acts tells us of the continuation of His work through the presence of the Holy Spirit in the church
  • The epistles are His letters through His chosen servants (for example, Galatians 1:1) to his elect people
  • The book of Revelation is His revelation 
  • His church now labors to make all nations His disciples (Matt. 28:18-20)
  • At the consummation of history, He will return again to judge all mankind (Acts 17:31). 
  • From beginning to end, the Bible speaks of Jesus Christ who is "the Alpha and the Omega" (Rev. 22:13).
  • He is the key to God's special revelation and the one who should have preeminence in our lives (Col. 1:18).

Jesus' Life, in Complete Conformity to the Law of God

Under this section, Rushdoony discussed the relationship between Jesus and the law of God. The life of Jesus is described as a life of perfect obedience to the perfect moral standard of God.

"A short survey of Biblical teaching discloses that God does not save His chosen people by lowering His moral standards; the very reason why those people need His saving mercy is because they have violated His moral standards. If such standards were expendable or arbitrary, then God could choose to ignore their transgression and save people by sheer fiat or decree of pardon. However, the law could not be thus ignored. To save His people, God sent His only-begotten Son to die sacrificially in their place. In order to qualify as the Savior, Christ lived a life of perfect obedience to the commandments of God. In order to atone for sins, Christ died in alienation from the Father to satisfy the law's demand for punishment. Consequently in His life and death Christ perfectly obeyed the law of God, and this has unavoidable implications for Christian ethics - for imitating the Christ portrayed throughout the Bible."

The Scriptures regard the work of Christ as that of perfect obedience:
  • In defining the purpose of His Messianic advent, Christ said "I have come down from heaven to do the will of Him who sent Me" (John 6:38). 
  • The pivotal event in the accomplishment or redemption was Christ's laying down His life and taking it up again - His death and resurrection; in these things Christ· was obeying His Father's commandment (John 10:17-18). 
  • His work of atonement was performed in the capacity of a suffering servant (cf. Isa. 52:13-53:12). As such He was subjected to the law (Gal. 4:5) and justified us by His obedience (Rom. 5:19). Obedience to the will and commandment of God was therefore crucial to the life and ministry of our Savior. 
  • As our great High Priest He was sacrificed to discharge the curse of the law against our sin (Gal. 3:13; Heb. 2:17 -3:1; 4:14-5:10). 
  • As the prophet of the law, Christ rendered its proper interpretation and peeled away the distorting traditions of men (Matt. 5:17-48; 15:1-20). 
  • And because He obeyed the law perfectly and hated all lawlessness, Christ has been exalted as the anointed King (Heb. 1:8, 9). 
We see here that Christ's saving work and His three-fold office are determined by His positive relation to the law of God, the permanent expression of His holy will.
  • Since Christ is the exact representation of God's nature (Heb. 1:3) and since the law is a transcript of the holiness of God, Christ embodied the law perfectly in His own person and behavior. 
  • Christ challenged His opponents with the stunning-virtually rhetorical-question, "Which of you convicts me of sin?" (John 8:46). Of course, no one could, for Christ alone was in a position to declare, "I have kept my Father's commandments and abide in His love" (John 15:10).
  • Christ was tempted at every point with respect to obeying the commands of God, yet He remained sinless throughout (Heb. 4:15). 
  • Because He kept the law perfectly, Christ had no need to offer up sacrifice for His own sins (Heb. 7:26-28). Instead He offered Himself up without spot to God, a lamb without blemish as the law required, in order to cleanse us of our sins (Heb. 9:14). 
  • The Old Testament had foretold, "righteousness will be the belt about His loins" (Isa. 11:5), and the Messiah could declare, "Thy law is within my heart" (Ps. 40:7-8; Heb. 10:4-10).
  • We read in Galatians 4:4 that "when the fullness of the time came, God sent forth His Son, born of a woman, born under the law, that he might redeem them that were under the law."
  • Christ was neither lawless nor above the law; He submitted to its every requirement, saying "it becomes us to fulfill all righteousness" (Matt. 3:15). 
  • He directed the healed to offer the gift commanded by Moses (Matt. 8:4), kept the borders of his garments (9:20; 14:36), paid the temple tax (17:24-27), attended to the purity of the temple (21:12-17), etc. 
  • He directed His followers to do those things which conformed to the law's demand (Matt. 7:12), told the rich young ruler to keep the commandments (19:17), reinforced the Old Testament law by summarizing it into two love commandments (22:40), indicted the Pharisees for making God's commandments void through traditions of men (Mark 7:6-13), and insisted that even the most trite or insignificant matters of the law ought not to be left undone (Luke 11:12).
  • Jesus severely warned His followers not even to begin to think that His coming had the effect of abrogating even the slightest letter of the law; teaching that even the least commandment had been annulled would eventuate in one's demotion in the kingdom of God (Matt. 5:17-19). 
  • Christ submitted to the law of God even to the very point of suffering its prescribed penalty for sin. He died the death of a criminal (Phil. 2:8), taking upon Himself the curse of the law (Gal. 3:13) and cancelling thereby the handwriting which was against us because of the law (Col. 2:14). "He was wounded for our transgressions, he was bruised for our iniquities.... Jehovah has laid on him the iniquity of us all" (Isa. 53:4-6).
  • Sin cannot avoid the dreadful judgment of God (Nahum 1:2-3; Habakkuk 1:13), and therefore God does not save sinners without righteousness and peace kissing each other (Ps. 85:9-10).
  • Jesus remains just, while becoming the justifier of His people (Rom. 3:26). Accordingly the law's demands could not be arbitrarily pushed aside. Christ had to come and undergo the curse of the law in the place of His chosen people; He had to satisfy the justice of God. That is why it can be said that the death of Christ is the outstanding evidence that God's law cannot be ignored or abrogated. 
  • According to the law there is no remission of sin apart from the shedding of blood (Heb. 9:22; Lev. 17:11). "Therefore it was necessary that Christ offer up himself in sacrifice for sin" (Heb. 9:23-26). The necessity of the law's continuing validity is substantiated by the saving death of Christ on our behalf.
  • For us to be saved, it was necessary for Christ to live and die by all of the law's stipulations. Although our own obedience to the law is flawed and thus cannot be used as a way of justification before God, we are saved by the imputed obedience of the Savior (1 Cor. 1:30; Phil. 3:9). Our justification is rooted in His obedience (Rom. 5:17-19). By a righteousness which is alien to ourselves - the perfect righteousness of Christ according to the law - we are made just in the sight of God. "He made the one who did not know sin to be sin on our behalf in order that we might become the righteousness of God in Him" (2 Cor. 5:21).
  • It turns out, then, that Christ's advent and atoning work do not relax the validity of the law of God and its demand for righteousness; rather they accentuate it. Salvation does not cancel the law's demand but simply the law's curse: "Christ redeemed us from the curse of the law, having become a curse for us" (Gal. 3:13). He removed our guilt and the condemning aspect of the law toward us, but Christ did not revoke the law's original righteous demand and obligation. Salvation in the Biblical sense presupposes the permanent validity of the law. 
Throughout His life and teaching, and even up to the point of death, Jesus upheld the law's demands in the most exacting degree.

Imitating Christ

  • At many times in the history of the church, Christian living has been understood most generally as "the imitation of Christ." 
  • Because Christ is the central personage of the Bible, there is a sense in which Biblical ethics can likewise be summarized as imitating Christ - striving to be like Him, taking His behavior as the model of Christian ethics. Indeed, to take upon oneself the name of "Christian" is to be a disciple or follower of Christ (cf. Acts 11:26). Believers take their direction from the example and teaching of Christ. Accordingly, Biblical ethics is the same as Christian ethics.
  • Christian ethics is a matter of imitating Christ, and for that reason it does not call us to flee from the law but to honor its requirements. We are to have in ourselves the attitude which was in Christ Jesus, who humbled himself and became obedient (Phil. 2: 5, 8). We are to follow in His steps of righteous behavior (1 Pet. 2:21), showing forth righteousness because the Holy Spirit unites us to Him (1 Cor. 6:15-20). Therefore the Biblical ethic is the Christian ethic of following after the example of Christ's obedience to God's law. John expresses this point clearly: "Hereby we know that we are in Him: he that saith he abideth in him ought himself also to walk even as he walked" (1 John 2:5-6). 
  • Christians should therefore be the last people to think or maintain that they are free from the righteous requirements of God's commandments. Those who have been saved were in need of that salvation precisely because God's law could not be ignored as they transgressed it. 
  • The Holy Spirit indwelling all true believers in Jesus Christ makes them grow in likeness to Christ - "to the measure of the stature which belongs to the fulness of Christ" (Eph. 4:13, 15; cf. Gal. 4:19).

Christ walked according to the commandments of God. Therefore, we cannot escape the conclusion that Christian ethic is one of obedience to God's law, for Christ's perfect righteousness according to that law is our model for Christian living.

  • Jesus therefore must have the supremacy in Christian life. Because of our sinful disobedience to God's commandments, Christ came to atone for our offenses and become our eternal Savior. As such, He deserves our undying devotion and gratitude.
  • As the resurrected and ascended Son of God, Christ is Lord over all and deserves our obedience and service. Thus the lifestyle and ethic of those who have been redeemed by Christ as Savior and Lord will naturally center or focus on Him
Conclusion

From beginning to end the Bible centers on Jesus Christ. From beginning to end His life was lived in conformity to the law of God. And from beginning to end the Biblical ethic of imitating Christ calls us likewise to obey every command of God's word.


Source: Bahnsen, G. L. (1985). By This Standard: The Authority of God's Law Today. Tyler, Texas: Institute for Christian Economics. 

Uniqueness of the Apostles' Creed and Its Implications

I believe in God, the Father Almighty, Creator of heaven and earth, and in Jesus Christ, his only Son, our Lord, who was conceived by the Holy Spirit, born of the virgin Mary, suffered under Pontius Pilate, was crucified, died, and was buried; He descended to hell. The third day he rose again from the dead; He ascended into heaven and is seated at the right hand of God the Father Almighty. From there he will come to judge the living and the dead. I believe in the Holy Spirit, the holy catholic church, the communion of saints, the forgiveness of sins, the resurrection of the body, and the life everlasting. Amen.

What is so unique with Apostles' Creed compared to creeds of other world religions? And why is this uniqueness so important?

Rousas John Rushdoony answered the above questions in chapter 1 of his book, "The Foundations of Social Order: Studies in the Creeds and Councils of the Early Church." He claims that the Apostles' Creed compared to creeds of other religions is unique in at least two ways: nature of its assent and activity. This uniqueness carries with it important implications that embrace the whole of life. 

Unlike the creeds of other religions, the Apostles' Creed's assent is not to a body of ideas and concepts. Instead, "it offers a synopsis of history" (p. 5), and Rushdoony describes the creed as "a declaration concerning history" (p.6). 

"The Apostles' Creed is unlike all other creeds of other religions, whether humanist, Buddhist, Moslem, Hindi, or otherwise. The faith of all other religions is in a body of ideas or claims concerning reality. It may be a belief in the ultimacy of man, or the ultimacy of nothingness, in the office of a man (Mohammed as prophet), or an ultimate dualism or monism, but, in any event, it demands a belief in certain ideas or claims. The Apostles' Creed is radically different: it offers a synopsis of history, created by God the Father Almighty, requiring salvation by Jesus Christ, His only begotten Son, who entered, lived, died, and was resurrected, and is now the Lord and Judge of history. His holy congregation is operative in history, which culminates in the general resurrection and everlasting life. The whole creed therefore is a declaration concerning history"(pp.5-6).

One immediate implication of this kind of conception of the Apostles' Creed is the rejection of any "dialectical separation of faith and history" (p.6). He considers the application of such dialecticism in understanding Jesus foreign to Christianity. In fact, he bluntly describes it as pagan.

"Nothing then can be more alien to the creed, and to Biblical faith, than the dialectical separation of faith and history. To contrast the Jesus of faith and the Jesus of history is to talk the language of paganism, not of Christianity." (p. 6.).

Another uniqueness of the Apostles' creed compared to the creeds of other world religions is in terms of activity. Rushdoony narrates, "Non-biblical creedalism is active: it involves the individual's decision concerning a set of ideas and concepts." In contrast to this, Biblical creedalism due to its affirmation of "God's creation, redemption, and government" (p.8) is therefore passive. The nature of its passivity is in view of the fact that man is a recipient of grace due to "an act of redemption by the triune God" (ibid.). However, this passivity is the basis of genuine activity. Rushdoony explains it best:

"But this passivity is the ground of true activity: man under God moves now in terms of true law, in terms of the canon of Scripture, to exercise dominion over the earth in the name of the triune God. Christian creedalism is thus basic to Western activism, constitutionalism, and hope concerning history" (ibid.). 

The opening sentence of the Apostles' Creed affirms the doctrine of creation as a historical fact. Someone who accepts such affirmation could never escape the implication of other corollary doctrines such as God's sovereignty and eternal decree. 

"Implicit in this declaration that God the Father Almighty is maker of heaven and earth is the claim of God to be the law-giver, determiner, and sustainer of heaven and earth and of all history. He is its maker, and it is totally subject therefore to Him. An assertion of the doctrine of creation is also an assertion of the doctrine of sovereignty and of the eternal decree, of predestination" (p.6).

Other implications are also derived from the declaration that God is the Almighty Creator. This includes implications for ethics, law, and society.

"The Creed thus has vast implications concerning history because of its declaration that God is the creator of all things. This declaration immediately makes God the source of all ethics, of all morality, and of all law. In all non-Christian systems, the source of ethics and law is the state; it is the polis, the empire, or the kingdom. . . . Either God is the true source of morality and law, or the state is. If God is the true source, then the Word of God must be harkened to by the church, state, school, and every sphere of life as the one authoritative source of morality and law. " (p.6).

Source: Rushdoony, R. J. (1968). The Foundations of Social Order: Studies in the Creeds and Councils of the Early Church. Vallecito, California.

Tuesday, January 7, 2014

The Perfect Holiness of the Father

Chapter 6 of "By This Standard: The Authority of God's Law Today," Dr. Bahnsen starts his Trinitarian approach in arguing for the continuing validity of God's law. In this chapter, he focused on God's perfect holiness as the standard revealed in the law. He began the chapter with distinction between two kinds of "God-likeness" - a likeness of God that violates the law and a likeness that faithfully obeys the law. The first likeness is seen in the disobedience of our first parents in the Garden oof Eden. This is counterfeit likeness; it is Satanic. The other likeness, which is genuine is fully seen in the total obedience of Christ to the law even up to the point of death on the Cross. The chapter ends with the Puritan example in their zeal to obey the law of God in all aspects of life.

Here is the excerpt from the book with few revision and additional sub-headings for easy comprehension: 

Two Kinds of God-Likeness 
There is a sense in which the aim of every man's life is to be like God. All men are striving to imitate God in one way or another. Of course not all attempts to be like God are honored by the Lord and rewarded with His favor, for there is a radical difference between submitting to the Satanic temptation to be like God (Gen. 3:5) and responding to Christ's injunction that we should be like God (Matt. 5:48). The first is an attempt to replace God's authority with one's own, while the second is an attempt to demonstrate godliness as a moral virtue. 
Counterfeit God-Likeness - Lawlessness 
The basic character of godly morality was made manifest in the probation or testing placed upon Adam and Eve in the garden. God had granted them permission to eat of any tree of the garden, save one. They were forbidden to eat of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, but not because its fruit was injected with some literal poison. This was rather a test of whether they would live solely under the authority of God's word to them. God had forbidden it. Would they, despite their empirical research and personal desires, submit to his command on His simple say-so? Would they do their duty on the sheer basis that it was their duty? Or would they evaluate the command of God on the basis of some external standard of reasonableness, practicality, and human. benefit? 
The outcome of the story is all too well known. Satan beguiled Eve, denying what God had told her. She was led to assume the authoritative, neutral position of determining for herself whether God's "hypothesis" or Satan's "hypothesis" was true. Satan implied that God's commands were harsh, too stringent, unreasonable. He in effect condemned the supreme, absolute, and unchallengeable authority of God. He went on to suggest that God is in fact jealous, prohibiting Adam and Eve from eating of the tree lest they become like Him -lest they become rivals to Him in determining what is good and evil. 
Thus our first parents were led to seek a lifestyle which- was not bound by law from God; thus they were tempted into deciding for themselves what would count as good and evil. Law would not be laid down to them by God, for they would lay it down for themselves. Demonstrating sin's lawlessness (1 John 3:4) they became "like God"-law-givers of their own making and authority. God's law, which should have been their delight, became burdensome to them. 
Genuine God-Likeness - Total Obedience to the Law  
By contrast, the second Adam, Jesus Christ, lived a life of perfect obedience to the laws of God. When Satan tempted Him to depart from the path of utter obedience to God's commands, the Savior replied by quoting from the Old Testament law: you are not to tempt the Lord your God, you are to worship and serve Him alone, and you are to live by every word that proceeds from His mouth (Matt. 4:1-11). Here we have the very opposite of Adam and Eve's response to Satan. Christ said that the attitude which is genuinely godly recognizes the moral authority of God alone, does not question the wisdom of His dictates, and observes every last detail of his word. This is man's proper path to God-likeness. To live in this fashion displays the image or likeness of God that man was originally intended to be (Gen. 1:27), for it is living "in righteousness and true holiness" (Eph. 4:24). Genuine godliness, as commanded in the Scripture, is gained' by imitating the holiness of God on a creaturely level- not by audacious attempts to redefine good and evil in some area of life on your own terms. 
Jesus concluded His discourse on God's law in the Sermon on the Mount by saying, "Therefore you are to be perfect as your heavenly Father is perfect" (Matt. 5:48). Those who are not striving to become rivals to God by replacing His commands according to their own wisdom will rather endeavor to reflect His moral perfection by obeying all of His commands. John Murray has said, 
"God expects of His people nothing less than full conformity to his holy character in all of their thoughts, words, and deeds. They must emulate His perfection in every aspect of their lives. As Murray says, this standard of ethics ever binds the believer and never ceases to be relevant. This standard is just as authoritative and valid today as it was in the Old Testament."
God's Perfect Holiness 
According to the Old Testament ethic, God's holiness is the model for human conduct: "You shall be holy, for I the Lord your God am holy" (Lev. 19:2). This is also the precise model of moral conduct for the New Testament believer: "... but like the Holy one who called you, be holy yourselves also in all your behavior; because it is written, 'You shall be holy, for I am holy' " (1 Peter 1:15-16). There has been no alteration or reduction of the standard of moral behavior between the Old and New Testaments. God's permanent requirement over all of life is God-imitating holiness. In all ages, believers are required to display, throughout their lives, the holiness and perfection of their God. They ought to be like God, not in the Satanic sense which amounts to lawlessness, but in the biblical sense which entails submission to God's commands. 
Obviously, if we are to model our lives on the perfect holiness of God, we need Him to tell us what the implications of this would be for our practical behavior. We need a perfect yardstick by which to measure holiness in our lives. The Bible teaches us that the Lord has provided this guide and standard in his holy law (cf. Rom. 7:12). The law is a transcript of the holiness of God on a creaturely level; it is the ultimate standard of human righteousness in any area of life, for it reflects the moral perfection of God, its Author. 
The intimate relation which the law bears to the very person of God is indicated by the fact that it was originally written by the finger of God (Deut. 9:10) and deposited in the ark of the covenant which typified the throne and presence of God in the Holy of Holies (Deut. 10:5). Moreover, this law must be acknowledged to have a very special place or status because it has the exclusive qualities of God himself attributed to it. According to Scripture, God alone is holy (Rev. 15:4) and good (Mark 10:18). Yet God's law is likewise designated holy and good (Rom. 7:12, 16; 1Tim. 1:8), and obedience to it is the standard of human good (Deut. 12:28; Ps. 119:68; Micah 6:8). God is perfect (Deut. 32:4; Ps. 18:30; Matt. 5:48), and the law which He has laid down for us is accordingly perfect (Ps. 19:7; James 1:25). Every statute revealed by God authoritatively defines the holiness, goodness, and perfections which God's people are to emulate in every age. 
The Puritan Example 
The Puritans were zealous to live in the moral purity which reflects God's own. Consequently they upheld the honor and binding quality of every command from God. The feeling of Thomas Taylor was typical of them: "A man may breake the Princes Law, and not violate his Person; but not God's: for God and his image in the Law, are so straitly united, as one cannot wrong the one, and not the other" (Regula Vitae, The Rule of the Law under the Gospel, 1631). If God turned back His law, said Anthony Burgess, He would "deny his own justice and goodnesse" (Vindiciae Legis, 1646). Thus the Puritans did not, like many modern believers, tamper with or annul any part of God's law. "To find fault with the Law, were to find fault with God" (Ralph Venning, Sin, the Plague of Plagues, 1669). Therefore, in Puritan theology the law of God, like its author, was eternal (cf. Edward Elton, God's Holy Minde Touching Matters Morall, 1625), and as such "Christ has expunged no part of it" (John Crandon, Mr. Baxters Aphorisms Exorcized and Anthorized, 1654). 
Unlike modern theologians who evaluate God's requirements according to their cultural traditions and who follow the Satanic temptation to define holiness according to their own estimate of moral purity, the Puritans did not seek schemes by which to shrink the entire duty of man in God's law to their preconceived notions. Venning concluded, "Every believer is answerable to the obedience of the whole Law." 
As usual, the Puritans were here eminently scriptural. God's holiness is the standard of morality in Old and New Testaments, and that holiness is reflected in our lives by obeying His every commandment. "Sanctify yourselves, therefore, and be ye holy, for I am the Lord your God. And ye shall keep my statutes and do them" (Lev. 20:7-8). And a life that is truly consecrated to God, one which is genuinely holy, respects every dictate from God. He says that the way to "be holy to your God" is to "remember to do all My commandments" (Num. 15:40). To lay aside any of God's law or view its details as inapplicable today is to oppose God's standard of holiness; it is to define good and evil in that area of life by one's own wisdom and law, to become a rival to God as a law-giver. 
Of course this suppression of God's own standard of moral perfection - the law's transcript of His holiness- is a blow at the very heart of biblical ethics. It is to be "God-like" in exactly the wrong way. It is to seek moral perfection for some aspect of life which was originally covered by God's law but is now defined according to one's own determination of good and evil. This was the untoward character of Adam's rebellion against God's holy word: His own law replaced God's. 
Conclusion 
The law reflects the holiness of God, and God's holiness is our permanent standard of morality. Moreover, God's character is eternal and unchanging. "I am the Lord, 1 change not" (Mal. 3:6). There is no variableness in Him (James 1:17). From everlasting to everlasting He is God (Ps. 90:2). Therefore, because His holiness is unchanging, the law which reflects that holiness cannot be changed. Whether we read in the Old or New Testaments, we find that a man's attitude toward God's law is an index of his relationship to God himself (Ps. 1; Rom. 8:1-8). As John so plainly says, "The one who says 'I have come to know Him,' and does not keep His commandments is a liar, and the truth is not in him" (1 John 2:4). God's unchanging holiness and thereby His unchanging law is an abiding standard of knowing Him and being like Him.
We cannot suppress the generic character of this statement, 'Ye therefore shall be perfect as your heavenly Father is perfect.' It covers the whole range of divine perfection as it bears upon human behavior, and it utters the most ultimate consideration regulative ofhuman disposition and conduct. The reason of the biblical ethic is God's perfection; the basic criterion of ethical behavior is God's perfection; the ultimate goal of the ethical life is conformity to God's perfection.... And shall we say that this standard can ever cease to be relevant? It is to trifle with the sanctities which ever bind us as creatures of God, made in his image, to think that anything less than perfection conformable to the Father's own could be the norm and the goal of the believer's ethic. 

Source: Bahnsen, G. L. (1985). By This Standard: The Authority of God's Law Today. Tyler, Texas: Institute for Christian Economics.