Seeds sprouted after

Ride a jeepney two hours into the beautiful green-clad mountains outside Butuan City, and you’ll reach a covered basketball court that serves as the community center for a small village. A group of medical missionaries were holding a clinic in the middle of the concrete pavilion one morning in late June. They had been welcomed that morning by the village captain and his assistant, who said, “I have lived here all my life, and this is the first time a medical clinic has come to our village.” Jordan and Sam, two college students, took temperatures and blood pressure, then gave everyone a number and sent them to some benches to wait until they were called.

Pastor Antonio leaned on a table near the benches. He was a brown-skinned Filipino with a thick and powerful build, and deep grooves that time had etched into his face. He had once been in the rebel army, but now his hardened face had a sublime tranquility in it, as he taught the people sitting on the benches about the Gospel. Behind Antonio was a large banner with pictures illustrating Bible stories that outlined the Gospel, the Gospel that changed his life and took him from military to ministry. He pointed to the box that depicted a cross on a hill, and addressed the small crowd in deep-voiced Cebuano. I knew what he was saying.

A few minutes later, Pastor Antonio called me over. “I want you to share your testimony,” he said. There was a new group of patients waiting at the benches. I agreed, exited at the opportunity and a little nervous. I told my story, about how I had been raised in the church, how I had wrestled with my father’s atheism, how I had fallen into secret sins that taught me God’s patient love, how I had resolved to hold no part of my life back from my King, how Christ was my only good. Pastor Antonio translated after every few sentences, so I had plenty of pauses to think about what to say. The mothers and children looked at my intently as I urged them to seek God and find him good, as I had. I prayed, and it was over. We passed out some tracts, smiling at the families.

I repeated my testimony to two or three other groups of patients. At three o’clock, the medical mission wrapped up, and we took the bone-rattling jeepney ride back down the mountain road. “Lord,” I prayed, “I’ve been faithful to tell who you are to me. I’ve done all I can, but no one responded openly. Please bring fruit out of it in your own time.”

Pastor Antonio had a daughter who had just given birth and was in the hospital with complications. She was taking heavy antibiotics to fight infection. About a week after the medical clinic, I went to the hospital in Butuan City to visit Antonio and his daughter, marveling at dank corridors that would have appalled most medical professionals back home. As I sat beside his daughter’s hospital bed and talked with him and our friend Rudy, Antonio pointed a finger at me and said something in Cebuano. I didn’t quite catch it, but Rudy translated.

“He says God used your testimony to bring people to salvation. Three people from the medical clinic last week came to Pastor Antonio here in the hospital and asked how to join our church.”

“Wait, they came here?” I asked. The trip to Butuan City was not something casually done for most rural residents.

“Yes, they sought him out in the hospital. There were two women and a man,” said Rudy.

“Praise God!” I said, unable to keep back a smile. Are you serious God? Thank you so much!

Antonio had referred the three villagers to Pastor Allen, a pastor in a neighboring area who came to the village to do social work. He was the closest permanent minister to them, so we put the task of follow-up with these people in his hands – and in God’s.

I walked away from the hospital reeling in delight. God had surely used what I had said, together with what Pastor Antonio had spoken, to stir the hearts of those people. I was sure their faith was genuine. They had gone to such great lengths to find Antonio, a symbol of their search for the Truth.

God had used me, the media guy who took pictures, to be part of communicating the life-changing message of the gospel to these people. God had altered eternal souls, and he had done it through me. Even days after I had left the field, seeds sprouted. Praise be to God, who stirs hearts beyond our sight or knowledge.

A clean slate

God’s promise to Noah means that the earth will never again be destroyed by water. However, there is coming another destruction by fire.

…and the earth was formed out of water and through water by the word of God, and that by means of these the world that then existed was deluged with water and perished. But by the same word the heavens and earth that now exist are stored up for fire, being kept until the day of judgment and destruction of the ungodly. …But the day of the Lord will come as a thief in the night; in the which the heavens shall pass away with a great noise, and the elements shall melt with fervent heat, the earth also and the works that are therein shall be burned up. (2 Peter 3:5-7, 10-13)

This second destruction is the one spoken of in Revelation. Allow me to cite some references from Blueletterbible.com’s Greek and Hebrew lexicons.

The Greek word “burned up and dissolved” also translated “melted” used in 2 Peter is lyo, which means:
To loosen, undo, dissolve, anything bound, tied, or compacted together
c) to annul, subvert
d) to do away with, to deprive of authority, whether by precept or act
f) to loose what is compacted or built together, to break up, demolish, destroy
g) to dissolve something coherent into parts, to destroy
h) metaph., to overthrow, to do away with
The word parerchomai meaning “pass away” is also used.
And Katakaiō, which means “burned up and consumed by fire.”

I can’t tell how figurative or literal scripture is here. I don’t know if matter will be erased and remade, or if God will just purge all evil from the earth, as you say. However, either way, the feeling behind “lyo” “parerchomai” and “katakaio” is “totally clean slate.” In fact, lyo is where we get the word “lye” which is the active ingredient in soap – a basic cleaning agent. In Noah’s time, earth remained, and mankind remained, despite massive catastrophe; in the end times, there is no remnant.

“And He who sits on the throne said, “Behold I am making all things new.” Revelation 21:5

Whether the “new heavens and new earth” are physically the same ones is not essential, because scripture says they will be utterly, completely, and practically new.

For the creation was subjected to futility, not willingly, but because of Him who subjected it, in hope that the creation itself also will be set free from its slavery to corruption into the freedom of the glory of the children of God. Romans 8:20-21

The thing I would disagree with is that this earth reaches perfection apart from the drastic work of God recalibrating everything. To say that “creation is on an upward track” and “just give it enough time and we’ll reach utopia” is humanistic. No, creation is groaning, for only the return of Christ will bring peace to the earth. So, Joel, if we both have our hope fixed solely Him, then we believe the same thing! Just as God is the author and perfecter of our faith (Hebrews 12:2), he is both the author and perfecter of his creation. What do you think about this?

The most important part of what the new heaven and earth will be like is Revelation 21:3:

“Behold, the tabernacle of God is among men, and He will dwell among them, and they shall be His people, and God Himself with be among them.”

The real crux is that, for all intents and purposes, the earth and heavens are new, and furthermore, that they are really united together, because God and man are no longer separate, but dwell together. And what his heaven, but the very presence of God?

Waiting for a Jeepney

It was 9:30 am, already blistering hot, as I sat at the Shell gas station in Butuan City. I glanced at my watch again and squinted down the road – the last jeepney was supposed to have come by 9:00. I was supposed to be on a jeepney out to the village of MJ Santos, where I would meet up with the Nehemiah Team stationed there, but since jeepneys are the only public transportation that goes that far into the mountains, I faced spending most of the day waiting.

A man waved at me from a cluster of men and motorbikes near the road. “Do you live in MJ Santos?” he asked. “Yes,” I replied. He must have noticed my Nehemiah Teams t-shirt. White people are rare in Butuan. “I will give you a ride for 100 pesos. Forty-five minutes,” he offered. Jeepneys cost 40 pesos, but they took an hour and a half. It seemed like my best option at this point. “Okay,” I said, and got on behind him. Another Filipino sat behind me and one sat between the handlebars sideways (four total), and we set off.

As the road turned from paved to “under construction” to dirt and began to wind upward into the mountains, the man lifted his visor and leaned back to talk to me above the strenuous sputter of the motorbike engine. “My name is Rey. I live in MJ,” he said. “Cool. Do you have a farm there?” I asked. We swapped some small talk. Rey was a part-time motorbike driver and had a garden and a store (simply a roadside kiosk annexed to the home). A few moments passed in silence, and Rey leaned back to me again.

“Do you and your friends know the Bible?” Rey must have known a little about the Nehemiah Team in MJ.

“Yes, we study the Bible. It’s a big part of our lives,” I said eagerly.

“I would like to learn about the Bible,” said Rey, “I used to be a bad man, but I do not want to be a bad man anymore. I want to change. I want to learn about the Bible.”

“Would you like for me and my friends to teach you the Bible?” I asked, jumping at the opportunity.

“Yes. I will show you where my house is, okay, on our way back?”

“Sure! Take me by your house, and my friends and I will come by later.”

Rey’s house was right beside the only road that goes through MJ. At five o’clock I went back with Andrew from the Ag team, and our translator Bong, although Rey spoke some basic English. Rey’s house was a single room walled with bamboo and roofed with thatch. His wife was sitting in the adjacent store with their baby daughter (and another one on the way). We sat down on the floor of the house and showed him the first chapter of John in a Cebuano translation of the Bible. “This is the first time I’ve studied the Bible,” he said, gazing at the pages. My turn came and I told him a story I called “A Snake Problem,” describing Moses and the Bronze Serpent, then leading into the Fall of Man (with its serpent) and ending with the statement, “We each have the venom of sin in us, and Christ is our antidote.” Hearing the story, Rey said again, “I used to be involved in some bad things, and I see how its affecting my marriage, and I want to change.” We prayed with him and said goodnight so he could eat dinner, promising to return. Rey had been very receptive! As Andrew, Bong and I walked back along the dusty road at dusk, I prayed aloud, “God, take hold of Rey! He’s searching for you so much, don’t let him go. Open his eyes.”

I had to leave the next day, to visit another missions team in Malaybalay, to the south, but Andrew went back soon after and gave Rey a Cebuano audio recording of the New Testament.

The team went back to Rey’s house about a week later to follow up. “Yes,” Rey said matter-of-factly, “I’ve been listening to the audio Bible before I go to bed. I’ve trusted Jesus to be my savior.” Unsure of such a sure response, they probed a little, asking questions about what that meant. Rey answered every question spot-on. It seemed as though everything had quite naturally fallen into place in his heart. Hayley and Kristen, the girls from the team, later visited Rey’s wife, and she too made a commitment of faith.

Rey had been waiting for someone who could tell him about Christ, who could teach him about the Bible. He was aware of his need, and he was searching for the answer. His heart was primed for the gospel, and all it took was someone to come within his reach. While I was waiting on a jeepney to arrive, he was waiting on a messenger of the gospel to arrive. How many others are waiting, longing deep in their souls for something (or Someone) more, and yet have no one to tell them His name?

Why I plan to go to the unreached

  • Resolution 27. Resolved, to labor, while I remain on earth, to one end: the communication of the gospel to an unreached people, encoded in scripture and through culture.
  • Near > Far. Laboring up close to reach the unreached is better than laboring at a distance.
  • Men > Money. Laboring to win souls is better than laboring to raise money to win souls.
  • Warfront > waiting. Attacking the universal need is the best action in the absence of specific assignment.
  • Pull > Push. Personally going to an unreached people group is the best first step toward mobilization.

    Near > Far

    Physical location matters for three reasons.
    First, physical location affects the spiritual realm. Let us think in terms of war, for we are indeed at war with the Enemy. Where is the front line of the war for the Kingdom of God if not with the unreached people groups of the world? In lands without the gospel there is unbroken darkness that feeds the most souls to hell and causes them to suffer under long-established strongholds. There the army of God must guard less and actively engage more, taking new territory, bloodying its sword more frequently. The unreached lands call the most for the violent to take the kingdom of heaven by force. Now spiritual warfare is best conducted by physically being present, because physical areas have significance in the spiritual realm, and our physical presence has weight—that’s why we prayer walk. Therefore to engage the enemy in the physical area where he is most concentrated is the best way to wage war against him.

Second, physical location is a major component of the action that brings faith to life. Consider two men who prayed for it to rain gold on a mountaintop. The one who really believes God will answer his prayer will take a sack and go to the mountaintop to wait. He will go to the place where he will best be able to work in accordance with the act of God, when God acts. In the same way, if I deeply want the unreached to be reached and I pray for them to be reached, I will change my location in accord with my prayer, that I might better experience (and even contribute to) the working of its completion.

Third, there is a certain common sense to relocating to lucrative areas. Consider that unemployed people of many countries will immigrate to America in order to find jobs, even if they have no job lined up or waiting for them when they arrive. Why is this? Because they know that it is simply more likely that they will find a job in the States than in their home country. Why do we in the business of harvesting souls not use the same common sense, if I want to win souls as much as foreigners want to make money? There is money to be had in their countries, but they are pursuing greater wealth. There are souls to be won in the United States, but I will pursue the greater impact.

Men > Money
Clearly, financial contributors and senders are crucial to church planting and church growing. However, the issue at hand is how to bring the greatest possible increase. I assert that more good can be done through causing men to join the Kingdom than by gathering material resources or support (including money) for the Kingdom. The souls of men are the substance by which the Kingdom grows, and for this reason ought to be the focus of my efforts.

In the Bible we see that “men are God’s method.” They are the substance of the kingdom. Christ said, “Seek first the kingdom and his righteousness, and all these things shall be added unto you as well.” “All these things” speaks of material, but His kingdom is “not of this world.” Souls are the only things that are eternal in nature—they are the commodity of the kingdom. Christ also said, “ask the Lord of the harvest to send out workers into the harvest.” He did not say that plowshares or pruning hooks were few, but workers. It is the sweat of men that is emphasized as the way to advance the kingdom. Also, if we consider the greatness of the Kingdom in terms of the building a Royal Palace for the Lord on earth, we ought to remember that “He does not dwell in a house built with hands,” but he will “put My Spirit in your hearts.”

Thinking pragmatically, men are also the greatest asset to the Kingdom. Consider missionary mobilization as an example. One method of raising money is to work a secular job and donate many of the proceeds to missions. However, my likely income as a worker in the United States will be less than $85,000, whereas the total expendable income of evangelicals in the United States is $850 billion, less than 1% of which they currently give to missions. Appealing to the Church to give out of this large, untapped surplus will most likely raise more money than one secular job could. I can raise even more money by producing individuals each of whom will seek out his own support. An army of missionaries each asking God to provide sending monies will probably be more effective than one voice seeking the same. Therefore multiplying the men of the Kingdom is the most logical way of its advancement.

What this means is that I must trust God for material support and labor to win souls, instead of laboring for material support and trusting God to win souls. “But money is necessary!” – you see I do not deny that; I only say that men are more crucial, ought to therefore be the center of the mark. If there are no swords in the land, blacksmiths are more important than steel, for steel can be found more easily than the skill to craft it into a weapon. If there are blacksmiths, the people can scour the land for bits of steel; but what good is steel if there are no blacksmiths? How about in farming? If materials are the fertilizer, men are the very crops.
Therefore recruiting souls is more important than raising any material support by which to recruit souls, and thus ought to receive my focus.

Warfront > Waiting

First, I should note that the Church is synonymous with the Kingdom in this present age. God has willed that, during this age before Christ himself returns and fully establishes His Kingdom, that it be solely embodied in the Church. So the extent of the life of the Body is now directly proportionate to the his Kingdom. I can more precisely say that “my mission is the growth of the Church.”

Scripture tells us that the Church has many members with different roles, and that each must serve in his specialized role for the best overall the function—even if certain roles appear less important than others. “For as his share is who goes down to the battle, so shall his share be who stays by the baggage” (1 Samuel 30:24). “If there were all one member, than where would the Body be?” (1 Corinthians 12:19). The economists of the 1700’s confirmed this truth when they learned that in factories, productivity is maximized through the specialization of roles. To use the wartime paradigm, the Church is analogous to modern army with communications specialists, medics, helicopter pilots, computer analysts, and footsoldiers; it is less similar to an ancient army consisting of only footsoldiers. Therefore the way in which I can personally bring the most benefit to the Kingdom may not be the same as the universal priority. It is possible to bring the greatest advancement of the gospel to unreached peoples by serving according to a specialized capability to meet a lesser need, rather than serving with less capability toward meeting the greatest need. To use the wartime paradigm: Say that while on the way to the front line of the battle, I see a wounded soldier with dire and immediate need for medical care. If I have medical skill and if I am filled with a compulsion to stop and help, then I am justified in stopping my advancement to the front line.

However, only God can assign me a specific role in the Church. Any appointment outside the general priority must come only from the one who blew the original trumpet (one one who outranks him—but there is none). To deviate my course myself by saying, “I am not suited for that” is to doubt the dimensions of Christ’s inheritance in the saints. Has God revealed his will to me, or do I merely find this role easier than that one? If this is the basis of my conclusion, it is the faulty assumption that God values my pleasure above his glory. Will I not venture outside the temple because I know from God that I am in the place he has appointed for me to best serve the Kingdom, or because I do not know where that place is, but I would rather not soil my white priestly robes in the meantime? Self-evaluation of what I consider to be “for me” or “not for me” is insufficient to alter the general command—it must be from God, not from myself. “The son can do nothing of himself, unless it is something he sees the father doing” (John 5:19). In fact, whether it is self, other humans, or spirits, nothing in the earthly realm has sufficient authority to alter the command, except God, who issued it.

This assignment must be through special revelation from God (which can take many forms). If the present nature of my abilities (such as spiritual gifts) inhibits me from contributing to any part of the general process, then this would be an obvious means of the Spirit communicating what my assignment is (or is not). “The pen is mightier than the sword” –but if God has given me a pen, a little common sense tells me not to try to wield it on the battlefield! God may also, seemingly arbitrarily, speak to me through his Word, through prayer, through other believers, through visions, or through any other means, to deliver his commission; but whatever may be the medium by which I perceive the inclination to “deviate,” I must ascertain that it is God’s command. I do not undertake here to explain how to discern God’s intentions; I assume that it will be certain when the Spirit has indeed communicated it, for “my sheep hear my voice.” Therefore if I diverge from the road to the “front lines,” it must be due to a clearly revealed understanding of that intention.

To the extent that God’s revelation does not overrule the universal priority, I remain bound to that priority. If I have no revelation—if I cannot tell whether the greater need in “A” is weightier than my unique skill at meeting the need of “B”—if my gifts and abilities are not so directed as to point me apparently toward an exclusive method of growing the church or deny to me another— then the most responsible course of action is to go for the method I know to be the most generally effective. There are several reasons for this. In the absence of revelation there is nothing between me and Resolution 27 and must push for the “greatest possible.” (Has he said, “Be a medic in a hospital in the United States,” or just, “Be a medic”? Unless God clarifies I must be a medic for the sickest people with the least medical care.)

Furthermore, any niche through which I can further accomplish Resolution 27 is found through (1) seeing a need and (2) being convicted about it (remember the medic analogy)—and both of these come fastest through obedience to the general rule. First, my exposure to more desperate and immediate needs is likely to increase as I go to the area of greatest overall need, the specific conviction of the Spirit will be more likely. Second, revelation (conviction from the Spirit) usually follows obedience, according to the pattern of scripture. “But get up and enter the city, and it will be told you what you must do” (Acts 9:6). “He who has my commandments and keeps them is the one who loves me; and he who loves me will be loved by my Father, and I will love him and will disclose myself to him” (John 14:21).

So then, however much of the general command has not been cancelled by revelation still applies to me, and I must run to the warfront with all of my might.

Pull > Push

Just like it is better to write by pulling the pencil than by pushing it, it is better to “bring” someone to the mission field than to “send” them.

First, I ought to be very careful with the idea that I am exempt from the thing I am calling others to join. It seems like it would be easy to fall into self-righteous hypocrisy if my work day in and day out was “go forth,” while I had never been myself. I would acknowledge that in some cases mobilizing without going is possible (the Student Volunteer Movement has some examples). This does not seem to be normal, though. Personally going to the mission field is in some sense winning the right to mobilize others later on. It is the seed from which mobilization most naturally flowers.

Also, eyewitness accounts are more persuasive than any other kind of source. Vivid details of the lost, pictures freshly captured, will move hearts to answer specific needs more than the general “ought to” that already hangs thick in our society. Eyewitness accounts are also more informed, able to direct funds and volunteers toward the most crucial spots, in the right timing.

Finally, finding new needs is a better work than focusing on current supplies, because it takes more faith. We are to attempt to meet the needs and trust God to provide as we stretch beyond our apparent ability. To pull back and say, “Let’s just work on what we have” smells dangerously like self-trust, and supposes God’s ability to be limited. God wants radical faith that jumps and trusts Him to chase us and catch us in the nick of time. I want the faith of George Mueller who opened the orphanage and let God provide day by day, rather than wait for God to provide before he began. To pull others behind me as I plunge into the lost areas without secured support requires more trust than to wait until everything is lined up, then push the people into the area from behind. It is good to see how the funds and people are possible, but “blessed are those who believe without seeing.”

So those are my reasons,
and I will go
until the Lord directs me
otherwise.

On the Deity of Christ (A letter to a Jehovah’s Witness)

Dear Jess,

After our stirring discussion on the flight to Los Angeles, we agreed to look into this business of the nature of Christ—whether he is God or not, that is. In keeping with this I discovered and read the appendix in What Does the Bible Really Teach (which I received from your friends) entitled “The Truth About the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit.” I found this to be a very good representation of your perspective, concisely presenting many of the same verses you referenced. Since it was in writing, I was able to ponder its thoughts and search the scriptures more carefully than our conversation allowed. (We both experienced how frustrating it can be to have a thought from the Bible but not quite have the ability to find its reference or be able to quote it verbatim.)

I hope, after such inquiry, to have come to clear understanding of What Does the Bible Really Teach and what the Bible really does teach. I have found that the Bible says (and means) that the Father is God, and the Spirit is God, and the Son is God. Therefore Jesus is indeed deity. Whereas I admit that I am at least somewhat biased in my interpretation of scripture, as any person with a worldview must be, I believe honestly that my conclusion is founded solidly on Biblical evidence. I urge you to wait a moment in shutting the possibility out of Christ being God, only long enough to give sincere and searching look at this evidence, and join with me in praying to God in the name of Jesus Christ that he would indeed reveal to us the fullness of who He is.

With a prayerful mind, I present the evidence to support my conclusion in the pages that follow. With this evidence I am not attempting to demonstrate that Christ did not have humanity, for we agree he clearly did. Rather I will focus solely on the point that he also possessed complete divinity. No matter how “beyond us” this is, it is clear in scripture. Christ was 100% God, 100% man. I’m not going to undertake a rationalization of this that will allow complete comprehension. (I don’t fully understand it myself!) But as John Piper says, “It is not for us to tell God how it is, but to accept how it is.” What I will attempt is not to make sense of it, but simply show using the Bible which we hold in common that, holding honestly and completely to it, one cannot let go of either part of Christ.

I hope you will take the time to read it. (After all, I took the time to write it! No copy/pasting!) I would love to hear what you thought of it. What are your first reactions? Your thoughts? How else do you explain such scriptures (for I do indeed want to know if there is another equally satisfying way around them)? Has your belief changed in any way? Do you have further questions for me? I look forward to your reply, if it pleases you to send one. I only ask that you not let this issue slide underneath the table, because it is, as we said at the end of our conversation, of utmost weight to our faith—the faith around which we have centered our hope, and our very lives.

May God bless you and keep you, and make his face shine on you, and give you peace. In the name of Christ, your fellow truth-seeker,
Ben

A Refutation of the Article’s Evidence
I want to start by looking at the scriptures presented by the Jehovah’s Witness article, “The Truth about the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit.”

The principle evidence used by both Jehovah’s Witnesses and Christians is John 1:1. However, because any direct scriptural interpretation of this verse depends on a confident knowledge of Greek, and both sides have translations resulting from their interpreting of this verse, I cannot use this verse as evidence; neither can a Jehovah’s Witness. That means that the paragraph with the subhead “’The Word was God’” is rendered obsolete.

In the “Get More Facts” section, I agree that “to grasp the meaning of John 1:1, you can look into the Gospel of John for more information on Jesus’ position.” The second paragraph quotes John 1:18 as evidence that Christ cannot be God since many saw Christ but “no one has seen God.” But look at the second part of the verse, which the article failed to mention—it is arranged as a contrast to the first part, and it says, “[but] the only begotten God who is in the bosom of the Father, He has explained Him.” Christ then, is the “image of the invisible God,” the visible part of the invisible, the manifestation of the otherwise incomprehensible, the communicated message from the inscrutable source. Therefore the article presents a logically false dilemma resolved after the semicolon in the verse.

The next argument on page 203 says, “the Word was also ‘with God.’ But how can someone be ‘with’ someone and at the same time ‘be’ that person?” I object that this is imposing what the scripture can or cannot mean, based on human logic. We must rather take it at its word. The real question is the one asked on the previous page: “Is the idea of the Trinity found there [in the Bible]?” Keep reading the evidence in this letter…

The next argument the article makes is that “Jesus making a clear distinction between himself and his heavenly Father.” However, this statement is irrelevant, it is beside the point. As I said in the introduction, the Trinity does not deny that Jesus is the Son of God at all; anyone who accuses a Trinitarian of this belief is misinformed. Using John 20:31 (page 203) is void for the same reason – we agree that Christ is the Son of God, even while he is part of God. In the same way, a Trinitarian does not deny the truth of Psalm 90:2 and Acts 7:55 (the “extra proof” on page 204). Proving that Christ is distinct from God does not detract at all from the deity of Christ according to the Trinity, because the doctrine of the Trinity embraces both of these apparently contradictory statements.[1]

The last piece of evidence in the article is from Matthew 24:36: “Concerning that day and hour nobody knows, neither the angels of the heavens nor the Son, but only the Father.” I found this the most compelling bit of evidence presented in the article—it’s a good point. If Christ is not here all-knowing, then how he can share in the omniscient nature of God? My answer comes from the fact that God often causes himself to appear to us in human ways. That is, there are other instances of him masking his omnipotence and omniscience. For example, Exodus 32:14, Genesis 6:6. If God can regret, if he can change his mind, then he can also “not know” something. I challenge someone to resolve the totality of Jehovah’s human-like personifications in the Bible! They are a mystery; we must believe that He reveals himself in these ways for a good reason.

Scriptures that Indicate the Deity of Christ

John 1:2-3
“He was in the beginning with God”
And we know that “in the beginning God created the heavens and the earth.” Therefore, at the point when Jehovah created, Jesus already was. Simply was. Existent.

To clarify consider Jude 1:25: “to the only God our Savior, through Jesus Christ our Lord, be glory, majesty, dominion and authority, before all time and now and forever. Amen.” All glory went to Jehovah through Christ before all time. (See also John 17:5) That means even before any number of billions and billions of years that the two might have spent together before the rest of creation, because years is still time, regardless of how far it is removed from the present. We’re talking of the eternal past here – and only deity dwelt in eternity past.

“All things came into being through Him, and apart from Him nothing came into being that has come into being.”
· One might reason, “certainly the maker is naturally excluded from ‘all things’ that are made – concluding that “all other things” is the implied meaning.
· That is why the New World Translation marks this as “all [other] things”; however, “other” is not in the Greek – it is inserted (hence the brackets) in order to make the interpretation consistent.
· John apparently understood that potential line of reasoning also, because he rephrased himself to clarify. “And apart from Him nothing came into being that has come into being.”
o Why did he repeat himself and add emphasis? He wanted to reemphasize the “not created” status of the Word
o Without Him, nothing was made that is in the “made” category
o If He is in the “made” category, then he must have made himself
o If you don’t exist, you can’t bring yourself into being
o Therefore he can’t be in that category!

John 1:18
“No one has seen God at any time; the only begotten God who is in the bosom of the Father, He has explained Him.”

This verse is quoted in “The Truth About the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.” However, some overlooked truth in this very passage points to the deity of Christ. He, the Word spoken of (consider context), who is in the bosom of the Father, is called “God”! How then, since the Father is Jehovah, God Almighty, can God be in his bosom?

And furthermore, how is God begotten? This must not be creation or birth, but an issuing forth of the essence, which has been present for eternity. For God was and is and is to come; there is never a time when God was not. This is a compelling mystery. I think it is the mystery called the Trinity we are running into.

Genesis 3:5, 18:1-19:1, and 32:24-32
One more thought on “no one has seen God”—people have seen Him! Now if God has never been seen, then we have a contradiction. But if it was Christ, “who has revealed” or “explained” the Father, and he is truthfully referred to as Jehovah in these passages, then we have a way to avoid contradiction.
· “They heard the sound of the Lord God walking in the garden in the cool of the day, and the man and his wife hid themselves from the presence of the Lord God among the trees of the garden.” (Genesis 3:5) How can the Lord God Almighty descend from his throne, where he reigns with power over creation, to walk about in the garden like a human? However, if the pre-incarnate Christ were here in the garden “in the cool of the day” then the divine sovereignty can remain uncompromised.
· Genesis chapter 18, especially noting verses 1, 22, 33, and 19:1. God here appears with two angels to Abraham and talks to Him in the form of a man, before going down to Sodom. He is referred to as a man and yet when Abraham talks to him, the text refers to the man as Jehovah.
· Genesis 32:24-32. Jacob here wrestles with Jehovah as with a man. He asked the man’s name but his response was only “why do you ask my name?” – That’s the same kind of enigmatic response that Moses got when he asked Jehovah, “Who should I tell them has sent me to you?” Because of this Jacob realized with awe who he had been wrestling with and said he had seen Jehovah face to face.

Jehovah Himself manifested himself as a man in the Old Testament, even before He so manifested himself in the New Testament through Jesus. If these passages are true, it would require a man to be God and God to be a man. I believe that the one spoken of here is the Second Person of the Trinity – Jesus Christ, appearing before his coming. (This view is not just mine – it is agreed upon by =many protestant theologians.)

Isaiah 9:6
“For a child will be born to us, a son will be given to us; and the government will rest on his shoulders; and his name will be called Wonderful Counselor, Mighty God, Eternal Father, Prince of Peace.”

A child will be born, incarnate on earth, and yet he will be Mighty God, Eternal Father? This is a miracle indeed! And we agree that it is Jesus Christ who is the Messiah prophesied about in this scripture. Do I believe enough to call him all the names that “he shall be called”?

John 7:37-38 (considered with Jeremiah 2:13)

“Now on the last day, the great day of the fast, Jesus stood and cried out, saying, “If anyone is thirsty, let him come to Me and drink. He who believes in Me, as the Scripture said, ‘From his innermost being will flow rivers of living water.’” (John 7:37-38)

“For my people have committed two great evils: They have forsaken Me, the fountain of living waters, to hew for themselves cisterns, broken cisterns that can hold no water.” (Jeremiah 2:13)

How then can Christ and Jehovah both claim to be the fountain of living water? The fountain is the source, not the channel. Living water cannot flow “from” God “through” or “by” Jesus, because the fountainhead is the source! We know that the Spirit flows forth from One source only, and scripturally we see that Christ is the source, and Jehovah is the source. They must then be One.

John 20:28-29
Thomas answered and said to Him, “My Lord and my God!” Jesus said to him, “Because you have seen me, have you believed? Blessed are they who did not see, and yet believed.”

If Thomas called Jesus “my God” in error, how could Jesus have accepted this praise? For Christ knows that Jehovah’s name is Jealous, and that he will have no gods before Him? (Even his most beloved created thing.) Christ, being such a servant of the Father, could not have accepted praise – wanting praise as Jehovah was the very sin that the Enemy fell prey to!

John 8:57-59 and John 10:30-33
“So the Jews said to Him, ‘You are not yet fifty years old, and have you seen Abraham?’ Jesus said to them, ‘Truly, truly, I say to you, before Abraham was born, I am.’ Therefore they picked u stones to throw at Him, but Jesus hid Himself and went out of the temple.” John 8:57-59
“’I and the Father are one.’… The Jews picked up stones again to stone Him. Jesus answered them, ‘I showed you many good works from the Father; for which of them are you stoning Me?’ The Jews answered Him, ‘For a good work we do not stone You, but for blasphemy; and because You, being a man, make Yourself out to be God.’” John 10:30-33

These passages again reinforce the fact that Christ’s words were often interpreted as claims of Godhood, of being Jehovah, and he never attempted to negate, clarify, or correct this interpretation. Instead he suffered persecution at the hands of the Jews because he would not recant his statements! Who would propagate a misunderstanding – especially one that it would have greatly pleased him to correct.

If Christ was anything less than God, no matter how much his beloved son, he ought to have responded by denying the misunderstanding. Consider how Paul and Barnabas responded when people (seeing their miracles) took them for Deity:

“When the crowds saw what Paul had done, they raised their voice, saying in the Lycaonian language, ‘The gods have become like men and have come down to us.’… But when the apostles Barnabas and Paul heard of it, they tore their robes and rushed out into the crowd, crying out and saying, ‘Men why are you doing these things? We are also men of the same nature as you, and preach the gospel to you that you should turn from these vain things to a living God, who made the heaven and the earth and the sea and all that is in them…’” Acts 14:11, 14-15

But Christ did not respond this way – when his statements in John were taken by the audience to mean, “I am God”, he by his response repeatedly said, “Yes, you heard me right.”

Colossians 1:15-19
When Christ is referred to as “firstborn of all creation” in verse 15 and “the firstborn from the dead” in verse 18, both context and history tell us that the meaning of the terms is not that of being “born first” but of having “first place” – highest rank and priority. “Firstborn of all creation” is followed by “For by him all things were created…through him and for him” which indicates that he is the reason for creation (priority).

“He is before all things, and in Him all things hold together” He is before all things. Simple language.

“He is also head of the body, the church” Again, rank is the theme here.

“And He is the beginning, the firstborn from the dead, so that he himself will come to have first place in everything”

Here is proof that “firstborn” does not mean literal, temporal birth, but rank. By his power Christ caused all other raising from the dead. Paul is praising the fact that Christ is top dog. If we take it literally, then that is not true, for Christ raised Lazarus from the dead before he raised himself. But in the Middle East culture of the day, “firstborn” had the connotation of rank, not of literal “birth,” because being the firstborn was a special right and privilege (double inheritance, etc.). So these verses do not say that Christ was actually born.
Instead I take this passage to be a beautiful praise of the deity of God, because Christ created “all things, both in the heavens and on earth.” How can Christ, if he existed before this “all things,” have dwelt somewhere other than the heavens or the earth? “In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth.” Created beings need a “somewhere.” So I don’t think Christ is part of this “all things” but rather the only uncreated Being.

These all things were created “for him.” But is not Jehovah concerned ultimately with his glory – did he not make the world and everything for himself? Then how is the whole point of creation one of his created beings?

John 14:8-9
“Philip said, ‘Lord, show us the Father and that will be enough for us.’ Jesus answered: ‘Don’t you know me, Philip, even after I have been among you such a long time? Anyone who has seen me has seen the Father. How can you say, ‘Show us the Father’?’”

If anyone who has seen Christ has seen the fullness of God the Father, how can you say they are one in purpose only? If I go as an ambassador to the U.N., unswervingly intent on the same goals as the president, even then, can I say that he who has seen me has seen the president? No, I can never assert myself to be the true president unless I am he.

Colossians 2:9
“For in Him all the fullness of Deity dwells in bodily form”

But Jesus is more accurately “fully like” God, having his attributes, one might say, according to the New World Translation. If Jesus Christ is fully like God, he must possess all of his attributes. The problem is there are many absolute attributes of God for which there is only a stark “yes” or “no.” For example, if he is holy, he must be fully so, there is no “partially holy.” Does he therefore share in God’s (1) omnipotence, (2) omniscience, (3) omnipresence, (4) eternality, (5) perfection, and (6) pure agape love? If Jesus does not share in these attributes, I ask how he really shares in the nature of the Father at all? If Jesus does share in these attributes with God, then I ask how there could have ever been a time when he did not? (Look at that list again and grasp it.) For how could the Father, at that point lacking that which is eternal, perfect, and all-powerful (Christ), at the same time be perfect and complete? So to be really like God is necessarily an eternal and absolute status, not something that can be gained (or lost).

Hebrews 7:1-3
“For this Melchizedek, king of Salem, priest of the Most High God….without father, without mother, without genealogy, having neither beginning of days nor end of life, but made like the Son of God, he remains a priest perpetually.”

Here having “no beginning of days” is equated with “being like the son of God.” I take this to mean that the Son of God had no beginning of days, but existed “perpetually.” And if he had no beginning of days, then he could not have been created.

Another Train of Thought
Is God love? If yes,
Has he always been so? If yes,
How many persons does it take for love to exist? At least two, right?
Did he exist by himself in eternity past? If yes, then,
How then could he have possessed love without any object outside himself to love?
But if God existed in three (or at least two according to the argument) persons, then love could have existed within himself, between the members of the Trinity, His heart could be stirred with selfless love, for the Father could love the Son, and the Son love the father, and the Spirit love them also, and they the Spirit, for all eternity past.

In Conclusion

Why do I go through all this trouble to hang on the nature of Christ? Because our salvation rests on Him, it is a doctrinal essential that cannot be tampered with. If Christ is created, he is nothing more than the greatest of angels (the next highest level of existence to God). His sacrifice is less than divine and thus cannot appease God’s wrath. If he was merely man, then you have said that it is possible for a man to be good enough to get to heaven, and if we only follow after the one who did, we can share in the attainment of paradise. That is effort based. Works based. It is man getting to God – but the gospel is the exact opposite! The gospel is God Himself reaching his Right Hand down into history and coming to man. God reaching down, not man climbing up. If Christ is not God, not matter if he is only a hair away, he is a world away, and he becomes a “successful archetype” – like Buddha. If Christ is God, then our salvation is through faith in God; if Christ is man, then our salvation is through faith in man.

It’s that simple, when you boil it down to the core. I believe that Christ must be deity for the good news to work. As for me, God has caught me up in salvation threefold – the Holy Spirit is the hand behind me that pushes me upward, Christ is the road on which I walk, and the Father is my glorious destination. May the triune God enlighten your eyes to see his true nature in the face of Christ. For his sake, in his name, by his power I pray, Amen.

I know it’s incomprehensible, but that is exactly the point where faith comes in. So now, Jess, I urge you to believe.

Oh, the depth of the riches both of the wisdom and knowledge of God!
How unsearchable are His judgments and unfathomable His ways!
For who has known the mind of the Lord, or who became his counselor?

Romans 11:33-34

Great is the Lord, and worthy of praise; his greatness is unfathomable.
Psalm 145:3

C.S. Lewis on divine omnipotence and goodness

I present for your thoughtful consideration my favorite excerpts from Lewis’ insight on God’s predestination, justice and love- relevant to the timeless tension of the Problem of Evil. These are hand-typed, so I must really agree with them!

Perhaps this is not the “best of all possible’ universes, but the only possible one. Possible worlds can mean only ‘worlds that God could have made, but didn’t’. The idea of that which God ‘could have’ done involves a too anthropomorphic [man-shaped] conception of God’s freedom. Whatever human freedom means, Divine freedom cannot mean indeterminacy between alternatives and choice of one of them. Perfect goodness can never debate about the end to be attained, and perfect wisdom cannot debate about the means most suited to achieve it. The freedom of God consists in the fact that no cause other than Himself produces His acts and no external obstacle impedes them—that His own goodness is the root from which they all grow and His own omnipotence the air in which they all flower.…

No answer [has been] attempted to the objection that if the universe must, from the outset, admit the possibility of suffering, then absolute goodness would have left the universe uncreated. And I must warn the reader that I shall not attempt to prove that to create was better than not to create: I am aware of no human scales in which such a portentous question can be weighed. Some comparison between one state of being and another can be made, but the attempt to compare being and not being ends in mere words. “It would be better for me not to exist” – in what sense “for me”? How should I, if I did not exist, profit by not existing?

—C.S. Lewis, The Problem of Pain, Chapter 2, “Divine Omnipotence”

If God’s moral judgment differs from our so that our ‘black’ may be His ‘white’, we can mean nothing by calling Him good; for to say ‘God is good”, while asserting that His goodness is wholly other than ours, is really only to say “God is we know not what.” And an utterly unknown quality in God cannot give us moral grounds for loving or obeying Him. If he is not (in our sense) ‘good’ we shall obey, if at all, only through fear—and should be equally ready to obey an omnipotent Fiend. …The Divine ‘goodness’ differs from ours, but it is not sheerly different: it differs from ours not as white from black but as a perfect circle from a child’s first attempt to draw a wheel. But when the child has learned to draw, it will know that the circle it then makes is what it was trying to make from the very beginning….

We call human love selfish when it satisfies its own needs at the expense of the object’s needs—as when a father keeps at home, because he cannot bear to relinquish their society, children who ought, in their own interests, to be put out into the world. The situation implies a need or passion on the part of the lover, an incompatible need on the part of the beloved, and the lover’s disregard or culpable ignorance of the beloved’s need. None of these conditions is present in the relation of God to man. God has no needs. Human love, as Plato teaches us, is the child of Poverty—of a want or lack; it is caused by a real or supposed good in its beloved which the lover needs and desires. But God’s love, far from being caused by goodness in the object, causes all the goodness which the object has, loving it first into existence and then into real, though derivative, lovability. God is Goodness. He can give good, but cannot need or get it. In that sense all his love is, as it were, bottomlessly selfless by very definition; it has everything to give and nothing to receive.

—C.S. Lewis, The Problem of Pain, Chapter 3, “Divine Goodness”

Time like a bubble

I cannot and will not contest that God has foreordained those who will be saved. He has. But think of time as a bubble. God holds the bubble in his hand, and we are inside. All of our lives are predetermined outside the bubble, from birth to death forming one cohesive whole…but inside “time” things are constantly taking shape by our choices. Inside the bubble, our minds are confined to the linear progression of time, and predestination is almost irrelevant to us, because we cannot fathom it. We act according to time, making choices in every moment in an effort to attain God. That’s why we are “eager to make our calling and election sure” and “work out our salvation with fear and trembling.”

Three aspects of Christian leadership

In Genesis 18:19-22, Jethro gives Moses three pieces of advice about leading the people. We always hear about the third piece – “delegate” by appointing judges. However, what he says first is “stand before God and before the people” (intercessory prayer) and “teach them the laws of the Lord” (conveying the Word).

In Acts 6:3-4 the pattern holds true—delegation is instigated by the leaders, yes, but to this end, that the leaders may “devote themselves to prayer and to the ministry of the Word.”

Therefore we might say that the core fundamentals of Christian leadership are:

  • Prayer
  • Ministering the word
  • Delegation

Get a load of this Deity

It seems to me that Colossians, which my leadership team has chosen as its book of emphasis, contains perhaps some of the most succinct and sublime chunks of scripture. Consider this description of Christ (Colossians 1:15-18, broken down for emphasis), one of many passages which demand whole books of praise.

He is the image
of the invisible God,
the firstborn
of all creation.

For by Him all things were created,
both in the heavens and on earth, visible and invisible,
whether thrones or dominions or rulers or authorities—
all things
have been created
through Him
and for Him.

He is before all things, and
in Him
all things
hold together.

He is also head of the body, the church;
and He is the beginning,
the firstborn from the dead,
so that He Himself will come to have first place
in everything.

God is not a “great teacher” – he is the glue of the universe, the epicenter of time and the cosmos! Do we believe that this Man who is lord of the millennia from ancient Egypt until today, lord of creation from the Orion Nebula to the atom’s electric charges, is with us? What kind of lives can we live with this magnitude of reality?

The difficulty of life, and why God seems distant

I can only say that I have been well acquainted with distance from God during my life. Sometimes it’s my fault, but others I’m doing everything right. But it’s in those times, when it makes no sense, that I experience the essence of faith. “Faith is not a feeling, it’s what you believe in spite of them.”

Nate, you don’t need faith when God answers. You need faith now. Now is the time to be assured of what you hope for, and to hold onto scripture as the evidence for what you can’t see.

James 1:2-4 Consider it pure joy, my brothers, whenever you face trials of many kinds, because you know that the testing of your faith develops perseverance. Perseverance must finish its work so that you may be mature and complete, not lacking anything.

And we can take comfort in the fact that Christ experienced separation from God.

Matthew 27:46 About the ninth hour Jesus cried out in a loud voice, “Eloi, Eloi, lama sabachthani?”—which means, “My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?”

Is this difficulty, this pain, a horror story? No, it is a love story because of how it ends.

Consider the sweetness of suffering…
No pain, no gain
Ripped muscles lead to bigger muscles
Broken seeds lead to new sprouts
The beauty of dawn cannot come without night
Consummation is worthless without waiting
Food is tender and flavorful after being cooked in the fire
The mother must let go to see maturity in the son
The father cries at the wedding of his daughter
Without strenuous study, there is no knowledge
Without negative experience, there is no wisdom
Without rain there is no good in sun
Without cold there is no good in a hearth
Without heat there is not good in shade
Sweet pastry is made better with bitter coffee
The dramatic pause leads into the climax
The quality of every story is in the intensity of its conflict

So if I run from discomfort, I commit the greatest act of cowardice.

Hebrews 12:2
Let us fix our eyes on Jesus, the author and perfecter of our faith, who for the joy set before him endured the cross, scorning its shame, and sat down at the right hand of the throne of God.

He endured the pain of the cross, because of the joy he saw in the distance. Let us do likewise.