Avoiding the "Magic Jesus" Gospel Presentation

What of the gravest failures in ministry is the failure to properly or carefully explain the Gospel to young people. Come to think of it that applies to all people, not just young people. All too often, sweet, goodhearted, and well-intended people trying to simplify the Gospel go too far. Their desire is maybe a little misguided and they over-simplify the Gospel until it is something less. It becomes something less than a saving Gospel. Fortunately, God looks at the heart and sometimes despite our inept explanation of God’s Gospel people are still born again. That said, let us never mistake God’s grace for God’s approval.

 What does a watered down Gospel look like? Here’s what I call the “Magic Jesus” formulation. Here Jesus is almost presented like a genie in a bottle in a fairy tale:

Jesus loves you. He wants to be your friend. He wants to make your life better. He doesn’t want a heaven without you. If you pray to ask Jesus in your heart He will change your life from the inside out and you will go to heaven and He will make your life better and or make you a better person. In the end you’ll be better off or happier… or find contentment. Do you want to trust Jesus? Pray along with me to ask Jesus (i.e. receive Jesus into your heart)… you’ll be glad you did.

 Years ago I read a story about a pharmacist who began watering down prescriptions just a bit. His motives were wrong, unlike the well-intended folks I refer to above. His results were harmful, just like the well-intended folks I refer to above. This is not a strong enough dose to save as it is missing key ingredients. The "Magic Jesus" scenario is more of a sales presentation of what Jesus can do for you rather than what you need to understand to be saved. As Christians, we want to avoid this kind of presentation at all costs. A heavily diluted Gospel loses efficacy, like heavily diluted prescriptions. The results can be of eternal consequence.

 What are the key ingredients? As you look at these you'll see the ones that are typically absent in the “Magic Jesus” Formulation below. Here they are:

 

  1. God. God made the universe and everything and everyone in it. Everything He made was in perfect harmony—very good. Genesis 1:1 says that in the beginning God created the heavens and the earth. Later it says that God saw all that He made and it was very good.

  2. The Bible. We know this from the Bible. The Bible is His book, written for us and to us. It’s a love letter from another world. 2 Timothy 3:16-17 says that God’s word came from Him and is useful for understanding God and God’s ways and knowing how to serve Him.

  3. Mankind. God created mankind, humanity, to know Him, to serve Him, and to take care of what He made. He made human beings as reflections of His glory and “specialness.” He created us to relate to Him perfectly and always. Genesis 1:26-27 tells us that God created man in His own image and likeness, both male and female persons.

  4. Sin. For reasons hard to understand and believe the first people (and all who came after them) chose to reject God’s love and care and to get out of serving Him. In so doing they violated God’s law and rightly received a penalty of condemnation for their hate crime against God. It’s like getting a death sentence. Romans 3:23 says that all people have sinned and Romans 6:23 says that the wages of sin (the consequences of sin is death).

  5. Salvation. For these reasons man needs to be rescued or saved from the consequences and results of sinning against God. But to save others someone has to be sinless and have never rebelled against God. They have to have lived a life of perfect obedience against God. 2 Corinthians 5:21 says that Jesus took our sin in our place that we might become righteous.

  6. Savior. Jesus, God in Human form, came to earth to die for us as a gift in our place, rescuing us because we needed rescue. It’s His gift to us that we don’t deserve. And if we will trust Him and turn to Him for rescue we will be saved. We read this in Romans 6:23, Ephesians 2:8-9, and in Romans 10:9-10. Jesus is the only Savior or Rescuer there is (Acts 4:12; John 14:6).

 If you can cover all these elements in your own words (of course) it’s unlikely you’ll end up watering down the Gospel into a “Magic Jesus” presentation. It’s okay to simplify something but you’ve got to avoid oversimplifying it. That’s as true of the Gospel as it is true of anything else. If a person doesn’t understand that all people are sinners in need of a Savior, they’ve missed the heart of the Gospel of God’s grace. Just like you never want to offer a vaccine that doesn’t work, you don’t want to offer someone a Gospel substitute that gives them a false sense of security because they prayed a formulaic prayer based upon the wrong prescription!

We are going to be offering Gospel presentation design training in the coming months on Zoom! Stay tuned.

The Beginning of the End of Christian Higher Education?

Whether you understand a “Trojan Horse” to be malware that damages your computer by means of a “harmless” download, or if you go all the way back to the archetypal Trojan Horse of ancient literature both concepts are essentially the same. Both are destructive machines that destroy their host after gaining access to the victim-environment. They destroy from within.

Enter the institutional diversity committee or diversity officer at institutions of higher learning in Christian Education. Today Christian liberal arts colleges, universities, and seminaries have been infected with critical theory and intersectionality. From Wheaton, Illinois to Santa Barbara (Westmont), California, to AZUSA, California the emerging problem is the same. While Critical Theory and Intersectionality are old news in secular academia they are new to unsuspecting administrators and faculty members in Higher Christian Education. What is Critical Theory? What is Intersectionality? You can listen to an explanation of Critical Theory and Intersectionality here in a sermon entitled “Imagine a God, Part 2.

These days, one of the tell-tale signs that trouble is ahead is the creation or arrival of a Diversity Committee or Diversity Officer. Like all trojan horses, these appear to be harmless gifts of love to a student body in need of nurture, encouragement, and protection. They begin informally, then they become formal and established. Budgets are developed. People are hired. Resources are committed. Inevitably, they begin to metastasize and morph into something harmful (if not deadly) to the academic and religious integrity of the Christian institution.

At some point, you’ll begin to hear about triggers and microaggressions. The microaggressions that trigger committee intervention are based upon subjectivity or the “lived experience” of the student-complainant. If you, as a professor or instructor, do or say something in class that hurts a student’s feelings, then you are responsible as an educator for an act of oppression or aggression. Your words may seem innocent enough (to you and perhaps others). Nevertheless, you are guilty until proven innocent. For Christian Institutions accepting students of other religious backgrounds (Islam, Hinduism, et al) the exclusivity of the Gospel can be either a macro-aggression (think large hurtful insult or assault) or a microaggression (a smaller hurt). If you protest your innocence, depending on your race, you may be told that your “white privilege,” blinds you to the reality and impact of your infraction. You may be told that your “whiteness (for example)” renders you insensitive to the needs and hurts of others. You may be forced to avoid the Gospel because it is divisive—or at least water it down.

Talk about the exclusivity of Christ for salvation and you’ve committed an offense of some kind and since the classroom is yours, you are held accountable in some way for not being careful enough, sensitive enough, or loving enough. Use the wrong terminology in giving a public assessment or critique of a classroom presentation and you could be guilty of oppression. Critique a paper, or grade an essay, in a way that a student doesn’t like, you may find yourself accused of a microaggression. And if the student has typically received higher grades in the past (for better work) then you are definitely suspect. If the microaggression is real to the student then it is considered real and you are at fault.

The problem for a Christian educational environment becomes more problematic because the Bible is absolute truth and what is says about the human condition cannot really be challenged. Enter someone struggling with gender dysphoria, LGBTQ issues, or some other group perceived as a minority and if they are offended by what is taught, then the professor (or instructor) must be guilty of something. Given the redefinition of terms of race and racism (only Caucasians can be racists) and that race, now, is said to be a social construct and things become exponentially more complex.

Enter the diversity committee and the Diversity Director / Officer / Administrator. They exist to find, discover, or ferret out microaggressions, incipient racism, and oppression in any form. How is their effectiveness measured? By discovering subtle racism, clueless racism, white privilege, and oppressors (real or imagined). Ultimately, they fall this trap: they find themselves needing to justify their continued existence. How is their effectiveness to be measured? They must receive and act on credible accusations. How is an accusation evaluated? “Lived experience.” Lived experience means “it was real to me.” A presupposition of Critical Theory and Intersectionality is that if you felt it, then it is real. Objectivity and logic are by definition tools of oppression. The department or committee’s effectiveness is predicated on discovering offenses. They must do so to survive and receive resources and funding. They must go beyond training. Creating awareness must result in referrals. Awareness must mean detection. Detection must result in referrals. Complaints and referrals must involve action. This necessitates almost an environment fostering self-fulfilling prophecies.

That’s why I used the Trojan Horse metaphor. Inside the horse are helpful sounding diversity training courses and sensitivity courses that well-meaning presidents and provosts readily approve. Regrettably, they do not closely examine the horse they are buying. They seldom convene a control committee to review the proposed curriculum or ask for definitions of terms. In the name of love (forgetting that sometimes love is tough) and “dialogue” they make unfortunate miscalculations and ever so gradually things begin to get out of hand. Diversity officers (and students) attempt to dictate what teachers may or may not say or teach. For many, the very role of a teacher implies built-in oppression. Diversity Officers, Diversity Committees and student sometimes attempt to first influence and then dictate to administrators and presidents how the institution is to be run. When someone tries to reign things in, they are branded an oppressor. Once opened, Pandora’s Box is difficult to close. Things gradually go from bad to worse when the Trojan Horses are naively accepted and embrace—even by those who have the best interests of the students at heart. They fail to see it for what it is: an instrument of harm. Pray for our Christian colleges, universities, and seminaries. For many, the cat is already out of the bag because the Trojan Horse is now inside the camp.

New Podcast Coming August 26th!

Please pray for us as we prepare to launch a new podcast! Given all the complexities of COVID-19 and the need to provide helpful resources, we are looking to launch a podcast on August 26th.

What? The podcast will offer an overview of the current events swirling around us in this crazy world from a biblical perspective. Think of it as a biblical conversation about issues facing our fallen world. You can listen to it as you drive, while you run errands, while you exercise, or on a walk.

Why? We live in a complex world and there are some discussions that do not necessarily lend themselves to a sermon and we can’t cover it all on a Sunday.

How Long? It’s a 25-minute overview of a particular issue or topic. It’s intended to be bite-sized and accessible. It won’t be a sermon but more of a discussion.

How often? We will release podcasts weekly on Wednesdays. The first podcast will be Wednesday, August 26th.

Who is this podcast for? In a word: everyone. The hope is that it will have something for everyone from new Christians to mature and maturing Christians… from unbelievers to those seeking God.

Does it have a name? The working title is something like “Out of My Mind,” or “From Out of My Mind.” It’s a play on words tying to “A biblical conversation about our crazy world.”

Where can I find it? You can find a link on the church website and it will be posted on Spotify, Itunes, and other places.

Format. Much of the time it will be a “monocast” (just one person talking). Other times it may be an interview with a person of interest or even a panel discussion. Stay tuned.

Social Media and the Christian

We live in perplexing times. Perhaps nothing so perplexes me or vexes me as a pastor than some of the comments I see Christians and church leaders make on social media such as Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, or other platforms. While my expectations are quite low when it comes to the secular world, Christians are held to a higher standard. They should be. They represent Christ.

Don’t misunderstand me. I don’t expect that a Facebook post or Tweet that is biblical will please or receive the approval of a lost and broken world. We don’t seek the world’s approval on issues like Abortion, Traditional Marriage, Critical Theory, Intersectionality, etc. At the same time, no Christ-follower should go out of their way to poke their metaphorical finger in the eye of the opposition. Paul warns us in Colossians about our speech, “Let your speech always be gracious, seasoned with salt, so that you may know how you ought to answer each person (Colossians 4:6).” As a Christian you represent Christ. When you speak rashly or unwisely your conduct reflects poorly on Him. How then shall we speak, or write? God’s word says:

Let no corrupting talk come out of your mouths, but only such as is good for building up, as fits the occasion, that it may give grace to those who hear. (Ephesians 4:29)

What’s this mean for you? Your written or spoken word should not be provocative, things like “get a life…” The aim is to build others up, not tear them down. As you write and speak, give consideration into the environment in which you step. Is what you are about to write or say going to improve things? Does it suit the occasion given all that is going on at that moment in cyberspace or in life. Does it make things worse? Will what you are saying or writing make things better? Proverbs warns us not to answer a fool according to his folly lest you become like him (or her).

Notice the wording “that it may give grace to those who hear.” Often we are tempted (I know I am) to do it unto others because they did it unto me. That’s returning evil for evil not overcoming evil with good (Romans 12:21). That’s sin in God’s sight, according to God’s Word. “Pushing back” involves falling into the trap of repaying evil for evil—which God opposes. Proverbs tells us that that words of the rash are like the thrusts of a sword but in contrast the tongue of the wise (the words of the wise) bring healing. Jesus meant what He said when He said, “Blessed are they that mourn for they shall be comforted.” If you see something you dislike because it’s wrong, don’t add fuel to the fire. Instead, cultivate a godly grief over the sin you see. Jesus meant what He said when He said, “Blessed are the peacemakers for they shall be called children of God.” When you make comments online are you trying to one-up the opposition or are you trying to reason with them peacefully. Are you using sarcasm and insults?

God says to us through His Word in Colossians 3:8, “8 But now you must put them all away: anger, wrath, malice, slander, and obscene talk from your mouth.” Don’t confuse your nationality or politics with Christianity. It’s okay to be patriotic. It’s okay to have an opinion. But never confuse patriotism or your political party as being synonymous with Christianity. Paul writes when I was a child I use to reason like a child… when I became a man I put away childish things. Be certain not to act childishly online. It’s doubtful you’ll change anyone’s opinion. Most likely, you’ll only make things worse. Be Christlike. You don’t have the right to vent. Venting is a worldly concept inconsistent with Christianity. Be careful.

 Don’t act like the world. Friendship with the world is hostility toward God. Your life is not your own. You were purchased with a great price—the shed blood of the Son of God. Therefore, do your best to govern yourself accordingly. Want an easy test? Before you write or speak ask yourself this, “Is what I’m about to write or say going to bring God pleasure?” If in doubt—don’t say or write it. Disagree if others if you must but do so graciously. The world is watching (and so is Jesus). Please be careful, thoughtful, and Christ-like.

 

 

 

 

One Week Later: Looking Back on July 4th Weekend and Its Meaning

(Owning America’s ‘History’ of Injustice)

Someone recently could not bring themselves to wish me a happy July 4th weekend. The reason was America’s terrible history of oppression and hate. America was not worthy of respect. That got me to thinking. There’s a lot of examination going on right now of our nation’s past. Some of our nation’s past isn’t pretty—in fact some of it is downright ugly. I’ve heard aspects of our past compared (recklessly) to the Holocaust (systematic extermination of the Jews by Nazi Germany), the Rwandan Genocide, and even Pol Pot’s “killing fields” where the socialist-communist government exterminated from one fifth upwards to one third of the population of Cambodia. This type of hyperbole is unnecessary and distracting. Let’s not throw the baby out with the bath water.

Do certain aspects of our nation’s history make our nation and some of its people hopelessly irredeemable (and in who’s sight)? Well, that could bring us to Israel and David. In the interest of time, let’s stick with David. In the Old Testament, God’s word covers the life of David more than any other man. He’s right up there with Moses and Abraham. King David is described as “a man after God’s own heart (1 Samuel 13:14)” and we see this terminology repeated in the New Testament in Acts 13.

And when he had removed him, he raised up David to be their king, of whom he testified and said, ‘I have found in David the son of Jesse a man after my heart, who will do all my will.’ (Acts 13:22)

It is significant that this statement is repeated and reaffirmed in the New Testament because the comments in 1 Samuel appear before David’s adultery with Bathsheba and his conspiratorial murder of Uriah the Hittite, Bathsheba’s husband (2 Samuel 11-12). Moreover, the statement and description in Acts is made after David’s failure as a parent, documented in part in 2 Samuel 13 as well. Then, of course, there was his failure to honor God’s will by numbering the troops and people of Israel, bringing calamity to the nation which suffered as a result of David’s sin (2 Samuel 24). Despite his many failings David is described as “a man after God’s own heart.”

David failed to live up to his own ideals and beliefs. He failed to meet God’s standard of righteousness. David repeatedly sinned against God (and others) in significant ways. David in some way personifies every Christian, let alone every person who set high standards for himself or herself. He sinned and fell short of the glory of God. Truly, the wages of David’s sin was death (death to many) just as the free gift of God for David was eternal life. David reminds us of God’s grace and God’s providence and glory displayed through flawed and fallen human beings (like David).

Scripture shows us David’s mountain top heights and deep, dark valley experiences. We see David’s faith and failings. And we are reminded that apart from Christ our world and its people are doomed and damned… but for the grace of God. What’s this got to do with July 4th and our nation? What’s this got to do with the here and now? Our nation is made up of people, Christian and non-Christian. Over the last 250ish years, many of them purportedly subscribe(d) to a set of very high ideals embodied in the nation’s founding documents, constitution, and laws. And yet they applied these standards sinfully at times and imperfectly. That’s why, depending upon who you talk to, our country and its history is either a history of the greatest country in human history and God’s green earth or a portrait of hate, failure, and all that is wrong with this world—the source of great evil. That’s how we see people and institutions these days—totally good or totally evil. Human beings are, after all, creatures of extremes. The fact is that no one is as good as they’d like to believe or as bad as others say.  This brings us to our own context, the Fourth of July, Independence Day and what to make of American History.

We are told that ours is a history of corruption. Our nation is a nation of systemic and structural racism. Do I believe in systemic racism? I’ve been asked this question a number of times, recently. Do I believe this country is structurally racist and racism is systemic in our institutions laws, etc.  My short answer is no. Why do I say this? I say this because the facts and pattern of the nation’s history do not support this.

Someone wisely said, “Facts are stubborn things; and whatever may be our wishes, our inclinations, or the dictates of our passion, they cannot alter the state of facts and evidence.” Just as David’s sin was great, so is mine, so is yours, and so is our country’s. It is, after all, made up of sinners—like every other country and people in this world. Is racism pandemic here in our country? Sin is pandemic. Racism is a species of sin. Racism is worldwide because sin is worldwide. One act of racism is one act too many. Sin kills (Romans 6:23; Ezekiel 18:20). Is America an fundamentally racist nation whose government structures and institutions are bent on discriminating against people of color? What do facts tell us?

  • George Washington was a slave owner. David was an adulterer and murderer. David repented and Washington freed his slaves at his death, providing pensions for those who could not provide for themselves and providing for the education and vocational training for some who lacked parents and freedom for them after the age of 25.  Let’s tear down his statue and expunge all memory of him. And let’s do the same for King David.

  • Thomas Jefferson wanted slavery condemned in the Declaration of Independence but many feared losing the South in the war against the British. He referred to slavery as an “abominable crime.” And yet he owned slaves. Unforgiveable… like King David’s adultery and murder… a man after God’s own heart. Let’s expunge all memory and honor of him from our past. Let’s do the same for King David.

  • Slavery never took hold in some states because the people opposed it and freemen were common in Northern States, some serving as pastors in predominately white churches. Some in the 1700’s married white women. Imagine that. But let’s condemn everyone as evil and oppressive. Let’s do the same for King David.

  • An entire Civil War was fought with a death toll of 750,000 men out of a total population of 31 million (2.4% of the total population or almost 5% of the male population). Then there’s Gettysburg (10,000 killed; 30,000 wounded). The abolition of slavery figured prominently in the war. Many believe the Civil War was God’s judgement. “White men” fought for freedom of all people—including slaves.

  • Abraham Lincoln issued and executed the Emancipation Proclamation (imperfectly). The Emancipation Proclamation was soon followed by the 13th amendment to the Constitution in 1865. The 13th Amendment  gave the newly freed slaves (and others) citizenship and the right to vote. Did that cure things? Souls are changed one soul at a time with the Gospel, nothing less. But what do we make of the “white men” who passed this legislation? What do we make of a country that did so?

  • In 1870 Hiram Revels, the first black US Senator, was elected (Republican) in Mississippi.  He had been born to free black parents. Numerous congressmen and congresswomen and senators of all colors have since followed, nationwide. How in the world did they get elected in a structurally and systemically racist society in which they were a minority—and by whom?

  • The Federal Government frequently stepped in attempting to ensure voting rights and rights of citizenship. Who took these actions? Who supported them? Did less than 14% of the population compel 86% of the population, the majority of whom are said to be evil racists, all, to do their bidding? Or were they imperfect people trying to live up to an ideal?

  • President Harry S. Truman desegregated the US Military by executive order in 1948, establishing the President's Committee on Equality of Treatment and Opportunity in the Armed Services—something Franklin Roosevelt had been unwilling to do. Did Truman rely on the black vote? Don’t people say today that Truman was an evil racist? What motivated him? Why did he do it? Should we keep or tear down his statue? Should we revile his memory and achievements? What about King David? What about you?

  • In 1954 segregation in schools was declared unconstitutional (Brown v. the Board of Education) by “white” Supreme Court Justices… Change came and comes slowly.

  • In 1957 Republican President Dwight Eisenhower sent Federal Troops to Little Rock, Arkansas to integrate public high schools and ensure the safety of students. Is this structural and systemic racism—or was Eisenhower combating racism?

  • In 1963 Federal Troops and the Alabama National Guard were deployed to desegregate the University of Alabama. Why? Why did this happen? How could it happen in a country dominated by racism?

  • In 1964 Congress passed the Civil Rights Act of 1964 tightening and strengthening laws against discrimination against people according to race, age, and sex. Why would a predominately racist Congress, Senate, and President put such legislation into law? Who elected and reelected them?

  • In 1967 the first black Supreme Court Justice, Thurgood Marshall was appointed to the US Supreme Court. Who appointed him? Marshall was followed decades later by Clarence Thomas (1991). Who appointed Thomas? There has been a black Supreme Court Justice sitting on the US Supreme Court for over 53 years. Appointed by whom? What was their motive?

  • In 1987 Ronald Reagan appointed Colin Powell the first African American National Security Advisor. Wasn’t Reagan a racist?

  • In 1989 George H. W. Bush appointed Colin Powell as the first African American Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff over all US Military operations. Why? How?

  • Barack Obama elected President twice, 2008 and 2012. Black people made up less than 14% of the U.S. population. Who were these voters, then, who elected President Obama? If American is structurally racist and racism is systemic, how was he re-elected and by whom?

  • Between 1964 and 2014 between $15 trillion and $22 trillion dollars were spent in the war on poverty, creating several debilitating unintended consequences. Poverty has dropped from 15% to 14.5%, the majority of the drop taking place before the spending that would ultimately destroy the African American Family. But who elected these politicians over time? And why did they commit so many financial resources? Weren’t most of them racists?

What’s the point?  If America, as a country, didn’t care about people—all people as well as of color, blacks making up less than 14% of the population, who elected Obama president twice? Who appointed Black Supreme Court Justices? Who desegregated the military? Who sent troops to desegregate schools and universities (and why?). Who appropriated trillions of dollar to fight poverty? And who elected (and reelected) them and why?  Why? It is because of the ideals that this country was founded upon. Do we live out these ideals perfectly? No. Do you? Do you or I live out our faith perfectly? No one does. God calls upon us all to excel still more. God calls upon us, requires us, as believers, to be agents of real change.

America is a nation with “the cleanest dirty shirt.” The shirt is dirty for sure… but… thankfully for us… not as dirty as everyone else’s. There’s no other country like the American Experiment anywhere in the world. People of color flock here in droves. Why? They come here for a better life. Why? Because America is a land of opportunity, a land of high ideals, and they have hopes of becoming part of the American Dream. BUT MAKE NO MISTAKE: ours is a flawed nation, comprised of flawed people—sinners. Like all humans, we struggle as a people, like all people everywhere, we fail to live up to our ideals, so carefully documented in our founding documents. Does that make everything “okay?” It does not. Racism is real because sin is real. Change is needed.

But make no mistake. Change is needed. Real change. Significant change. And, Christian, you—you—have a role to play.

But change starts and comes from within. Change doesn’t come through laws, coercion, cancelling, virtue signalling, social media accounts like Twitter, destroying statues and institutions, or trying to forget (or rewrite) the past. Change is much more difficult than that. It’s all about “the long game.” There are no short or easy answers.

Change comes one soul at a time through the message of Jesus Christ for those who worship the One, True God. For those worshipping at other altars change too often comes through violence and reverse discrimination (the opposite of the Golden Rule), revenge, and vengeance. So what? We, as Christ followers have the only real answer. Accept no substitutes.

We have work to do. As for what you can do as part of the church, we will be teaching through this in a short series. Here’s a rough listing of what to expect in the sermons that follow:

  1.  Chris Gee will speak on race and racism.

  2. I will speak on a biblical approach to protest and action.

  3. My second sermon will be an analysis of Critical Race Theory and Intersectionality and how they relate to Christianity.

  4. Roberto Munguia will speak on reconciliation.

Last and not least, it’s okay to say “Happy Fourth of July.” With all of its warts and scars and its “cleanest dirty shirt,” ours is a great country and we (as well as others) have much to be thankful for. Don’t throw the baby out with the bath water. Be thankful. Be grateful. Happy (belated) Fourth of July. Happy Independence Day. Let’s get to work!

Women in Ministry, Part Two

To the naked eye, this post will appear quite lengthy. It’s actually two posts of extra sermon study materials. The first is a critique of an article by the late Ray Stedman entitled “Should a Woman Teach in the Church?” We think the title is a little misleading because Titus 2:2-5 in the Pastoral Epistles clearly answers in the affirmative. Women have taught in the church for almost 2,000 years. We believe Stedman is attempting to answer the question “should women teach men?”

Pastor Paul Brown and Pastor Roberto Munguia provide a thoughtful critique of Ray Stedman’s article from 1976. We included it because Stedman wielded a great deal of influence as an excellent Bible teacher. Oddly, in this article, he appears to fall into a confirmation bias trap. He makes a case that women cannot be limited from ministry roles due to gender distinctions and then concludes that they must be excluded from the role of elder because they are women. Roberto and Paul provide many helpful insights by highlighting logical leaps and inconsistencies throughout his article. I appreciate their grace and gentleness. Stedman’s article appears in non-bolded fonts while our commentary is labeled “commentary” and appears in bolded letters.

Pastor Christopher Gee authored the second critique of an article published last October in Relevant Magazine. This article takes a someone less careful approach than Stedman but we thought to include and critique it because of the popularity of the magazine with young adults.

Keith Crosby (Lead Pastor)

Should a Woman Teach in Church?

The social movements of every age seem to be used by God to force Christians to re-examine (and clarify) their understanding of what the Scriptures teach. Painful as they may be, every such re-examination results ultimately in stronger and clearer statements on the subjects in question than the church has ever had before. This is certainly the case in the matter of the woman's role in the church. The secular Women's Liberation movement is forcing church leaders everywhere to distinguish carefully between attitudes toward women derived from customs and traditions of the past (often strongly macho-dominated) and what the Bible actually teaches and what the early church actually did.

Commentary

It is sad to know so little has changed in 44 years since the writing of this article. The situation has become even worse today, since what Stedman calls “the secular Women’s Liberation movement” has gained a strong foothold in the church. It appears, in many cases, the church has forgotten the study of the Bible in lieu of political correctness and “moving along with the times”.

In the scope of this brief article it is not possible to answer all the questions which are being raised today. But we would like to examine the specific question being asked by many Christians today: Should a woman teach the Scriptures, and especially, should she teach men or when men are present?

We can say at once that the New Testament clearly indicates that both men and women receive the gifts of the Holy Spirit without distinction in regard to sex. Included among these is the gift of teaching, and other related gifts, such as prophesying (basically, preaching), exhortation, and the word of wisdom and of knowledge. Women prophets are referred to both in the Old and New Testaments, and older women are instructed by the Apostle Paul to teach the younger women.

Commentary

It should be immediately noted that we have no disagreement that both men and women are equally gifted, and that some women are gifted to teach the Scriptures. The only question we are addressing is whether or not the New Testament prohibits women from teaching men in the context of Church gatherings.

A somewhat oblique reference in First Corinthians 11:4-5 suggests that both men and women were free to pray or prophesy in the open meeting of the church, though the woman must do it in such a way as to indicate that she recognizes the headship role of her husband. If she does so, there seems to be no objection to the fact that men would be present in the congregation, or any limitation placed on her for that reason. From the viewpoint of spiritual gifts, it seems clear that "in Christ there is neither male nor female" (Galatians 3:28c) and God expects every woman to have a ministry as much as he expects every male to have one.

 Commentary

While 1 Corinthians 11 does clearly indicate that both men and women were free to pray and prophesy, there are two considerations in order to understand this correctly. First, Stedman equates the gift of prophesying to “basically, preaching”. Prophecy, however, is not limited to preaching, as we understand it today. Paul defines the gift of prophecy as follows: “But one who prophesies speaks to men for edification and exhortation and consolation.” (1 Corinthians 14:3). In this passage, the word for men is ἄνθρωπος which refers to a human being, a person of either sex, (i.e. “mankind”). What Paul is saying then, in 1 Corinthians 11, is that both men and women can bring some word of edification, exhortation or consolation, to the church. This does not necessarily refer to teaching, as Paul uses that word in 1 Timothy 2.

Secondly, there is no mention of in what context this is to take place. Stedman (and others) assume that the women here would be praying and prophesying in the public worship service where men would be present. However, this is not stated in the text. These women could have been doing these things in the context of other women or children. When the context is the public worship gathering, Paul exhorts women to ‘stay silent in the churches’ (1 Cor. 14:34). We will further explain what Paul means later in this article.

In addition, Stedman, in the paragraph above, uses Galatians 3 to demonstrate equality of ministry between the sexes. However, Paul’s argument has nothing to do with ministry or giftedness. Paul is making the point that “you are all sons of God, through faith” (Gal. 3:26). The argument is one about being accepted into God’s family by faith, not one of serving God through the exercise of gifts in ministry.

Though the ministry of women in the New Testament churches is not prominent in the record, nevertheless, there are certain references which indicate they were frequently and widely used in various capacities. Almost all commentators agree that Priscilla and her husband Aquila were side-by-side companions of the Apostle Paul in his work both in Corinth and in Ephesus, and that of the two, Priscilla was the more gifted and capable teacher, since her name is most often listed first. (The statement that Priscilla was the more gifted teacher based on the order of reference, seems trite. Since Paul greets her first in Romans 16:3, are we to assume that he liked her better?) They were, together, the instructors of the mighty Apollos in his early preaching efforts. Here is a clear-cut case of a knowledgeable woman being used in the teaching of a man with no hint of an objection from Paul.

Commentary

In Acts 18:24ff we meet Apollos, a Jew from Alexandria who was “competent in the Scriptures.” Apollos was teaching throughout Ephesus and on one occasion Priscilla and Aquila heard him speak. Upon hearing him they recognized some deficiency in his teaching, so the passage tells us, “they took him aside and explained to him the way of God more accurately.” From this passage the argument is made that since the Scripture speaks of both

Priscilla and Aquila explaining the Scriptures, there is implied approval of a woman (Priscilla) teaching a man (Apollos).

There are two difficulties with this reasoning. The couple is said to have explained the way of God to Apollos. This could very simply mean that as a couple they heard him speak, asked to meet with him afterward, and jointly met with him while Aquila instructed him. Priscilla may or may not have verbally participated. Secondly, even if we allow that Priscilla participated in the instruction, we have to recognize that this is a very different context than a woman teaching a man in a public setting, which is what Paul prohibits in 1 Timothy 2:12, where he is instructing Timothy about “how one ought to behave in the household of God, which is the church of the living God.”

Further, in Paul's letter to the church in Philippi he urges an unnamed fellow-worker (probably Epaphroditus) to "help these women who have contended at my side in the cause of the gospel," (Philippians 4:3 NIV).

 In the letter to the Romans, he mentions other women who labored with him "in the Lord," (Romans 16:1-2, et al.).

Commentary

It would appear that Stedman introduces ideas into the text. There is no disagreement among evangelicals (or anyone else) that women participated in ministry. This is true of the Apostles as well of Jesus, himself. However, participating in ministry says nothing of what their role in that ministry was. Stedman makes the assumption that their participation must have included teaching. No such conclusion can be asserted from the text. To assume they taught is to go beyond what the text says.

 Perhaps no question would ever have arisen about the propriety of women's ministry were it not for two passages from Paul's hand which seem to lay severe restriction upon them. In First Corinthians 14 he says,

As in all the congregations of the saints, women should remain silent in the churches. They are not allowed to speak, but must be in submission, as the Law says. If they want to inquire about something, they should ask their own husbands at home, for it is disgraceful for a woman to speak in the church. (1 Corinthians 14:33b-35 NIV)

Again, in First Timothy 2 he says,

 A woman should learn in quietness and full submission. I do not permit a woman to teach or to have authority over a man; she must be silent. (1 Timothy 2:11-12 NIV)

 Taken by themselves, apart from their contexts, these two passages do seem to prohibit any kind of teaching ministry for women, especially in any public way, within the church. But let us look at some guidelines of interpretation which will help us in understanding just what the apostle means:

 Nothing in the above quoted passages can be taken in such a way as to contradict what the apostle himself permitted, or referred to with approval, in the practice of the church. He surely did not teach one thing and practice another. If, in First Corinthians 11, he speaks with approval of a woman praying or prophesying in public, as he does, then, surely, in First Corinthians 14 he does not contradict himself by forbidding women even to open their mouths in any circumstance in the public meeting of the church. We must, therefore, read the prohibition of Chapter 14 as applying to something other than the ministry of women permitted in Chapter 11.

 Commentary

Here Stedman rightly invokes the principle to let Scripture interpret Scripture and that one Scripture, rightly interpreted, will never contradict another. However, he forgets one principle – we should always interpret the less clear in light of the clearer. In fact, he does just the opposite. While 1 Timothy 2:12 is very clear, 1 Corinthians 11 is less so. Having also shown above that 1 Corinthians 11 does not give clear permission for women to teach men, the force of Stedman’s argument here is lost. We do not understand why but Stedman stretches the meaning of 1 Corinthians 14 to mean that the passages forbids women even to open their mouths in any public meeting—which is an incorrect interpretation and application of what Paul said.

 …these two passages do seem to prohibit any kind of teaching ministry for women, especially in any public way, within the church…

Commentary

Stedman appears to overlook that the context (see vv. 29-32) is prophesying in a public church gathering. Verse 30, where the word silent is used, means to refrain from prophesying but cannot be construed as a total prohibition from speaking in any way at a public gathering. For reasons unknown to us it would appear that Stedman is employing some sort of strawman argument.

 We must note that the immediate context of both passages quoted above has to do with the problem of disorder, and even some degree of defiance, in the actions of the women involved. In both passages, though widely separated as to recipients and locality, the word submission appears:

 In Corinth the problem was one of so conducting the meeting that edification of all present would be central; therefore tongues were to be controlled and limited, and so was the exercise of prophesying. Furthermore, they were to remember that "God is not a God of disorder but of peace," and then follows the warning against women speaking in the church. It is clear from this that the apostle was not concerned about women who properly exercised their gifts in prophesying or in praying but was greatly concerned about women who disrupted the meetings with questions and comments, and perhaps even challenged the teaching of apostolic doctrine with contrary views. This is what he prohibited, as Verse 37 makes crystal clear:

 If anybody thinks he is a prophet or spiritually gifted, let him acknowledge that what I am writing to you is the Lord's command. (1 Corinthians 14:37 NIV)

 He then closes the whole section with the admonition, "But everything should be done in a fitting and orderly way," (1 Corinthians 14:40 NIV).

 Commentary

Stedman rightly understands that Paul was instructing the Corinthian Church in proper order for worship. Chapters 12 – 14 primarily speak to the issue of the use of tongues and prophecy in public worship. In chapter 12, Paul begins to answer the question about spiritual gifts, speaking to the value of all gifts. There is no single gift that is more important than another. All are of equal importance to the health of the body. In chapter 13 he speaks to what he calls a “more excellent way.” That is, instead of disputes arising because of one’s giftedness, we should hold high the value of loving one another, and letting that love be our focus rather than our performance. Finally, in 14:1-25 Paul addresses the right and wrong ways to use the gifts of tongues and prophecy.

 Having said all that, he then says in 14:26, “What then, brothers?” In other words, “now that I’ve instructed you properly about the uses and abuses of gifts, what does an orderly worship service look like?” It is in this context that Paul states, “As in all the churches of the saints, the women should keep silent in the churches. For they are not permitted to speak…” Paul does not limit this instruction only to Corinth, which Stedman argues had a particular problem with unruly women. Instead, he writes this as a principle “in all the churches.” Are we then to assume that every church had the same problem with unruly women who were speaking out of turn? While this may, or may not, have been the case, Paul does not speak this as a corrective only in situations where women are unruly, but as a rule of proper order in all the churches. This is indicated when he says in verse 36, “Or was it from you that the word of God came: Or are you the only ones it has reached?” In effect he is saying, “Don’t think you can behave differently in worship than all the other churches. The word of God is clear to everyone.”

 There is another element in the context that may help us understand Paul’s words in these two verses. For what we read in verse 35, the women referred to here are married women (they are to ask their own husbands at home). So, the issue of submission is clear. With all the freedom women had gained in the church (opposed to the Roman, Greek and Jewish cultures) they must remember that they are commanded by God to submit to their husbands.

 The word to Timothy (who was probably living at Ephesus) is similar in character. The general context in which these words about women appear is concerned with regulating the behavior of Christians at meetings, as 3:14 makes clear:

Although I hope to come to you soon, I am writing you these instructions so that, if I am delayed, you will know how people ought to conduct themselves in God's household, which is the church of the living God, the pillar and foundation of the truth. (1 Timothy 3:14-15 NIV)

 In line with this purpose, Paul tells the men how to pray (without anger or disputing), and the women how to adorn themselves (not with fine clothing but with good works), and from this he moves to the words of prohibition against a woman teaching or having authority over a man. These words cannot be taken as an absolute (no woman should ever teach a man) for if that were true Paul should have rebuked Priscilla for having a part in instructing Apollos. The words "have authority over" provide us the key to understanding this passage. Women should not be permitted the role of authoritative definers of doctrine within the church. They must not be permitted to do this, even though they may mean well, for the role of authoritative interpreters is given by the Holy Spirit to the apostles and elders, who, in the New Testament, were invariably men. This is supported by Paul's references to Adam and Eve which follows.

 Commentary

The argument that “These words cannot be taken as an absolute…” is proven false since he bases that statement on the assumption that Priscilla was instructing Apollos, which we addressed earlier.

 We also have to recognize that the conjunction in 1 Timothy 2:12 is “or”, as Stedman rightly quotes. If the passage said, “I do not permit a woman to teach and to exercise authority…”, there may be reason to consider this a prohibition only against women being “authoritative definers of doctrine.” Since it says, “to teach or exercise authority” we must see these as two separate prohibitions, carrying the meaning, “I do not permit a woman to teach, nor do I permit women to exercise authority over a man.”

 We also need to see the emphasis Paul makes in verses 11 and 12:

  • A woman must quietly receive instruction à I do not allow a woman to teach

  • With entire submissiveness à I do not allow a woman to exercise authority over a man (see note about the “or” above)

The fact that Paul is stating the same principle twice in back to back verses should leave clear his intent. (this same parallelism can be made with the 1 Corinthians passage).

 From this we are warranted in drawing certain conclusions to guide our conduct today: Women certainly can teach. They are given the gift of teaching as freely as it is given to men, and they must exercise those gifts. Women can teach within the context of church meetings. They are certainly free to teach children and other women without question but are free to teach men as well if what they are teaching is not a challenge to the understanding of doctrine held by the elders of the church. Many godly and instructed women know far more about the Scriptures then many men, and it would be both absurd and unscriptural to forbid such men to learn from such women.

Commentary

We believe that Stedman has not proven this point in his exposition. We firmly agree that God has gifted women for ministry and that all of the gifts the Holy Spirit gives are available to all believers, including women. However, we differ from him in believing that God, in his sovereignty and through His revealed Word, has declared that only men should teach in a public church setting where other men are present.

Even the elders should recognize the often unique and godly insights of gifted women teachers and should seek their input in arriving at an understanding of the Scriptures. It is, however, the duty of elders to make the final decision of what is to be taught. No woman may participate in this.

 It is my hope that this brief survey will help many in understanding the difficulties involved in answering the question with which we began. I, personally, thank God for the gifted woman teachers among us at PBC and rejoice that we have little or no problem with the question of proper authority in this matter.

Commentary

While there are a multitude of legitimate, and very valuable, ways that women minister in the context of the church, we have to conclude that teaching publicly where men are present and having authority over men are not included in that list.

God forbid that we should ever limit a woman’s contribution in ministry based on cultural or man-made hierarchy, or ever put limits on women beyond what God Himself establishes. He created two sexes with purpose, as part of His divine plan for mankind. Let us continue to appreciate the value of each, while recognizing and affirming the God-given distinctions.

 

 Note: The next article is found in Relevant Magazine:

 

 

Relevant Magazine Article:

 

YES CHURCHES NEED WOMEN WHO TEACH, LEAD, AND PREACH: A BIBLICAL RESPONSE

 

The following article was critiqued by Pastor Christopher Gee. This article was apparently written with great emotion and is less measured than the Stedman article. The writer was a student at Fuller Seminary. Despite her shaky approach, we chose her article because “Relevant Magazine” has a young adult/ millennial readership and we thought to include it for that reason. I’m grateful to Chris Gee for his measured and grace-filled approach.

Keith C.

RELEVANT

Yes, Churches Need Women Who Teach, Lead and Preach

·       POSTED ONOCTOBER 21, 2019

·       5 MINUTE READ

·       KAT ARMAS

 

 There’s been a lot of buzz surrounding women lately. From Hollywood and #MeToo to Christians and #ChurchToo, women are demanding their voices be heard … and many are listening. Women everywhere are echoing Oprah’s famous line—“A new day is on the horizon!”—from her empowerment speech during Golden Globes.

But naturally, just like everything else in culture, not everyone agrees—particularly when it comes to women’s role in the Church. After John Piper came out with a response stating women should not pastor (or teach), Twitter users took it as an opportunity to promote, encourage and affirm the women who have impacted them in their faith and in their theology. Names of women rolled in for hours and with reason. Historically, women have been crucial aspects of the Church’s growth and spiritual formation. It’s apparent women belong in leadership.

 

Here are five reasons why:

1)    WOMEN WERE FOUNDATIONAL TO THE SPREADING OF JESUS’ MESSAGE.

 

Not only was “the woman at the well” the first evangelist to Samaria, and the women at the tomb the first witnesses and proclaimers of Jesus’s resurrection, but Mary of Bethany was affirmed by Jesus as “doing the right thing” in “sitting at Jesus’ feet.” In antiquity, “sitting at the feet” literally meant “being a disciple.” Even Paul, during his ministry made mention of several leading women in his salutation to the Roman Church (Romans 16). Among these were Junia the apostle and Phoebe, Paul’s emissary and the translator of the letter. We also know of several house-church leaders like Chloe and Nympha (1 Corinthians 1:11, Colossians 4:15), and Priscilla, who also taught Apollos “the more accurate way” about Jesus.

If women were crucial in leading Jesus’s movement in the very beginning, why wouldn’t they be as crucial in doing so now?

 

Scripture teaches that women are permitted to preach the Gospel to both men and women (Matt. 28:16-20), so there is no problem with the woman at the well being an evangelist.

 

We will make a few observations about curious examples given statement 1:

  

1)    WOMEN WERE FOUNDATIONAL TO THE SPREADING OF JESUS’ MESSAGE.

 

Comment:

We don’t know of anyone who would differ with this observation. Nevertheless, we do find the writer’s subsequent argumentation inaccurate or confusing. We will examine it and explain why using the following examples:

 

“but Mary of Bethany was affirmed by Jesus as “doing the right thing” in “sitting at Jesus’ feet.” In antiquity, “sitting at the feet” literally meant “being a disciple.”

 

Comment:

Mary sitting at the feet of Jesus has nothing to do with leadership or teaching. No one has suggested that women are excluded from following Jesus. However, the point of the passage is not that Mary was a disciple, per se; that is a given throughout all Gospel accounts. The point of the passage is priority. Mary had the right priorities. Martha did not. Mary’s priority in this vignette is one of eternal consequence while Martha is distracted by the cares of the world (Luke 10:38-42). The passage has nothing to do with leadership or preaching.

 

“Among these were Junia the apostle and Phoebe, Paul’s emissary and the translator of the letter.”

Comment:

Nowhere in Scripture is Junia described as an apostle. It is not correct to say that Junia was an apostle. Romans 16:7 reads, “Greet Andronicus and Junia, my kinsmen and my fellow prisoners. They are well known to the apostles.” This verse does not imply that Junia was an apostle; rather, it simply states that she, probably because of her ministry, was “well known” to the actual apostles.

 In regard to Phoebe, it is clear she delivered the letter of Romans, but it is difficult to determine  how or where the author gets that she was also the translator of the letter. We searched a 2017 blog post by the same author on Phoebe but found nothing to indicate how she drew this conclusion. Perhaps it was an extrabiblical account. Either way, neither delivering the letter or translating it implies teaching or having authority over a man (2 Timothy 2:12-13).

 We also know of several house-church leaders like Chloe and Nympha (1 Corinthians 1:11, Colossians 4:15)…

Comment:

This is another puzzling interpretive choice. It seems a bit of a stretch to say that Chole and Nympha were “house-church leaders.” For example, Colossians 4:15 only states that the church met in Nympha’s house. People today host small groups in their homes but do not necessarily lead or facilitate. Nympha may have simply hosted the church in her home. There is an absence of evidence that she preached, taught, or exercised any authority in this church. The temptation to read one’s bias into the text must be resisted. We are reminded that the Mormon Church practices proxy baptism based upon the inconclusive and vague statement in 1 Corinthians 15:29.

 

and Priscilla, who also taught Apollos “the more accurate way” about Jesus.

Comment:

Even today in churches where women do not teach mixed gender groups, it is not uncommon for a couple to co-facilitate a small group, disciple another couple, or evangelize an individual in their own residence. The writer oddly omits reference to, or fails to make mention of, Aquilla. Why do we mention this? Priscilla is always listed with her husband, and in Acts 18:26, the couple took Apollos aside “and explained to him the way of God more accurately.” Apollos “knew only the baptism of John” (v. 25) and had some significant gaps in his knowledge. Thus, Priscilla and Aquilla stepped in to fill in those gaps and strengthen his foundation in the Christian faith.

 It is possible that Apollos was not yet a true Christian, but fell into the category of an Old Testament “God-fearer,” one who worshiped the one true God but did not have a complete knowledge of the Gospel. In this case, Priscilla and Aquilla’s teaching would be more akin to evangelism, explaining fully the person and work of Christ. This could potentially be the case since before meeting Priscilla and Aquilla, Apollos “taught accurately the things concerning Jesus” (v. 25), but only after their instruction/evangelism does Luke say Apollos was explicitly “showing by the Scriptures that the Christ was Jesus” (v. 28).

 It is interesting to note that Priscilla played a part in equipping Apollos, but she herself did not participate in Apollos’ ministry in which he “spoke and taught accurately the things concerning Jesus” (v. 25) and “powerfully refuted the Jews in public, showing by the Scriptures that the Christ was Jesus” (v. 28). Priscilla apparently knew more than Apollos, but she left the public preaching and teaching to him.

 

2) WOMEN ARE GIFTED FOR MINISTRY IN THE CHURCH.

 Nowhere in the New Testament are the Spirit’s gifts gender-specific. In fact, Joel the Prophet spoke concerning Pentecost, “In the last days, God says, I will pour out my Spirit on all people. Your sons and daughters will prophesy … Even on my servants, both men and women, I will pour out my Spirit in those days, and they will prophesy.” Since we are living post-Pentecost, we can be sure God has poured out His Spirit on all flesh—both men and women. This also includes young, old and people in every ethnic group. The Holy Spirit has gifted the Church with the ministries and offices that it needs for its mission, as well as for the purpose of building one another up.

 In 1 Corinthians, Paul addresses both “brothers and sisters” when speaking of the gifts, claiming some will perform miracles, some will prophesy, some will be teachers, others evangelists and even others pastors. These are gifts distributed by the Spirit to both men and women, as God sees fit.

 Shouldn’t women use the gifts given to them by God to lead the Church, for its uplifting and edification?

Comment:

We completely agree that women are gifted for ministry in the church and that they should use their gifts to uplift and edify. However, while it is true that “nowhere in the New Testament are the Spirit’s gifts gender-specific,” there are several places in which an office is gender-specific. Elders must be “the husband of one wife” (1 Tim. 3:2; Titus 1:6). Paul assumes that elders are men only. While women can and should use their gifts to serve the Lord, Scripture reserves the office of an elder for men.

The author says, “In 1 Corinthians, Paul addresses both “brothers and sisters” when speaking of the gifts, claiming some will perform miracles, some will prophesy, some will be teachers, others evangelists and even others pastors.” We believe the author is referencing 1 Corinthians 12:27-28, which reads “Now you are the body of Christ and individually members of it. And God has appointed in the church first apostles, second prophets, third teachers, then miracles, then gifts of healing, helping, administrating, and various kinds of tongues.” Brothers and sisters is not found in the original language; however, it is found in some new gender neutral translations.

That said, while it is true that there is no reference to gender here, it also does not preclude that some of these gifts could have been reserved for men only. In fact, the most natural reading would assume that “apostles” would be all male, since indeed, all twelve apostles were men. Our concern, as it was in the discussion of Mary and Martha is that the author misses the point of the passage. The point of this passage, which follows the body metaphor of the church, is not that every gift is given to both genders, but that believers possess various gifts and each serves a unique role in the body of Christ.

The author also fails to take into account the wider context of 1 Corinthians. In 1 Corinthians 14:

“What then, brothers? When you come together, each one has a hymn, a lesson, a revelation, a tongue, or an interpretation. Let all things be done for building up. If any speak in a tongue, let there be only two or at most three, and each in turn, and let someone interpret. But if there is no one to interpret, let each of them keep silent in church and speak to himself and to God. Let two or three prophets speak, and let the others weigh what is said. If a revelation is made to another sitting there, let the first be silent. For you can all prophesy one by one, so that all may learn and all be encouraged, and the spirits of prophets are subject to prophets. For God is not a God of confusion but of peace.” (1 Corinthians 14:26–33)

Why is this passage of importance? Ignoring for the moment the use of the term “brothers,” the Holy Spirit, speaking through the pen of the Apostle, makes it clear that possessing a gift does not include using it how one pleases or outside the prescriptions of Scripture. There are what one could call “designer specifications” limiting or restricting the use of one’s gifts. The Designer is God and His specifications are found in His Word. Those who spoke in tongues were restricted in their use. Those who prophesied were restricted in their use. Similarly, regardless of one’s gift set, they may not exercise those gifts beyond the specifications of God’s word, regardless of the culture or one’s ideology.

 

2)    WOMEN BEAR GOD’S IMAGE, TOO. 

In the creation narrative, men and women were both given an equal responsibility to bear God’s image, have dominion/”rule” over creation, and be fruitful. In both genders being “made in the image of God,” we understand that the fullness of God’s personhood is expressed in not only in masculinity, but also in femininity. We were created to be reflections of God—to speak and act for Him in our distinctions.

 God affirms this when He uses female-specific imagery when relating to His people—like a bear to her cubs (Hosea 13:8), an eagle hovering over her young (Deuteronomy 32:11), a mother comforting and weaning her child (Isaiah 66:13, Psalm 131:2), a nursing woman (Isaiah 49:15) and a woman in labor (Psalm 131:2). Even Jesus compares Himself to a mother hen (Matthew 23:37).

If God is reflected in both masculine and feminine terms when nurturing His people, shouldn’t both genders be reflected in leadership—when nurturing members of the Church?  

This leads to the next point:

 Comment:

We agree that women, along with men, bear the image of God (Gen. 1:27). Men and women have equal value and equal standing before God, and both were given the responsibility to rule over creation. However, we do not follow the author’s logic when she says, “If God is reflected in both masculine and feminine terms when nurturing His people, shouldn’t both genders be reflected in leadership—when nurturing members of the Church?” Just because women are made in God’s image and God uses feminine illustrations to describe aspects of His love does not mean that He has ordained women to be leaders, elders, or preachers in the church (1 Tim. 2:12-13; 1 Tim. 3:1; Titus 1:5-6). That is quite a logical leap.

 

4) WOMEN NEED WOMEN ADVOCATES.

It’s no surprise that men and women are different—each having different experiences and different needs. Because of this, we need a diversity of voices in leadership who can guide and pastor men and women and speak to their particular situations. Diversity in leadership is tantamount to authentic discipleship and foundational for healthy relationships and growth within a community of people.

When making important decisions in the Church, female perspectives are necessary to speak into issues that men cannot relate to and don’t have firsthand experience in. No one knows the needs of women better than women. Shouldn’t leadership in the Church reflect the diversity of its members?

Particularly in our current culture, with sexual abuse stories being exposed within the Church, it’s more important than ever for women to be represented when it comes to making decisions in leadership on behalf of the community.

 Comment:

There is no basis in Scripture for this argument. Moreover, this argument appears to be based on the faulty assumption that women in biblical churches are somehow without a voice, without influence, and without any representation whatsoever.

 In short, it’s a pragmatic and emotional argument, not a biblical one. However, we do generally agree that there is wisdom in having women in leadership within the bounds that God has set, namely that women should have a specific discipling ministry to other women (Titus 2:3-5). The author’s argument that, “it’s no surprise that men and women are different—each having different experiences and different needs,” actually supports the notion that women should be focusing on ministering to women and men should be focusing on ministering to men since one tends to understand one’s own gender better. Who better to serve and represent women than women (Titus 2:3-5)?

 This, of course, does not preclude fellowship among brothers and sisters in Christ, nor does it preclude the example the author gave that men should listen to women on issues like sexual abuse. There is no need, however, for women to preach and teach on these issues with biblical authority and thus violate 1 Timothy 2:12; rather they can help men understand these issues in personal conversations, by sharing a testimony, doing a Q&A, or sharing their thoughts in a public setting: congregational meetings, committee meetings, fellowship groups, Sunday school classes, counseling, and small groups.

 

5) WHEN WOMEN ARE EMPOWERED, SOCIETY AS A WHOLE FLOURISHES.

We know that on a global scale, women are among the most oppressed people. In certain countries, many women have no rights in society, are sold like cattle for a bride price, forced into sex slavery and in some places, not even allowed to show their face in public. However, organizations like UN Women and the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), among others, have reported on studies that show how much of a vital contribution—and even complete shift in society—women make when they are educated and empowered. UN Women found that increased educational attainment for women and girls accounts for about 50 percent of the economic growth in OECD countries over the past 50 years. Over half of this is due to girls having had access to higher levels of education and achieving greater equality in the number of years spent in education between men and women.

Similarly, a study using data from 219 countries found that, for every additional year of education for women, the child mortality rate decreased by 9.5 percent.

These are only a couple statistics among hundreds that prove that women’s equality is necessary for human flourishing. When women are empowered, everyone wins.

If this is true on a grand and global scale, wouldn’t it be true for the overall health and growth of the Church? If women are celebrated, empowered and given freedom to exercise their gifts in leadership as God intends, imagine what it could do for the global Church—God’s kingdom on Earth as He intended—a glorious, united and beautifully vibrant people.

 Comment:

Is anyone in the 21st century church arguing against the education of women within the church, or their participation in church matters? This is not the issue. We agree women play a vital role in society, economics, and culture. The issue is God’s ordained role for women in the church.

 A few more thoughts:

  1.  The crux of the issue lies in 1 Timothy 2:12–15, which states, “I do not permit a woman to teach or to exercise authority over a man; rather, she is to remain quiet. For Adam was formed first, then Eve; and Adam was not deceived, but the woman was deceived and became a transgressor. Yet she will be saved through childbearing—if they continue in faith and love and holiness, with self-control.”

    • participation in the local church (or the global church, for that matter).

    • This is not a command that was only relevant for Paul’s culture, for Paul grounds this command in the creation narrative. He argues that Adam being made first and Eve second implies male leadership in the church. He uses the creation order and the “primacy of the first born” to illustrate his point (Christ being the first born of all creation pictures this motif as well—Col. 1:15). Furthermore, the fall reinforces the role of leadership for males. It was when Eve left the protection of Adam’s leadership that she fell, and it was when Adam abdicated his responsibility as leader and followed the voice of Eve that he fell.

    • It seems God has always chosen to use men to lead His people. Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, the heads of the 12 tribes, Moses, David, Solomon, Ezra, Nehemiah, the prophets, and all 12 apostles were men. There are extremely rare exceptions (Deborah, Anna the prophetess), but these rare exceptions seem to only prove the rule. Furthermore, these women leaders appear in narrative texts, which are descriptive rather than prescriptive. Passages like 1 Timothy 2:11-15 are prescriptive for how the church must function.

  2. It seems God has always chosen to use men to lead His people. Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, the heads of the 12 tribes, Moses, David, Solomon, Ezra, Nehemiah, the prophets, and all 12 apostles were men. There are extremely rare exceptions (Deborah, Anna the prophetess), but these rare exceptions seem to only prove the rule. Furthermore, these women leaders appear in narrative texts, which are descriptive rather than prescriptive. Passages like 1 Timothy 2:11-15 are prescriptive for how the church must function.

Women may be highly gifted teachers and leaders, but those gifts are not to be exercised over men in the service of the church. Gifts are given to all regardless of gender but with the distinction that the exercise of gifts is to be according to the prescriptions of Scripture.

 KAT ARMAS

Kat Armas is passionate about theology, coffee, and the ways the two intersect. She is currently living in Los Angeles, California, and pursuing a Master of Divinity at Fuller Seminary with a focus on New Testament studies. Kat and her husband own a coffee roasting company (www.therunningover.com). Their goal is to provide the best cup of joe, while building deep and meaningful connections with farms and communities overseas. Besides drinking coffee, Kat enjoys vegan food, books and blogging. You can read more of her work at www.katarmas.com. Find her on Twitter @kat_armas.

 

Women in Ministry, Part 1

We are teaching through the Pastoral Epistles (1 Timothy, 2 Timothy, and Titus). Today, on June 14, we are handling one of the more controversial passages in the NT and the Pastoral Epistles. The links provided below are intended to supplement the study of those who hear today’s message.

We are doing this as part of our series on “Church Matters” at Hillside. Our thesis is that church matters matter to God and so they should matter to us. 1 Timothy 3:14-15 tells us that there is a wrong way and a right way to do church, in God’s sight. Consequently, the Holy Spirit tells us through the pen of the Apostle Paul that He writes so that Timothy (the recipient of Paul’s letter) will know how to conduct himself (and teach or show others how to conduct themselves) in the household of God, the Church of the living God, the foundation and buttress of the truth (1 Timothy 3:14-15).

Paul begins with a discussion of doctrine and its importance. We find this discussion in 1 Timothy 1:3, jumping to this topic immediately after the letter’s greeting. In discussing the importance of doctrine first, God sets our priorities in order—which is the purpose for this Epistle to the Church at Ephesus. Timothy was based in Ephesus at the time doing a church reset. We also discussed how important doctrine is because it determines practice. We looked to Jesus’ discussion of doctrine in John 4,  with the woman at the well. From doctrine, we went to 1 Timothy 2, with a discussion of proper practice within the worship services and moving into chapter 3, the right kinds of people to lead the church in teaching and spiritual leadership (1 Timothy 3:1-7 and Titus 1:6ff). It is in the midst of this discourse that one encounters that verse that confounds so many, 1 Timothy 2:12.

 I do not permit a woman to teach or to exercise authority over a man; rather, she is to remain quiet. (1 Timothy 2:12)

 This verse is part of a larger discourse (1 Timothy 2:11-15). As a man, it’s always difficult to teach this passage because of the variety of effects it has upon women who hear. It’s never easy to explain.  With this in mind, I thought to add two resources written by women on this sensitive subject.

 The first is by Mary Kassian. Mary Kassian is an author, speaker, and professor of women’s studies at The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, in Louisville, KY.  She has written quite a few books, studies, and appeared in videos including but not limited to: Girls Gone Wise, The Right Kind of Strong, as well as the article we are linking to at the Desiring God website.  Her article is entitled, “Women Teaching Men—How Far is Too Far.” You can find it here. Kassian asks and answers questions relating to a practical and biblical working out of how far is too far. She takes a sane, serious, and careful approach to the topic.  

 The second article is more of a technical, exegetical study of the passage by Ann L. Bowman.  Ann L. Bowman, a seminary professor and writer, looks at the flow of the passage, the grammatical structures, and does a verse by verse lexical-syntactical analysis to understand and provide answers to the tough questions people wrestle through as they confront 1 Timothy 2:11-15). Her article was published in Bibliotheca Sacra, the well-respected theological journal of Dallas Theological Seminary.  You can find her article here and download it in pdf form.

 What I appreciate about these two writers is their serious and biblical approach. There are many unserious discussions these days, relating to these topics. Neither Kassian nor Bowman appeal to emotion, as so many do. They do not attempt to discredit the passage with a “hath God really said approach,” ala Genesis 3. They provide a straightforward and serious discussion of the meaning of the text and its implications for women in ministry. I hope you will give these articles a read, particularly given the era in which we live. They also provide us with a good witness as both women are good Bereans who search the Scripture to see if these things are true. In so doing, they set an example worthy of our emulation.

An Open Letter to to the Governor, the Mayor, and the County Health Officer.

Hello Hillside,

Below you will find the letter I wrote the state and local politicians. To provide you context please read my rationale in the paragraphs below. The actual letter to the state and local politicians is in bolded font.

When the initial order came to shelter in doors, we as a faith community honored that request because of what the Apostles Paul and Peter wrote in God’s Word in Romans 13:1-7 and 1 Peter 2: 13-17. We obeyed and “honored the king” because we wanted to shepherd the flock of God among us, as elders (1 Peter 5:1-4). These passages provided a tension with Hebrews 10:24-25, the command not to forsake the assembling together for worship.

Santa Clara County took the lead in enacting protective measures, seemingly getting the spread of COVID-19 under control. Of course, some wondered if it was more the tech giants who accomplished this because they sent their employees home and encouraged their safety. Regardless, churches are filled with vulnerable populations and all the modeling and ‘science’ suggested that this was best for our people. To that end we improvised online services, shopping for groceries for seniors, et al. As elders, we are grateful for how all of you stepped up.

However, as time passed it became increasingly clearer that the modeling and science were… well… not so scientific after all. Countries like Denmark are open for business… one might say… the state of Florida has been opened but cautious for about 3 weeks, Georgia and South Carolina have followed. The “Central Valley Counties” slower than Santa Clara to close have begun reopening. Santa Clara County lags well behind. Something like 1200 churches in Southern California opened on May 31st, some right here in San Jose. Entrepreneur Elon Musk reopened his Tesla factory in defiance of government policy. Still, we sought to stick to the text of Scripture.

Sadly, George Floyd was brutally and unjustly killed (some would say murdered) during his arrest. Protests and riots followed. City, county, state, and other local governments around the country accommodated the desire to protest. Protesters did not observe social distancing and neither did the criminals who robbed, looted, and assaulted people. We have been asked to limit outside worship services to 25 people. It has been suggested we may reopen for worship with 25% of building capacity or 100 persons, whichever is less. Our building is rated for 1,000 people. Twenty five percent of that figure is 250 but we are limited to 100… based on what? It has become increasingly clear over time that well-intended government officials are creating policy that seems more and more subjective. Meanwhile, “essential” businesses and services are opening…

Consequently, seeing as the government is selectively enforcing its own laws while allowing some to break them, we find ourselves (biblically) in a position where “the king” no longer honors the rule of law. Our desire to honor God via Hebrews 10:24-25 gains ascendence in the tension with the other passages. Blindly clinging to Romans 13 is not a tenable position. Therefore, yesterday, this letter was sent to the governor, the mayor, the Santa Clara Health Officer, and various councilmen and state senators. We ask that you prayerfully consider adding to this letter by responsibly writing and communicating as individual citizens. The letter is an open letter sent to media and politicians alike. I will provide email addresses at the bottom of this page, after a copy of the letter.

June 8, 2020

Delivered via FedEx and Email

 

Governor Gavin Newsom          Mayor Sam Liccardo                  Dr. Sara Cody, County Public Health

1303  10th Street, Ste 1173        200 E. Santa Clara Street          976 Lenzen Avenue

Sacramento, CA  95814            San Jose, CA  95113                 San Jose, CA  95126

Your Honors,

It grieves me to be writing concerning events surrounding the unjust killing (some would say murder) of George Floyd in the Twin Cities. Atrocities of this nature tend to have a global effect beyond their localities. Events such as these have collateral effects. This is one such case.

I am writing to you on behalf of houses of worship, including my own, to do the right, wise, and logical thing in the face of recent developments. What do I mean? Due to circumstances beyond your control, the protest gatherings and riots in California, San Jose, and across the nation have nullified the efficacy of the various COVID-19 countermeasures presently in force. I suppose it is not your fault. It is the result of the situation on the ground. One has to admit that due to circumstances beyond your control, your policies are rendered ineffective and ineffectual. They are irretrievably compromised.

Neither the legitimate protesters nor the rioters are observing social distancing, nor are they taking countermeasures to assure their safety and the safety of others from infection. The communities to which they will return will be effectively compromised. Regardless of the goodwill and best intentions of governments, the reality is that the proverbial horse is out of the barn (or the birds have left the nest), and you cannot return or recover them. Since it would have been impossible to enforce these restrictions on the protesters and rioters it is no one's fault. It is merely the situation on the ground (call it prevailing environmental circumstances). Even before the protests and riots, boredom and societal fatigue have progressively worked against the strict observance of public health policies. Things will only get worse as the summer progresses. I think you have to acknowledge this reality.

Attempting to ratchet these policies back up would be unwise and maybe even impossible.  To continue to impose these measures on gatherings of law-abiding worshippers in light of the protests would appear (and would be) selective, discriminatory, and unethical. I realize it’s difficult to hold those crowds to the standard, but now—by default—you will find yourself in the unenviable position of singling out churches like mine (and other houses of worship) when (by default) other mass gatherings are tolerated. That is bad policy indeed, not to mention terrible optics.

California is facing a long hot summer and will need all the help it can get. Communities around the country, the state, Santa Clara County, and San Jose need the ‘services’ of houses of worship and similar aid groups. We provide essential emotional, psychological, and spiritual grounding to people, many of whom are pent up, or in distress.  Last Sunday (May 31st), many churches ignored the ban. We did not. Now there seems no longer any credible reason to wait.

Do yourself and your constituents a service. Remove the restrictions on houses of worship and trust us to do what other essential groups have done—govern ourselves responsibly. Don’t make a difficult situation worse—lift the ban by July 1, 2020. Again, circumstances have rendered these restrictions unenforceable, and these crowds have irretrievably compromised and crippled the efficacy of your efforts. We hope to reopen on July 12, 2020. We hope to do so with your support and blessing.

Respectfully,

Keith Crosby

Lead Pastor

 

 cc:   Senator Jim Beall

        Vice Mayor Chappie Jones

        City Manager Dave Sykes

        Councilmember Dev Davis

        Councilmember Maya Esparza

        County Board of Supervisors President Cindy Chavez

        State Assembly Member Ash Kalra

        State Assembly Member Candidate Alex Lee

        Mercury News Editor Neil Chase

        Mercury News Opinion Editor Ed Clendaniel

        Mercury News Managing Editor Bert Robinson

        Mercury News Managing Editor Randall Keith

        San Jose Insider News Editor Jennifer Wadsworth

Here is a community activist group in opposition to endlessly sheltering in place: https://savesantaclaracounty.com/

Here are emails of various politicians—please be courteous:

City CouncilsCity Council Cupertinocitycouncil@cupertino.org

city council palo altocity.council@cityofpaloalto.org

CC los altoscouncil@losaltosca.gov

CC san jose

+ personally to Liccardo and Dev Davis

mayoremail@sanjoseca.govDistrict1@sanjoseca.govDistrict2@sanjoseca.gov ,District3@sanjoseca.govDistrict4@sanjoseca.govDistrict5@sanjoseca.govDistrict6@sanjoseca.govDistrict7@sanjoseca.govDistrict8@sanjoseca.govDistrict9@sanjoseca.govDistrict10@sanjoseca.gov

CC los gatos

council@losgatosca.gov

CCmilpitas

rtran@ci.milpitas.ca.govkdominguez@ci.milpitas.ca.govcmontano@ci.milpitas.ca.govaphan@ci.milpitas.ca.govbnunez@ci.milpitas.ca.gov

CC mountain viewcitycouncil@mountainview.gov

CCcampbell

susanl@campbellca.govlizg@campbellca.govpaulr@cityofcampbell.comanneb@cityofcampbell.comrichw@campbellca.gov

CC GilroyAllCouncilMembers@ci.gilroy.ca.us

CCSunnyvale

kleincouncil@sunnyvale.ca.govsmithcouncil@sunnyvale.ca.govlarssoncouncil@sunnyvale.ca.govhendrickscouncil@sunnyvale.ca.govmeltoncouncil@sunnyvale.ca.govgoldmancouncil@sunnyvale.ca.gov

CC Santa Clara

mayorandcouncil@santaclaraca.gov

CC Morgan Hill

rich.constantine@morganhill.ca.govlarry.carr@morganhill.ca.govyvonne.martinezbeltran@morganhill.ca.govrene.spring@morganhill.ca.govjohn.mckay@morganhill.ca.gov

CC Saratoga

hmiller@saratoga.ca.usmlbernald@saratoga.ca.usrkumar@saratoga.ca.usmcappello@saratoga.ca.usyzhao@saratoga.ca.us

 

Making sense of the times we are in...

I am not in the habit of doing this. However, when someone says it better than I can, they deserve both the space and the credit. Below is an article from theologian and church historian Tom Ascol on the current state of affairs we are experiencing in the wake of the brutal killing of George Floyd. Ascol is spot on. You can find the original article here.

God’s Word in Godless Times, or the Appearance of Godliness in Signaling Virtue

TOM ASCOL

But understand this, that in the last days there will come times of difficulty. For people will be lovers of self, lovers of money, proud, arrogant, abusive, disobedient to their parents, ungrateful, unholy, heartless, unappeasable, slanderous, without self-control, brutal, not loving good, treacherous, reckless, swollen with conceit, lovers of pleasure rather than lovers of God, having the appearance of godliness, but denying its power. Avoid such people. For among them are those who creep into households and capture weak women, burdened with sins and led astray by various passions, always learning and never able to arrive at a knowledge of the truth.

—2 Timothy 3:1-7

Read those seven verses of God’s words again. Slowly. Now go check your twitter feed or simply do a social media search for #GeorgeFloyd, #GeorgeFloydProtests, and #GeorgeFloydRiots. Paul is talking about America in 2020. Just as he was talking about Ephesus in the late AD 60s as well as about other times and places between then and now. He is speaking of recurring “times of difficulty”—perilous times; what he elsewhere describes as “the evil day” (Ephesians 6:13).

Godlessness in society does not stay there but seeps into the church wreaking havoc among the people of God.

Such seasons will be characterized by severe problems in society as “people” (v. 2) in general will give themselves over to the types of wickedness Paul catalogues in verses 2-4. Such wickedness is characterized by selfishness (“lovers of self, lovers of money, proud, arrogant”) and lawlessness (“abusive, disobedient to their parents, ungrateful, unholy, heartless, unappeasable, slanderous, without self-control, brutal, not loving good, treacherous, reckless, swollen with conceit, lovers of pleasure rather than lovers of God”).

That is bad enough. What is worse, however, is that godlessness in society does not stay there but seeps into the church wreaking havoc among the people of God. The most unsettling part of what Paul says is coming is his description of how professing Christians will act. They will be “having the appearance of godliness, but denying its power” (v. 5).

Paul further describes these people within the church in verse 7—they will be unteachable, “always learning and never able to arrive at a knowledge of the truth.” Even more to the point, he warns in chapter 4, “For the time is coming when people will not endure sound teaching, but having itching ears they will accumulate for themselves teachers to suit their own passions and will turn away from listening to the truth” and will “wander off into myths” (vv. 3-4).

I am convinced that America is living in a peculiarly “evil day,” in “times of difficulty” of which Paul writes. The asphyxiation of George Floyd as he begged for mercy from Officer Derek Chauvin who, ignoring his pleas, slowly snuffed the life from his handcuffed body is an example of this. When a civil authority mercilessly ends the life of a person he is charged to serve and protect, the evil of his abusive, heartless, and brutal action is compounded.

The outbreak of lawlessness in the wake of George Floyd’s death is also evil. Mayhem, brutal attacks, destruction of people’s livelihood, intimidation, violence, and murder have marked the protests of the last week. Attacks on police officers, breaking into private homes, looting, stealing, and blatantly breaking just laws have become almost commonplace.

True godliness unashamedly declares what God has said and it does so not just when it is safe but even when that message might cost your life.

Such lawlessness in our society is tragic. But what is worse is the failure and even complicity of so many Christians in the face of it. In their responses they have, as Paul puts it, an appearance of godliness that denies its power (v. 3:5). True godliness unashamedly declares what God has said and it does so not just when it is safe but even when that message might cost your life. It is taking God at His Word regardless of cost or consequence and speaking that Word with confidence in its power. Thus, John the Baptist didn’t merely preach repentance in the wilderness, he also applied God’s Word to Herod that by telling him that he could not lawfully have his brother’s wife (Matthew 14:1-12).

The mere “appearance of godliness,” by contrast, is willing to say what God says when it isn’t costly. If doing so actually elevates you in the eyes of the curators of the prevailing cultural narrative, then more’s the better. It is what today is commonly called, virtue signaling. That is what a person does when he would rather be perceived as virtuous and applauded by the modern arbiters of “virtue” than actually be virtuous and risk being canceled as a result.

It’s sort of like the German Landeskirchen preaching on submission to governmental authorities in Nazi Germany. No one got arrested for that. But it was a failure of nerve, or rather, a denying of the power of godliness, that kept most German Protestants from speaking against the anti-Semitic butchery in 1941. It is easy to go with religion when she walks in silver slippers.

The prevalence of an apparent but impotent godliness is being widely and prominently paraded today. That is why you have seen such bold, articulate outcries against the lawlessness of Derek Chauvin but only reluctant, comparatively muted responses to the lawlessness of the violent mobs that have terrorized cities and communities across the nation in the days since. That is why demands for justice are readily applied to the former but only hesitantly—if at all—to the latter. That is why you saw so many evangelicals following the crowd in #BlackoutTuesday on their social media feeds, some even sporting the Black Lives Matter (BLM) hashtag for extra virtue points. Never mind that the BLM organization and movement intentionally promote godlessness in their stated goals and focus.

That is why you know the names of Breonna Taylor, Ahmaud Arbery, and George Floyd but not the names of David Dorn, Shay Mikalonis or Italia Kelly. From all indications each of them unjustly suffered violent deaths (although at this point Shay is being sustained on life-support) but only the first three serve the destructive agendas of those who want to rip apart the fabric of our civil society. True godliness is willing to apply the standard of God’s Word to each of these cases. Apparent godliness will stop at the first three because to speak further is to invite the vitriol of the mob and, well, who has the power to withstand that?

It is the holy Scripture that God breathed out to be our authoritative, sufficient guide for life and godliness.

So, what are Christians who fear God more than people to do in such godless, evil days? We are to do exactly what Paul tells Timothy to do in 2 Timothy 3:14-15 and 4:1-5. First, continue in the Word, and second, preach the Word.

It is the Holy Scripture that God breathed out to be our authoritative, sufficient guide for life and godliness. It alone is “profitable for teaching, for reproof, for correction, and for training in righteousness, that the man of God may be competent, equipped for every good work” (vv. 3:16-17). Such a man—especially pastors—must, like Timothy, preach that Word at all times with authority and conviction. That is what Paul means when he writes, “preach the word; be ready in season and out of season; reprove, rebuke, and exhort, with complete patience and teaching” (v. 4:2).

This is to be done even when people don’t want to hear it; when they “will not endure sound teaching” (v. 4:3) and “turn away from listening to the truth and wander off into myths” (v. 4:4). The Word alone is able to make people “wise for salvation through faith in Christ Jesus” (v. 3:15). So, if we who know the Lord and have His Word fail to preach it, we are withholding the only message that God has provided to reconcile sinners to Himself. And all the virtue signaling in the world cannot change that.

So this is the choice that Christians are facing in times of difficulty. We can settle for an appearance of godliness while denying its power and win the accolades of this age. Or we can pursue real godliness and trust its power thereby inviting the venom and opposition of the champions of this age. To put it another way, we can signal false virtue and be welcomed by those operating on false principles of righteousness. Or we can practice genuine virtue and be welcomed by the God whose Word we refuse to compromise.

What we cannot do is have it both ways.

Good Friday: The Story of Promises Kept!

What’s Good Friday? As we prepare to commemorate the crucifixion of Christ, many will ask us (or the thought will cross their mind): what’s “Good Friday” all about? This may present a rare opportunity to share your faith.

 Good Friday is all about the kept promises of God. It’s been said that those who forget the lessons of the past are sure to repeat them. Good Friday reminds us of our need for a Savior and God’s grace in offering (and providing) us forgiveness.

 God promised redemption long ago. Our “first parents,” the first people, Adam and Eve attempted a rebellion against God ages ago. God created them, gave them each other, and gave them His world, this planet, to take care of. His only requirement was that they trust Him. Their trust would be demonstrated by their obedience to His single requirement. All the earth would be theirs with the exception of one symbol of their trust in Him—the tree of the knowledge of good and evil. There are urban legends that suggest this was an apple tree. No one really knows. However, evil (sin) is defined by doing what God forbids. Adam and Eve would experience the knowledge of God and evil if they disobeyed God by taking of the fruit of that tree. It would be a demonstrable act of rebellion. The penalty would be death. In Genesis 2:17 God says this: “but of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil you shall not eat, for in the day that you eat of it you shall surely die.” (Genesis 2:17) Some translate the last phrase, “dying you will die.” That’s the literal translation. People wrestle with the grammar here. Some see it as an intensification of an idea, “surely die…” Others find the germ of an idea of a death that is not immediate but imminent. You can see that the Hebrew words contain the same comment element or root word (highlighted).

Genesis 2:17B ...מ֥וֹת תָּמֽוּת׃

 Personally, I see an intensification. But I think within it and the aftermath we see a hint of immediate spiritual death followed by an eventual physical death. Regardless, Adam and Eve disobeyed and received their death sentence and in time, they surely died. God had intended them to live forever but sin has consequences. It always does. You find the record of their rebellion and sentences pronounced in Genesis 3.

 God shows the rebels justice and mercy all at once. In pronouncing sentence upon them and the one who tempted them with the idea to rebel, God shows great mercy, kindness, and reason for hope. In sentencing Satan, He utters these words:

I will put enmity between you and the woman, and between your offspring and her offspring; he shall bruise your head, and you shall bruise his heel.” (Genesis 3:15)

 In the process of dealing with the first couple’s sin, God kills an innocent animal to clothe them. An innocent dies because of their sin. Some suggest this is a foreshadowing of Christ’s innocent sacrifice on behalf of humanity. Something else that is peculiar happens. Adam names his wife “Eve,” which roughly translated means “life” or “living.” An odd action for two people sentenced to death. This gets us back to Genesis 3:15. This is called the “protoevangelium”—the “first gospel.” Why? God promises a Rescuer.  God tells Satan that the seed of the woman will be injured by Satan, but He will crush Satan’s head, signifying defeat Satan and his kingdom. If you have some time, read Isaiah 49-55. It spells much of this out long before Christ is born in Bethlehem. The Messiah would not merely redeem Israel but the whole of the world who turns to Him.

 All of which brings us to the Cross and Good Friday. Here Christ receives His injury, when He is nailed to the cross to pay for our sin. The Bible says that He suffered in our place for our sin although He never sinned. He paid our debt, a debt we could not pay. You see this in Philippians 2:5-8 and you see the risen Christ explain this to His disciples in Luke 24:44-48:

Then he said to them, “These are my words that I spoke to you while I was still with you, that everything written about me in the Law of Moses and the Prophets and the Psalms must be fulfilled.” 45 Then he opened their minds to understand the Scriptures, 46 and said to them, “Thus it is written, that the Christ should suffer and on the third day rise from the dead, 47 and that repentance for the forgiveness of sins should be proclaimed in his name to all nations, beginning from Jerusalem. 48 You are witnesses of these things. (Luke 24: 44-48)

 His suffering is the wound that God describes in Genesis 3:15. God kept His promise to Adam and Eve. Through the seed of the woman, through the virgin born Son of God, God sent a rescuer to defeat sin and death on our behalf. Jesus suffered death for us (spiritual and physical) and then demonstrated His power over sin and death and showed His promises could be trusted by rising again on what some call Easter Sunday (Resurrection Sunday). As the writer of Hebrews tells us Jesus made the once for all sacrifice for our sin so that we may have forgiveness and eternal life, in heaven with God (if we trust in Him).

 Good Friday is the day where we commemorate Christ’s suffering for our sin. How He who was perfectly righteous died for those who were not. Good Friday is where we see the goodness and grace of God in a promise made long ago that was faithfully kept. And that’s why Jesus uttered on the cross “It is finished.” The Greek word is Τετέλεσται “tetelestai (paid in full)” or “finished for all time.” Grammatically, it is in the ‘perfect tense’ the tense of completion. God’s promise was accomplished and completed at the cross.

 Good Friday is about promises kept. We see the faithfulness of God in Christ to do for us what we could not do for ourselves, pay our debt in full—because we were morally bankrupt. After all, we all sin—all of us. We tell half-truths that are whole lies. We act selfishly. So, Christ died for us selflessly.

 There’s another promise associated with Good Friday. It’s more closely associated with the resurrection:

 …if you confess with your mouth that Jesus is Lord and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved. 10 For with the heart one believes and is justified, and with the mouth one confesses and is saved. 11 For the Scripture says, “Everyone who believes in him will not be put to shame.” 12 For there is no distinction between Jew and Greek; for the same Lord is Lord of all, bestowing his riches on all who call on him. 13 For “everyone who calls on the name of the Lord will be saved.” (Romans 10:9-13)

 Good Friday was both a dark and glorious day in history. The mysteries of Christ suffering and all He endured at the cross cannot be fathomed by men. Neither can the forgiveness He offers. We cannot understand it exhaustively, but we can understand it sufficiently to embrace it by faith, confidence, or trust in Him. Look again at the promise above in Romans 10:9-13. It is the promise of redemption through the debt Christ paid in full at the cross for you. You don’t have to earn anything. But you do have to admit your sin and believe Christ can save you and commit your soul to His care in a full surrender of your whole being as you call upon Him for salvation. Commit to Christ and you will be saved. Call upon Him as a sinner in need of forgiveness. He’s done all the work for you at the cross. And God kept His promise for a deliverer. If you haven’t already—call on the name of the Lord. And if you did that long ago, or previously and are His child. Remember how easy He’s made it for you by going to the cross in your place… a promise made and kept long ago. This Good Friday: be sure to thank Him. 

Coping with Cabin Fever (While Sheltering at Home)

In sunny California we continue to self-shelter. Anna, my daughter who is a tech worker, has many meetings and presentations to do, even from home. She works upstairs in our townhome. Teri, my wife, keeps us all going. She keeps in touch with our son-in-law and daughter, who shelter in place nearby. Me? I work downstairs in a separate room. In some ways the church is busier than before but in different ways. The pastoral team is continually moving, working, and innovating…filming services and classes to post online… and coordinating other ministry. They even teach live online classes on Tuesday Nights. But one thing is certain. We all look forward to returning to ‘normal.’ We know that this, too, shall pass.

And yet, we are all pretty much stuck in doors. For some it’s like being snowed in, which can be fun for a while… Notice the emphasis on the wording, “for a while.” Depending on your family size and the size of your home, you might be feeling the pressures associated with sheltering at home—indoors. So, let me offer some spiritual and logistical advice.

Spiritual Advice:

In some cases, we may find our patience beginning to wear thin with one another. Nobody’s perfect and it’s oh-so-easy to see those imperfections (especially) in others. You may be tempted to offer a little correction to others who are not as perfect as you (think) you are. Jesus provides us great advice, rather forcefully in Matthew 7:1-5.

Judge not, that you be not judged. 2 For with the judgment you pronounce you will be judged, and with the measure you use it will be measured to you. 3 Why do you see the speck that is in your brother’s eye, but do not notice the log that is in your own eye? 4 Or how can you say to your brother, ‘Let me take the speck out of your eye,’ when there is the log in your own eye? 5 You hypocrite, first take the log out of your own eye, and then you will see clearly to take the speck out of your brother’s eye. (Matthew 7:1-5)

What’s the gist of all this? Before you get upset with others, ask God and yourself if any of these shortcomings might present in you. I knew someone who made a list of stuff they didn’t like with their spouse. They took it to marriage counseling. They handed it to the counselor. The counselor examined this list thoroughly before asking, “Are you sure this isn’t a list of your behaviors?” That’s the point of verse 5: “first take the log out of your own eye, and then you will see clearly to take the speck out of your brother’s eye.” This passage isn’t a prohibition against evaluating behavior. Jesus is fine with that because in a paragraph later he talks about just that. It is a prohibition against hypocritically evaluating others without a little healthy self-critique or evaluation. As they say, “look before you leap…” and, therefore, “think before you judge.” And if you must speak into a knotty situation using Ephesians 4:29, ask the following questions:

Let no unwholesome talk come out of your mouths, but only such as is good for building up, as fits the occasion, that it may give grace to those who hear. (Ephesians 4:29)

Before you speak, ask:

  • Am I about to say this in a helpful or hurtful way?

  • Can I find a way to say this in a way that encourages or builds up rather than discourages?

  • As far as fitting the occasion, how’s my timing (can it wait)?

  • In these close quarters, will others who might overhear find my words gracious and helpful, too?

  • Is what I’m about to say necessary and pleasing to God

Think about it. Pray about it. You’ll be glad you did.

Logistical Advice:

Human beings typically are creatures of habit and routine.  The truth is that even the creative and innovative types have some sort of routine. We are all wired differently, and our routines may not look or be the same. But we have do routines. Armies have routines, banks have routines, even my cat, Scheherazade, has a schedule. Every single person and field of endeavor has a routine.

Try and stick to (or maintain) a routine, or your routine. Here in Silicon Valley many “Tech People” already work from home a couple of days a week. Others… not so much. For your sake and the sake of your family sheltering at home with you make things are predictable as possible. Too much uncertainty can create stress and strife.

Establish a new routine with your family as you shelter at home. Meet for breakfast, lunch, and dinner. Talk with and to one another. Pray after breakfast or dinner. Go for a walk together to get some sunshine. Establish a routine. Program an exercise time you can find online programs for subscription. My wife and I exercise right after breakfast.

Use this time to firm up or reestablish your connection to Christ. Establish or reestablish a routine of prayer, reading your Bible, and worship. Remember that our worship services are online, so if you missed the streaming you can go back. For worship services, click here. Last and not least, consider making outreach part of your routine. How? Invite people to church. People who would not normally accept an invitation to accompany you to your own church are more likely to click a link you email or text them in difficult times like this.

So, as you shelter indoors. Show a lot of grace. Establish a routine. Wait on the Lord.

Making the Most of the Time While Self-Sheltering (from someone with experience)

As some of you may be aware, my daughter, Grace, has been “trapped indoors” for almost 4 years as the result of being struck by a car in a crosswalk.  She also, among other challenges, has a suppressed immune system and is sensitive to infection, viruses, etc. Due to her injuries she is forced indoors. On her blog she gives simple and helpful advice about how to handle being “trapped” indoors and making the most of the time… making it meaningful. Below is an excerpt from her blog:  

 Being trapped indoors for several weeks sounds daunting – perhaps even terrifying, depending on your baseline activity or anxiety level. However, I’ve been “trapped” indoors for around three and a half years due to my neurological disabilities and I’ve learned plenty of tricks to keep my days not just full, but meaningful. Some of these I learned in occupational therapy, some I learned from managing online school, and some I learned from plain ol’ trial and error. Hopefully, they can help y’all relax and view this time as an opportunity instead of an obstacle.

 Make a plan. I was never a to-do list sort of girl before my accident, but I quickly became one afterward. Writing out a list of things to accomplish each day keeps you from feeling bored and also gives you a mood jolt every time you cross something off your list. “There’s nothing to do” is a dangerous slogan. There’s always something to do if you look hard enough. Besides, the more you say something, the more likely you are to believe it.

Set goals. This goes hand-in-hand with your daily to-do list but is more fun since it gives you concrete markers to aim for. Is there a book you’ve been wanting to read? Give yourself a certain number of days to finish it, then schedule a certain amount of reading time into each day. What about that Spring Cleaning project you’ve been threatening to start? Now’s the perfect time! The great part about being inside for a few weeks is that you don’t have to tackle everything all at once unless you want to. Instead, you can spread projects over multiple days by scheduling just a chunk of time per project per day. The important part is to stay consistent. Ready for the fun part about goal-setting? REWARDS! True, your reward bank might be a tad limited at the moment, but I bet you still have some rewards you can enjoy when you meet your goals. Or, if you really want something exotic, make another list of rewards to enjoy once you can go out again.

 Stay active. This is a HUGE one for me. I have to exercise around an hour a day due to residual physical deficits, but did you know the average adult needs 30 minutes of moderate exercise 5 times per week? None of us will be going to the gym any time in the near future, but you can find plenty of exercise videos on YouTube. For those of us who are fans of walking or running on the treadmill, Spotify has exercise playlists organized by BPM. I’m trying the 140 BPM playlist for at-home walking (I can’t run)…my only disclaimer is I’d be careful about this option if you live on the second floor of an apartment complex! And friendly reminder, “Shelter at Home” doesn’t mean you can’t go on an outdoor walk by yourself or with a family member. Fresh air is always the best medicine…just stay away from strangers while you’re taking it! 😉

 Set time limits. This one is both a “do” and a “don’t.” Scheduling activities to occur at certain points throughout your day and deciding how much time you will spend on each of them is a great way to make time fly. I’m frequently surprised at how quickly the time passes between my alarm ringing at 5:40 am (thank you, Ivan!) and my medication alert clattering at 5:30 pm. That being said, it’s a good idea to set limits on screen time as well. Vacations are notorious for Netflix and gaming binges, and there’s nothing necessarily wrong with that. But we’re in this for a lot more than one week, and staring at screens for hour upon hour as you lounge on a lumpy couch is NOT good for your mind and body. So, enjoy your “guilty” pleasures but set a timer on your phone and make sure you’re getting up to stretch or…ahem…exercise. Even wiser would be investing an equal or greater amount of time interacting with those around you and exercising your mind through activities like reading or learning something new (podcasts are a great place to start!)

These are just a few of the tips and tricks I’ve discovered over the past few years. Feel free to comment below or on Facebook if you have some of your own that you’d like to share. It’s true that we’re in for a difficult few weeks, but I also think it’s an excellent opportunity to practice “making the best use of the time, because the days are evil.” (Ephesians 5:16).