Category Archives: Theology

Man’s Need for a Savior as Reflected in Movies

Nicole Moore Sanborn

Over the past few months my mom and I have indulged in watching a set of superhero movies.  As I watched, I could not help but notice a key thematic element.  The theme of man’s overwhelming need for a savior seemed to be a reoccurring aspect of the movies we watched.  This theme presents itself primarily in princess and superhero movies, where someone or something tends to need saving.  With the exception of very few, each movie in these archetypes clearly presents man’s helplessness and despair without a savior.  The archetype also appears in other movies to be discussed in this article.

Every girl loves a good princess movie, right?  Wrong.  Many girls do not like the fact in nearly every princess movie, the girl requires the aid of a prince to either break a spell or save them from whatever predicament they are in.  Many girls do not like this theme and archetype, because it subordinates the girl to require a man’s assistance.  Either way, the realization of man’s need for a savior has sprinkled itself into these princess movies.  I am basing this article off of the Disney princess movies, not on the original fairy tales.

In Cinderella, Cinderella is trapped living under the dictatorship of her stepmother and two step-sisters.  If the Fairy Godmother had not arranged a feasible way for her to attend the royal ball, Cinderella’s life would have remained static.  Had Cinderella not gone to the ball, left her shoe, and proved to the prince they danced at the ball, she would not have gotten married.  Cinderella needed saving from her condition.  The Fairy Godmother, and later the prince, stepped in and saved her.  The Fairy Godmother saved her night (through creating the means for Cinderella to attend the ball), and the prince fell in love with her, ultimately saving her and removing her from her predicament into a life of royalty and comfort.  While the Bible does not guarantee us a life of comfort, God brings us where He wants us and sends us certain places to do His work.  This is similar to the Fairy Godmother sending Cinderella to the ball where she met the prince.

In Sleeping Beauty, Aurora can only be awakened by the prince’s kiss.  If the prince had not defeated the evil queen in dragon form and eliminated the monstrous cage of brambles engulfing the castle, Aurora would have remained asleep.  The only way she could be awakened and the spell broken was if Prince Charming kissed her.  Aurora needed outside assistance to bring her out of her predicament and change her life.  She needed a savior: Prince Charming.  Christ brings us out of our previous predicament of being slaves to sin and apart from God by giving us new life, making us slaves to righteousness and justifying us with God, as Paul says in Romans.  In doing so, Christ brings us out of our previous predicament and changes our lives forever.

Beauty and the Beast presents a different type of princess movie: Belle provides outside assistance to her father and the Beast as opposed to needing outside assistance for herself.  Belle travels to the castle to save her father but becomes imprisoned by the Beast.  The only way the Beast will release her father is if she breaks the curse and falls in love with him.  In doing this, Belle not only saves her father, but she also breaks the curse the Beast was under and saves him.  Belle also restores beauty and order to the palace.  Belle’s father and the Beast both require outside assistance from Belle to be removed from their predicaments.  God restores beauty in our chaotic and sinful world as Belle helped restore beauty in the castle.  Christ breaks our curse of being slaves to sin and releases us from the prison of sin we were once in before He saved us, similar to how Belle saves the Beast and her father in Beauty and the Beast.

Mulan is another classic Disney princess movie.  Mulan sacrifices herself, paying no heed to the rule against women joining the army.  She sacrifices herself for her feeble father, the only male in the family, because she did not want him killed in battle.  The army discovered Mulan was a woman and banished her (instead of killing her, the traditional Chinese custom).  If this had not occurred, she would not have gained the intelligence necessary to save China.  Through Mulan’s actions, the Chinese army defeated the Huns and her father was saved from going to war.  Similar to Christ saving humanity, Mulan saves China as well as her father.

Superhero movies completely embody the idea and theme of man’s need for a savior.  First, let’s take a look at the word “superhero.”  Merriam-Webster’s New World Dictionary defines “super” as “to a degree greater than normal; higher in rank or position than, superior to; and, greater in quality, amount, or degree than, surpassing.”  The same dictionary defines “hero” as “any man admired for his courage, nobility, or exploits, especially in war; and, as any man admired for his qualities or achievements and regarded as an ideal model.”  Combining these definitions, “superhero” can be defined as “a man greater in quality, amount, or degree than and surpassing other men, who is admired for his courage and nobility.”

In Marvel’s Avengers, only the band of heroes, specifically The Incredible Hulk, Iron Man, Black Widow, Hawkeye (after he is released from Loki’s spell), Captain America, and Thor, with their combined abilities, can defeat Loki’s army and recover the powerful Tesseract.  Without this band of heroes, Loki would have taken over the world and used the Tesseract for sinister purposes, ultimately conquering earth.  Although this parallel seems extreme, please bear with me.  Just as only this particular band of heroes can save earth from the villain, only Christ has the power to defeat Satan and win us over, providing us a way back to God.

The Incredible Hulk is a slightly different example of man’s need for a savior as reflected in movies.  After the experiment on Bruce Banner goes wrong, the people in charge attempt to capture and kill him.  The authorities fear his condition and want to avoid the slaughtering of innocent civilians.  However, in their efforts, the fatal error of genetically altering one of their men is made, and he, in the end, becomes a greater threat than the Hulk (Bruce Banner).  Only the Hulk has the strength and ability to defeat the monster due to the genetic altering (as a result of Gamma radiation) that took place in both of them.  The men in charge require outside assistance to save humanity from the new monster they created, and Bruce was the only one capable of finishing the job.  Christ is the only one who can bring us back to God through his death on the cross.  He is the only one who can finish the job to restore us.  Without Christ, we would be lost, just as the people would have been lost without Bruce.

In Captain America: The First Avenger, Steve Rogers, a weakling, is not cleared for service in World War II.  By choice, driven by his desire to fight, he is genetically altered into a “supersoldier.”  The serum is lost after Rogers is transformed, foiling the plan to create an army of genetically-altered supersoldiers designed to win the war.  Captain America becomes the only one strong enough to defeat the Red Skull, the all-powerful leader of HYDRA (the bad guys).  Without Rogers’s alteration, multiple soldiers would have been lost.  Rogers led a rescue mission to save a group of soldiers, including Bucky, his best friend.  Without him, the rescue mission would not have been successful, nor would the Red Skull have been defeated, as he was the only one capable of doing the job.  Once again, Christ is the only one capable of restoring us.  Only the son of God can bring us back to God; Christ sacrificed everything for us.

In Thor, Thor is sent to earth to learn humility.  However, Loki remains and betrays their father.  It is only after Thor learns humility that he can return to save his people.  Without Thor sacrificing the Rainbow Bridge, his only way to return to Earth and see the girl he loves again, his people would be lost.  Thor, after being sent to learn humility, sacrifices his desires for the good of his people.  The Biblical parallel is not quite the same in this example.  Christ did not have to learn humility, as He is perfect.  However, He did humble himself to live as a human and die on the cross for our sins.  Christ sacrificed all after humbling himself.  Christ sacrificed His life, while Thor simply sacrificed not seeing the girl he loved again, making the parallel more difficult to draw.  Both sacrificed out of love: Christ’s love for us; Thor’s love for his father and people.  Thor’s people required his assistance to break the Rainbow Bridge and restore order; humanity required (and requires) Christ’s assistance to redeem us.

A couple of other movies that employ man’s need for a savior include The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe as well as The Lord of the Rings trilogy.  Once again, these examples are based on the movie adaptations of the original books.

The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe parallels easily with man’s need for a savior, as C.S. Lewis was a Christian when he wrote the book (the basis for the movie).  It is a parallel of the Bible.  The White Witch represents Satan and Aslan represents God.  Edmund betrays Aslan, just as we betray God through our sin (the origin of our sin nature being the fall of mankind in Genesis chapter three).  Aslan dies on the stone table to buy Edmund back from the White Witch.  Edmund is saved, and Aslan is resurrected.  This clearly parallels our betrayal of God and Christ redeeming us (or buying us back) from our sin nature through His crucifixion.  Aslan’s death on the Stone Table and his resurrection represent Christ’s death on the cross and His resurrection.  Thus, man’s need for a savior is purposefully embodied in this example.

In The Lord of the Rings trilogy, only Frodo can take the ring and get rid of it once and for all.  The lust for the ring’s power is so strong only Frodo can resist it (while he does succumb to the lust for power, he is not wholly defeated).  The journey to save everyone and burn the ring can only be accomplished by, well, himself.  In the same way, Christ is the only one who can save us.  Without His death and resurrection, we would still be separated from God due to our sin.

In each of the above examples, the characters cannot fix their problem by themselves.  They need an external aid to redeem them of their problem and fix the situation.  Similar to the above examples, we cannot fix our sin.  We cannot redeem ourselves; there is no possible way for us to do enough good deeds to make ourselves right with God.  Only Christ can redeem us and fix our problem.  These movies reflect man’s helplessness as well as the fact man is void without God.  These characters reflect man’s need for someone (an external source) to reach out and save them.  This theme is something I stumbled upon through my enjoyment of these films, and drawing parallels between these movies and my faith was enjoyable.  I hope you, the reader, thought it enjoyable as well.  Man knows he is incomplete, but many choose to turn away from the fact we are helpless without Christ, an external source, aiding us and saving us.  Movies reflect the idea man needs an external aid, and I hope this look aided the way you view movies in the future.

Sources

Merriam Webster’s New World Dictionary

Personal experience

Twelve Reasons the Church Deserves to Lose the Children

Christopher Rush

Whatever Happened to Good Ol’ Meat-and-Potatoes Christianity?

A little over a decade ago in his book Kingdom Education, Dr. Glen Schultz quoted Barna Group research indicating something like 88% of kids growing up “in the church” leave it shortly after high school graduation (for several reasons, not just college experiences).  In 2011, the Barna Group summarized five years of research with six reasons the youth are leaving the church: 1) the church is too overprotective, 2) their church presents Christianity as something shallow or irrelevant, 3) the church comes off as antagonistic to science, 4) the church communicates issues of sexuality poorly, 5) the church is too xenophobic and exclusive, and 6) the church seems unfriendly to those who doubt (some wording has been paraphrased).

Later last year, the Barna Group supplemented that research with five “myths” people erroneously believe why the youth are fleeing the church: 1) people lose their faith when they leave high school, 2) dropping out of church is a natural part of one’s spiritual journey, 3) college experiences are a key factor in leaving the church, 4) young Christians are becoming increasingly Biblically illiterate, and 5) young people will return to the church as always happens.

That list is not entirely helpful, since the Barna report elaborates on those ideas more specifically beyond what our present focus is here (readers are certainly encouraged to check out both of those articles), and not every point is relevant to our present inquiry.  Some of these ideas are pertinent here, though, and since the following article was conceived before I read the Barna reports, it is somewhat comforting to be supported by such a reputable source (though “comforting” is perhaps an inappropriate term for such a distressing subject).

Our focus here is not just about why young adults/near-adults leave the church, though that is part of it.  The Barna research concludes the church is somewhat to blame, but it is perhaps too lenient (perhaps because the main thrust of both articles is to get you to buy, and maybe read, the latest books by the president of Barna Group) and too narrow in its focus.  Our purpose here is to broaden our vision beyond polls and standardized surveys.  Some may consider this article a petty rant about personal grievances, a tirade against things I don’t particularly like.  Admittedly, some of the initial items in the list may seem somewhat petulant, but that was not my intention in including them (the latter items should be overtly significant issues, at least).  I consider them all valid contentions in an overall effort to encourage the church to examine itself and its practices.  It’s time we are open to the possibility the church is (at least in part) responsible for the mass exodus of young parishioners.  Perhaps the church deserves to lose the children.

1. Quiet Time

Admittedly, this is not a corporate church issue, but it can possibly be one part of the overall problem (why kids willfully reject the church and Christianity).  As an aspect of Christian experience, the “quiet time” has undergone a diverse life of favor and disfavor.  Is it Biblically supported?  Some would look to Jesus’ example of leaving the disciples early in the morning to pray fervently for protracted periods of time as the basis for the “quiet time.”  Others seem just to declare it to be an important, almost necessary, component of daily Christian life, based on nothing more than a fabricated aura of spirituality surrounding an atypical human act.  The problems with basing one’s conception of the value of the “quiet time” on Jesus’ behavior are twofold: 1) we don’t have Scriptural evidence Jesus did this on a daily basis, 2) the verses usually indicate Jesus went away to pray for a long period of time.  I have never heard those insisting on the “quiet time” call it a long period of time.  Instead, those who advocate the “quiet time” make it a simple, brief, self-serving activity.  It is never advertised as a half-hour or longer activity; most make it out to be a 10-minute activity necessary for one’s daily wellbeing or authenticity as a Christian.  Jesus didn’t get away by Himself to make Himself feel better for praying to His father.  “Quiet time” advocates tell you it is for your own good, that it will refresh you and give you energy for the day, like it is some sort of spiritual caffeine supplement.  See the self-contradicting irony: it is both a necessary ritualistic component to authentic spiritual maturity as well as a convenient, unobtrusive make-yourself-feel-better/pick-me-up/start-the-day-off-right little treat.  10-minute “quiet time” devotionals are all about checking off Bible reading from a daily checklist, enabling the quiet timer to feel good about himself without having done anything substantial.  True, reading the Bible can benefit people even without their will, but reading the Bible a few minutes a day just to do it is not genuine spiritual maturity.  Advertising spiritual growth as a convenient, fit-it-into-your-schedule supplement certainly does not give an accurate view of the Christian life to the kids.  Why maintain an allegiance to a faith that requires nothing more than 10 minutes of your day?  The “quiet time” is not real.  Christianity is not about making you feel better.

[Editor’s note: the above paragraph was written before this year’s Retreat.  Mrs. Lane’s enjoining to spend 45-plus minutes of quiet, solitary Bible reading and meditation, with actual interaction with the meaning and implications of lengthy Bible passages is clearly different from what most people advertise the “quiet time” to be.  By all means, spend a great deal of time regularly praying and studying and meditating on the Word of God free from distractions.]

2. Altar Calls

Part of the danger of altar calls is the notion of “Seeker Churches.”  What part of Romans 3:11 is unclear to people who administrate the functions and operations of local churches?  As will be addressed later, evangelism is not a corporate church function.  The church gathers to glorify God and grow mature.  Messages designed to communicate the importance of becoming born again, directed primarily to the unregenerate visitors who may or may not be present in the (for lack of a less accurate word) audience cannot be the sole presentation from the pulpit/stage.

Not that I am denying the importance of people learning for the first time the importance of regeneration — let’s not be ridiculous.  Likewise, let’s not be ridiculous by looking to Acts 2:41 as some sort of permission to do this.  I’m not denying the Spirit can convict and seal 3,000 souls today, but Peter is not addressing a church meeting, either.  He is speaking to an audience of all unsaved people (except for the 10 other Apostles).  Paul and Peter both rail against churches spending too long on basic doctrine without moving on to more advanced spiritual substance (1 Corinthians 3:1, 1 Peter 2:2).  I don’t understand why churches think ending each message every week with a “now that you’ve finally been convinced of the truth of the gospel thanks to this one message and the peppy music you heard, come up and prove how you are now saved” call to the audience is a sign of genuine conversion or rededication.  Shouldn’t actual discussions between those who are spiritually mature and those who are apparently coming to Christ occur before any public display is made?  How do we know it is genuine conversion and not just an emotional response to the many emotionally-driven elements of the contemporary church service?  I am not outright denying the possibility anyone could ever “get saved” in a church service, especially in light of Acts 2:41 as we have just referenced, but we should also acknowledge the Bible makes it clear genuine conversion is known by the fruit in the life of the person now saved and being saved, and that takes some time.  The problem is the pressure altar calls make on people to react immediately the way the church people want them to react, and despite the many times Jesus encourages those hearing Him on the Sermon on the Mount to “do their business with God the Father” in secret, altar calls demand an immediate, public display of nascent righteousness.  It is often difficult to accept the validity of these — and I have been to two Promise Keepers conventions.  Certainly baptisms are to be public displays of justification, but altar calls are not “come up and get baptized,” but rather “come up and get saved” most of the time.

Concerning the altar calls that aren’t justification related, I am frequently confused by these as well.  Admittedly I am personally averse to situations of embarrassment.  Not that those who heed the call are concerned about looking embarrassed, especially if they are actually being moved by the Spirit to seek immediate counsel, but just as churches should never do an “open mike response session,” enjoining spontaneous public displays of repentance, rededication, or just plain outbursts of catharsis could hardly be what Paul had in mind when he wrote on the importance of structured worship meetings done decently and in order (1 Corinthians 14:26-40).

Altar calls are not doing things “decently and in order.”  Children who grow up in the church and never experience something those around them consider worth going up to the altar may feel their experience of Christianity is inferior, and thus maybe they aren’t “doing it right.”  Instead of pressuring people to respond in such an emotionally-charged way and have these dramatic experiences, perhaps churches should encourage those so moved to seek out one of the multiple leaders of the church for authentic discussion and verification, and then the church can be notified in an orderly manner about the great ways the Spirit is moving in the lives of those in the local body.  Everyone is benefitted/edified that way, which is partly why the Church exists in the first place, and the kids are not awkwardly pressured to leave their seats week after week (before they leave their seat for good).

3. Kids on Stage

Similarly, some churches seem to take a perverse pleasure in embarrassing the children of their congregation.  I’m not just talking about the annual, painful to anyone whose child is not on the stage at the moment (and even to some whose are), Christmas Pageant (which may or may not be Biblically accurate), though that is part of the problem.  I’m talking about the entire practice of bringing the children on stage to sing some songs, do some skits, or whatever other nonsensical reason old people give for wanting to make young people cry.  Sure, some kids have real talent at an early age.  Let them be the ones who sing for the grownups.  Let the gifted actors do the plays (written by actual, professional playwrights, please — never any skits).  Don’t make all the kids in the nursery or children’s care wing come up and “sing” for us.  Most aren’t really singing, not well.  Most are shouting.  Others are not paying any attention.  Some are scared out of their minds.  Some are crying.  Are the adults doing anything to soothe these poor children?  No.  No, the grownups who have been given charge of the wellbeing of these children by God are sitting far away, laughing at their misfortune.  Perhaps the parents think the kids will not remember these experiences, since they are just kids.  Take it from me, kids remember these embarrassing and painful situations.  If you don’t want kids to leave your church when they grow up, stop putting them in embarrassing and painful situations.  Stop doing stupid things in general.

4. Gym Night

I have enjoyed some quality Gym Nights over the years, don’t get me wrong.  The problem is not with gym nights ontologically — the problem is akin to some of the reasons the Barna Group found in their surveys over the years: if “Christianity” is solely about fun, without any doctrinal substance, the church is not a relevant or important aspect of life.  Clearly this is not true: Christianity and corporate church life are integral (i.e., necessary) for life to be done correctly.  Churches, then, need to stop advertising it as a meaningless garden party.  It’s one thing to appeal to the “video game crowd,” but another to appeal so much the experience is nothing distinct from their normal video game habits.  Churches would do well to remember the old adage: “what you win them with is what you win them to.”  If Gym Night has an equal balance of athletic/hobby activities and authentic worship/devotional/purposive sanctification activities, keep the Gym Nights coming.  If, however, as seems to be the case too often today, Gym Night is nothing more than a “hey, we do those things, too” open house with no Biblical message or teaching involved, shut it down.  Christianity does not need to be “cool.”  The kids are choking to death on “cool” in the unregenerate world.  Christianity needs to offer the Word of Life.  As the Barna Group found, the kids have nothing substantial upon which to ground their ephemeral faith.  Give them authentic experiences and sound, doctrinal content.  If our message of the cross is not a stumbling block, it’s not an accurate message.  Don’t water down the gospel just so you have enough bodies for Scavenger Photo Hunt Night.

5. Small Groups

As with Gym Nights, the problem is not “small groups qua small groups.”  The danger is the growing dependence on small groups as a substitute for corporate worship church meetings.  If a church is so large it needs to advertise small groups as the way to get to know people and build relationships instead of at corporate meetings, it’s probably time to break off and form a new local church or two.

Small groups can serve very useful functions in the development and maturity of the individual Christian and the church body as a whole, but not if it is just “Gym Night for Adults.”  I’ve been to planning meetings and informational sessions in which the whole point of starting some men’s small groups was to give men an opportunity for a social club and pretend it was somehow authentic Proverbs 27:17 in action.  Concerning the recent trend of sermon-based small groups … blerg.  I acknowledge my personal experience of Christianity is quite distinct from most people’s experience.  Sermon-based small groups aren’t my idea of a useful time, but for some perhaps it is — so I don’t want to just tear them down wholly.

Small groups need to be purposed for spiritual growth and maturity.  I’m obviously not saying grownups aren’t allowed to have fun as Christians, nor am I saying every moment of small group time has to be super-spiritual and ultra-sanctified.  Fellowship is a necessary component of Christian/church life, clearly, but if we proclaim the point of corporate church life is solely to sing a few songs together and hear a topical sermon in the same room together, and maybe taking the Lord’s Supper once a quarter (if time permits), our conception of church life has become woefully distorted.  If the adults can’t model healthy, genuine mature Christian community for the kids, it’s no wonder they feel no need to continue with church life once they become adults.

6. Worship Leaders

Again, I’m not here to excoriate the entire group of this newly-created entity called the “worship leader.”  I know a few members of this group, and they are not in question here.  Clearly we are in a bit of a crisis of terminology, symptomatic of the larger epistemological crisis of why the kids are fleeing the church.  Frequently we will hear speakers remind us “worship is not just singing,” but in our programs (I’m sorry, “bulletins”) we look down and see “Worship Leader” for the name of the person who leads the band (excuse me, “worship team”).  If we want the kids to know and worship accurately, we should probably start using terms correctly, especially in the literature we hand out to everyone who comes into the church (pardon me, “church building”).

I’ve visited local churches in which the worship leader spent nearly all of the time with his eyes closed, engaged in some secret business to which none of us were privy.  I certainly don’t begrudge a Christian from worshipping and experiencing God privately, but if a person is supposed to be a leader of other people, even for only 20-some minutes a week, it’s not too much to ask that the person keep an eye on the people he is supposed to be leading.

You can always tell the worship leaders who spend a great deal of time listening to live albums of their favorite Dove Award-winning professional bands, since they try to recreate the mood and audience reactions immediately and on nearly every song, even if the congregation in front of them is wholly unprepared for it.  Then they will tell us to spend a few minutes with the Lord individually, right where we are.  This may sound like a good idea, but aren’t we gathered for corporate worship?  Why are we supposed to do individual things in a corporate church meeting?  Can we not effectively worship God solitarily at home, or does your musical accompaniment make it more authentic?

Similarly, you can also tell the worship leaders who are really frustrated preachers.  During the super-spiritual quiet part of the song, the worship leader will go off on a ten-minute mini-sermon, usually motivated by his frustrations with the congregation and why they aren’t spiritual enough.  Worship leaders: stop talking.  The kids wisely do not connect “being talked down to” with “worthwhile Christianity.”  Stop being part of the problem.  Stop telling us to “make this our prayer this morning.”  It’s not a prayer, it’s a song.  Why are you telling us we sound great? and why are you demanding we sing louder?  You aren’t the judge of our worship; we aren’t singing to you.  And you can stop going to the a cappella bridge every time and stop singing, telling us to do all the singing for you.  Leading by abstention isn’t really leading.  Oh, and worship leaders: the words to the song are being projected up on the screen.  You don’t have to keep telling us what words are coming next.

7. Accompanied/Extemporaneous Prayers

It’s quite possible the most annoying things worship leaders do is accompany prayers, whether from themselves or someone else (like the preacher).  Are we supposed to be listening to the words being prayed over us (or at us, depending on the temperament of the person doing the praying) or the music being played?  Stop with the sensory overload.  First you rail against the kids’ constant digital music obsession (while you tell them to go have a quiet time), and then you put music to the prayers, as if they must be more palatable or entertaining for the congregation.  Let’s try to avoid hypocrisy if we want the kids to remain active within our ranks.

The more time I spend in Virginia, the more I tend to agree with C.S. Lewis concerning the value of traditional, planned-out prayers, such as are found in the Book of Common Prayer.  Extemporaneous prayers are not, as everything under scrutiny in this article, naturally and wholly repugnant, especially when occurring in a Breaking of Bread service, but the practice of it needs improvement.  An emotive background score is not going to salvage a theologically spurious and structurally disorganized prayer.  Rambling is one of the things Jesus specifically warned against concerning prayers: don’t use too many words like those who want to be noticed, He said.  If you are going to pray, great — I’m certainly not discouraging prayer; just try to be accurate and coherent.  Especially if you know you are going to be leading an official leading prayer in the forthcoming service: there is nothing unspiritual about planning your prayer out in advance.  Certainly we in the congregation benefit more from orderly, planned out sermons; why do we think prayers have to be spontaneous in order to be spiritual?  A good planned-out prayer can be quite beneficial, perhaps even more so than a heartfelt, impromptu “thank you, Father, for dying on the cross for us, and as the preacher comes to give us Your word, Lord, we ask that your Son be with us during this meeting.”  Poor doctrine, no matter how heartfelt, is not really beneficial or spiritual.  Not that I’m disagreeing with the Bible, which clearly says the Spirit helps translate our oft-times feeble and erroneous prayer, but why not do our part and pray accurately and preparedly when we have the chance?  As mentioned above, chaotic disorganization is not appealing to adults; it certainly isn’t appealing to the youth struggling to overcome their own internal near-adulthood chaos.

8. Contemporary Christian Music

Little needs be said here, surely.  Churches should really stop treating the singing of hymns like some sort of special treat or palliative to the older generations, as if they need to be coddled or appeased once in a while.  You certainly don’t need me to tell you the depth of theological content in songs of the church has steadily decreased over time to its current abysmal state of emotive shash.  While that is an unabashed generalization, it is more accurate than not in most cases.  Perhaps your experience is different.  Send me the address and meeting times of your local church.  The blatant rejection of the worship-musical output of the history of the church connects to the next point.

9. Rejection/Ignorance of Church History

I suggest to you kids would not leave the church so quickly if they 1) knew God accurately and 2) knew the church accurately.  Assuming these kids who leave the church are actually born again Christians (not to open up a whole other can of worms), if they knew God increasingly more accurately, why would they possibly walk away from Life itself?  And if they knew what the church was, its history, its musical history, its theological and doctrinal history, its heroes and shapers and martyrs, would they really be so quick to walk away from a history that truly belonged to them in substantial ways, both emotional and intellectual? if they truly considered themselves members of an integrated Body?  Doubtful.

It’s bad enough preachers throw down volumes of systematic theology as some sort of anathema to genuine Bible study, but to keep the congregation ignorant of the life history of the organic organization to which they are declared a vital part (either unintentionally or willfully) is inexcusable.  Even if it is a supplementary “Sunday School” class on Church History, or a small group that meets to read and discuss key works of theologians or missionaries or martyrs of the faith throughout history, do something to make the kids and the older people aware of the history of this thing called the church.  Too many Christians go around thinking the church exists solely for them and their particular weekly needs.  The church is far older and more important than that.  I’m not saying every local church has to have a lending library, but each church should make awareness of the history of the church (the one Body of Christ) a priority.  Clearly this cannot happen in “seeker-friendly churches” designed mostly for evangelistic outreach.  Apparently the purpose of those sorts of groups is to “get people into Heaven.”  However … that’s not what the Body of Christ is about.

10. Governing Structure

This may seem out of place, since it isn’t an aspect of in-service church experience, but it is quite possibly an important aspect of church life whose impact is generally ignored.  Related to the significant issue of mega-churches, if the local church is not enabling and encouraging the regular use of each member’s spiritual gifts, given to them by the Holy Spirit Himself, the church is not functioning properly.

How this relates to governing structure and the children fleeing the church may seem tenuous, but it is connected.  As boggling to the mind as it may seem, despite the clear governing structure indicated throughout the New Testament (especially the Pastoral Epistles), a significant number of churches have, for all intents and purposes, one person at the top called the “head pastor.”  Where is this position in the New Testament?  That’s right: nowhere.  The church is not a feudal organization.  Perhaps the head pastor talks about how great the board of elders is, but if he is the man doing all the teaching virtually every week, things are not right.

Added to this confusion, American churches in the 21st century seem to be in the habit of advertising for new pastors and leaders across the country.  What does this tell the kids in the congregation?  There is no future for you here, basically.  If we want new help, if we have positions (new or old) to fill, we will find them from the national marketplace, not from within.  In total contrast to Paul’s direction for the governance and promulgation of church leaders, solely through one generation discipling the next, churches would rather steal from one another.  So the kids see no future in the church.  If anyone else in the congregation has the gift of preaching, he certainly can’t use it here, since the head pastor is responsible for 40-some sermons a year.  And we wonder why the average length of the pastorate in America today is about 18 months.  Maybe if churches operated more Biblically, with a multitude of teachers and preachers under the governance of elders, supported by a multiplicity of deacons, the leaders wouldn’t get burned out so quickly, kids would see value in staying loyal to the local church (since the local church is actually loyal to its members), and the church would more likely be growing spiritually and not just numerically.

11. Topical Messages

Topical messages have their time and place: holidays, kairotic moments, seasons of that sort.  However, if the kids get nothing but topical sermons week after week, year after year, we should not be surprised the kids walk away from the church.  A steady diet of topical messages gives the kids the impression the Bible is a disjointed, unconnected encyclopedia.  Spiritual maturity does not come from an ignorance of the Bible as a connected whole.  Advertising the annual “preaching through a whole book of the Bible!” as if it is a rare delicacy is not terribly impressive, especially since the “preaching through a whole book of the Bible” means the preacher covers multiple chapters in one sermon while talking about only a couple of verses.  This is not a rigorous commitment to the Apostles’ teaching.  Without a commitment to systematic, expository preaching, the church is not going to grow spiritually.

Perhaps you will think that is too bold a claim to make.  The New Testament, however, disagrees: read Hebrews 5:11-6:2 and 1 Corinthians 3:1-3 as key examples of the importance of maturing from basic principles of the faith to maturity.  Maturity — genuine knowledge, in fact — comes from understanding truth, reality itself, in terms of relationships (see The Idea of a University by Cardinal Newman).  Knowing the flow of the Bible, God’s providential work through history, does not come from a few verses here and a few verses there.  Jesus’ extensive knowledge of the Old Testament did not come from a topical survey of some pertinent messianic prophetic passages.  To consider Paul’s use of the OT as a topical approach is to misunderstand him completely.  Viewing Hebrews as nothing more than a pastiche of unrelated verses or concepts is bad hermeneutics (to put it nicely).  Topical messages cannot be the only approach to Bible preaching.  The congregation may enjoy topical sermons more, preachers may enjoy giving them more (since they are easier to prepare — and by “prepare” I mean “download from some other pastor’s website”), but I’m quite certain the Bible actually condemns giving messages to people just so they will feel better.  Something about ear tickling, as I recall.

For you pastors out there who will respond “I don’t have time to prepare expository messages each week,” I refer you to the previous reason kids leave the church.  The reason you don’t have time to do your job accurately is 1) being an elder has become a salaried position (this could have been addressed earlier, but it is such a mind-blowing notion to me I don’t have the heart to talk about it at length), and 2) you are trying to do too much.  Follow the Pastoral Epistles and develop multiple teachers and preachers capable of effectively dividing the Word of Truth to the people.  If multiple teachers and preachers are on the rotation, including all of the elders, all of you will have time to prepare systematic expository messages.  Everyone wins.  And more importantly, the church operates correctly, the children grow and will more likely find no reason to leave the church; most importantly, God will be more glorified through it all.

12. Matthew 28:19-20 vs. Acts 2:42

Finally we have the crux of the issue, at least as far as I see it.  The Barna Group and others view this issue differently, and that’s fine — I’m not saying I’m more right than they are.  The point of this overview was to present other potential reasons why the kids don’t stay in the church after they grow up.  The absence of doctrinal truth is most likely the main reason — since the church has not given them an accurate understanding of who God is, what the church is, who they are in Christ, the purpose of life, and all the rest of the key answers to existence available only through God’s revelation, we shouldn’t be surprised they don’t stick around for more of the same.  The main issue, as I see it, then, is on what fundamental principle or idea the local church functions: Matthew 28:19-20 (the so-called “Great Commission”) or Acts 2:42.

Some of you are already antagonistic, since I had the audacity to call the revered “Great Commission” “so-called.”  Others of you will say something akin to “the church has had a long history dating back to Genesis 12 and YHWH’s covenantal promise to Abram, and though Matthew 28 occurs before Pentecost it is still part of the lengthy outworking of God’s single-yet-multifaceted plan to return mankind to the Tree of Life and full relationship with Him.”  Obviously.  I’m not denigrating either the importance of Matthew 28:19-20 or the validity of its connection to Acts 2:42 (and their origin in Genesis 12 and even Genesis 1-2).  What I am saying here is in the practical operations of local churches in America in the 20th-21st centuries, noticeable differences exist between churches grounded upon Matthew 28:19-20 and those grounded upon Acts 2:42, and the churches driven by Acts 2:42 seem (to me, at least, and feel free to rebut) more Biblically authentic.

In Matthew 28:19-20 Jesus is talking directly to the Apostles.  As you know, the debate is whether Jesus’ words to them also apply to the people who later become disciples of Christ after Pentecost.  The Apostles are unique to the church, which sounds painfully obvious, but many people tend to forget that simple truth.  Few Christians seem to grab hold of the several diverse commands Jesus gave His followers before His crucifixion, though many are quite eager to glom on to Jeremiah 29:11, since it makes them feel so good.  What is it about Matthew 28?

The parallel passages have significant contributions to the notion of going into all the world and making disciples.  Luke 24:48 says “You are witnesses of these things.”  Part of the reason Jesus sends the Apostles out to the world is they actually saw Jesus, His sufferings, and His resurrection.  We are not witnesses of any of those things.  Mark 16, most of which is somewhat suspect, adds quite unusual aspects to the effects of evangelism according to the Great Commission: “in My name they will cast out demons; they will speak in new tongues; they will pick up serpents by their hands and if they drink any deadly poison, it will not hurt them; they will lay their hands on the sick, and they will recover” (Mark 16:17-18).  If these things are supposed to accompany evangelism as prescribed by the Great Commission, not too many people in North America have been recipients of the Great Commission.  John 20:23 adds Jesus saying “If you forgive the sins of any, they are forgiven them; if you withhold forgiveness for any, it is withheld.”  Do non-apostles have the same authority?  Effectively, by claiming the Great Commission for all Christians, one is claiming every Christian has the ability to pick up snakes and drink poison with impunity, forgive the sins of everyone or not at their own discretion, and every Christian actually witnessed the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus.

We can’t just take one version of the Great Commission and not the others, can we?  Some would say we could, arguing since the Matthew account is outside, and Mark, Luke, and John are inside, the different gospels aren’t really talking about the same particular event, in that Jesus was spending His post-resurrection forty days with the Apostles talking about many important things.  But since they are so similar, can these different versions really be talking about different sendings?  How many times is Jesus commissioning His disciples?  Especially since they are to wait around until Pentecost, it doesn’t make much sense to say Jesus is really giving them different commissions.  Acts 1 also emphasizes the people who receive the “Great Commission” are eyewitnesses to Him: “you will be My witnesses in Jerusalem and in all Judea and Samaria, and to the end of the earth” (verse 8).  Once the hundreds of people listed in 1 Corinthians 15 and everyone else who actually saw Jesus were dead, clearly no one else who took up the mantle of the Great Commission could be following it literally.

The New Testament emphasis on evangelism is actually more on personal lifestyle than actual departure from one’s location.  Paul says some evangelists are given as gifts to the church, but others are given different gifts, so not everyone has the “gift of evangelism.”  The Great Commission is not the same thing as 1 Peter 3:15’s “ready defense,” and Peter is certainly addressing members of the church.  Paul’s oft-used Romans 10 passage about the importance of evangelists going out into the world also includes the oft-overlooked reminder these people are sent out by the church, in that most people are actually staying behind in a supportive role.

All of this to say I’m still a bit skeptical the Great Commission is literally for every Christian to follow, since only a limited number were actual witnesses to the content to be spread by the recipients of the Great Commission, and the New Testament epistles emphasize personal lifestyle evangelism more than actual packing up and going somewhere else for most Christians.  Evangelism is not a corporate church function, since it exists as an entity for the growth and maturity of itself.  “Now,” as Bill Cosby said, “I told you that story to tell you this one.”

Churches built on the “Great Commission” seem to be essentially the kinds of churches described throughout this article: their main focus is not on the actual Christians within the congregation but everyone else in the community.  Their definition of success as a church is increased attendance.  Of course I’m not saying it’s bad for churches to grow or care about people not on the attendance roster.  I would be ecstatic if everyone in the world became an authentic Christian.  But success for the Body of Christ is not solely numerical growth, especially if numerical growth is based solely on statistics of numbers of people who walk in the door, with no knowledge of whether these people are actually Christians or not.  Success for the church is identical to success for the individual Christian: conformity to Christlikeness.  This is spiritual growth, not just numerical growth.  Transfer from the Kingdom of Darkness into the Kingdom of Light (justification) is crucial, obviously — but purpose does not cease there.  If it did, the church would not exist at all: Christ would just call us home immediately upon regeneration, and the sealing work of the Holy Spirit would not occur.

In contrast are churches built on Acts 2:42: “And they devoted themselves to the Apostles’ teaching, fellowship, to the breaking of bread, and to prayer.”  Here we have the conduct of the original church in clear, concise language.  These are the activities of the church.  The rest of the New Testament corroborates this so evidently it needs no elaboration here.  Churches built on Acts 2:42 exist for the spiritual growth of the Body of Christ.  Obviously visitors are encouraged and welcome — it’s not like non-Christians are banned from coming through the doors — but sermons are not directed at them.  Acts 2:42 churches value evangelism, they send out and support missionaries, and they equip and encourage those in the congregation to be prepared with a ready defense for the hope found within them.  They regularly celebrate communion and strangely enough never run out of things to say about Jesus and what He has done.  They know personal lifestyle evangelism is far more effective in reaching lost souls than altar calls — perhaps they got that from Jesus’ example in the gospels.  They are governed by a plurality of elders, supported by a plurality of deacons, and disciple the successive generations in the intellectual content of the faith, the history of the church, and the use of their spiritual gifts.  Instead of trying to make church fun for the kids, giving them nothing substantial upon which to base their faith as they grow, churches founded on Acts 2:42 focus on the Head of the church as the source, reason for, and purpose of life itself.

Meat and Potatoes

The purpose of this monograph was not to rant against the things American Christianity enjoys which I personally dislike, though it may have seemed like that.  I didn’t say much at all about a great number of things that irritate me, which I admit is probably small comfort.  Likewise, my intent was not to set up a straw man argument, making Matthew 28 churches all bad and Acts 2:42 churches all good, and while I admit it could be interpreted that way, it would be dishonest to reject the position outright: the distinctions are real.  I have seen them in many churches across the country.  Churches are geared either for those who aren’t there yet (Matthew 28) or those who are (Acts 2:42).

Matthew 28 churches, despite their claim they exist to make disciples, rarely do that very thing.  In an effort to always be appealing and entertaining, they rarely go beyond the elemental things (if spiritual matters are ever discussed at all).  God’s wrath and justice are never mentioned, and the kids must always have a good time (especially at Trunk-or-Treat).  Missions trips are often undertaken, surely … but hardly ever (if even then) are they advertised for the sake of those who haven’t heard the gospel.  They are something to make you, the Christian, feel better about yourself, as if missions trips exist solely to make you feel like a better Christian, to get out of your comfort zone, and check off the “short-term missions trip” from your Pillars of Christianity checklist, like reading through the Bible in a year, going to that super-spiritual youth retreat every summer, and, of course, making sure all of your radio presets are set to music both positive and encouraging.  Matthew 28 churches are eager to declare the time for Bible study is over: now’s the time for action.  Since the emphasis is always on going away to feel better about yourself, it is bemusing they are irritated the children actually heed that message.  It is quite possible these churches deserve to lose the children.

Acts 2:42 churches, whose reason for existing is not just to get larger numerically so they can afford to hire more staff but instead abet spiritually maturation of the Christians within the congregation, are more likely to retain the kids as they grow older, since they aren’t trying too hard to be fun and relevant.  Instead of fun and games, these churches provide truth and life.  That’s what the kids want.  That’s what the kids need.  That’s the Christianity we all need.

Pass me the meat and potatoes, please.  The children and I are hungry, and we wouldn’t mind staying for dinner.

References

Barna Group. “Five Myths about Young Adult Church Dropouts.” 19 September 2012.

—. “Six Reasons Young Christians Leave Church.” 18 September 2012.

Schultz, Dr. Glen. Kingdom Education: God’s Plan for Educating Future Generations. 2nd ed. Nashville: LifeWay Press, 2003. 1998.

Higher Love: The Annotated Remix

Christopher Rush

The following is a chapel address given April 20, 2012, with occasional musical accompaniment.

Entrance1

The title of this message is “Think About It: There Must Be Higher Love … Without It Life is Wasted Time … Bring Me a Higher Love … Where’s that Higher Love I’ve Been Thinking Of?”2  The subtitle this message is “Where is Chaka Khan when you need her?”3  I admit this is rather a lengthy title for a brief message, but it couldn’t really be helped.  I know what you’re thinking: why didn’t play that song as his entrance music instead of Sly and the Family Stone?  That’s certainly a good question, and the answer will undoubtedly be even better.  The answer is that it sets the mood quite well for what I want to talk about today: the nature of God’s higher love and the powerful ability of music to help us experience and delight in that love better than most anything else.  This will be done rather subtly, as a vast majority of the content of this message is taken from lyrics of songs.  See if you can identify all the songs used in this message.  As this opening song indicates, it is music that brings this worshipful experience about.  Music has always been closely tied to worship, communication, and thus loving God and one another: the Levitical tabernacle musicians; David’s role as court musician to soothe Saul; Elisha called for a musician in 2 Kings 3 to better hear the word of the Lord; Paul enjoins us in Ephesians 5 to speak to one another with psalms, hymns, and spiritual songs (which is what I am doing to you here today); around God’s throne forever are beings singing and worshiping God.  These functions (worship, communication, praise) are all driven by one major impetus: higher love2.

Think About It: There Must Be Higher Love

Let us approach these thoughts on love through the framework of our title, beginning with the first line “think about it: there must be higher love.”  Immediately Brother Steve recalls to our attention love is connected to the intellect — he doesn’t say “feel about it,” or “emote about it,” or “sense it.”  He tells us to think about it.  Our memories are immediately drawn to Luke 10:27 and its synoptic fellows: “You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your strength and with all your mind, and your neighbor as yourself.”  Loving the Lord with our minds is part of the primary commandment, the most important thing we are to do — this is the person we are supposed to be.  Love is not just an emotional component, though it partly is (and Brother Steve is also mindful of this when he shortly after this says to “look inside your heart and I’ll look inside mine,” in an effort to find this higher love).  It surely is partly emotional, since as human beings we cannot fully divide are emotive selves from our ratiocinative selves.  Sometimes we try, for various reasons and this can be temporarily fruitful, though to be fully human we must see everything wholly, from both sides; we always need to hear both sides of the story4.  This includes loving with our minds.  Since love is intellectual, love is rational, love is volitional, love is self-aware.  Since we have focused many times over the years on the intellectual nature of love, we can move from this notion of love being self-aware to the second aspect of our framing title: there must be higher love.

C.S. Lewis’s “argument from desire” may be applicable here5.  Lewis says we as human creatures primarily desire things because there exist satisfaction for those desires: we hunger because food exists to satisfy that hunger; we yearn for community because other people exist and there is God with whom to have community.  If a yearning exists innately for something apparently unfillable in this present existence, that should cause us to suspect another aspect to existence exists — perhaps not one in this present incarnation.  Though some argue against this, most of those counterarguments are built upon a materialistic presuppositional base combined with a neglect of Lewis’s emphasis on “innate” desire.  He’s not talking about the older child “oh, I wish I could fly” sort of nonsense — that’s not an innate thing.  Children are innately afraid of falling, not innately yearning to slip the surly bounds of earth and say “excuse me while I kiss the sky6.”  Perhaps the reason people yearn to live forever is because they, in fact, will.  Since we yearn for higher love, and surely we all do — we all yearn not just for love but a fully, wholly satisfying love that is divine7, transcendent, superior to the love we get even from our most intimately loved fellow humans — if Lewis’s argument is valid, and most rational people agree it is, as brother Steve says, “there must be higher love” — a satisfaction for this yearning exists.  It must exist — whether down in the heart (where? down in the heart8), hidden in the stars above, or overtly displayed in the stars above — but not just because we want it, since we have just been reminded to “think about it.”  It’s not there solely because we want it; it is already there, a priori, innate, uncreated, fully self-existent, and perhaps almost coincidently, just so happens to be the satisfaction to a deep-felt innate desire, one of the most primal, driving needs we as mortal beings have.  This love draws us to itself, lifting us higher and higher, and keeps on lifting us higher and higher, higher than we’ve ever been lifted before.  Once, we were downhearted, disappointment was our closest friend; but then when we met this higher love, disappointment disappeared and never showed its face again.  I said this love keeps on lifting us higher and higher9, intentionally and willingly.  Almost as if it is a personal being … but we shall get there soon enough.  Perhaps you are also wondering if this love can take you high enough — can it fly you over yesterday10?  Accepting all I’ve done and said11?  All of us get lost in the darkness; all of us do time in the gutter12.  You aren’t alone in wondering if Higher Love can build an emerald city with these grains of sand?  Will it take me places I’ve never known?  Will it make it all new that’s old?  It can do that; indeed, it can do that13.  Don’t turn your back on and slam the door on those12 who truly love you, banging their heads outside your wall14.  Turn around and stand and don’t be afraid to let your true colors show15.  The alternative, as we shall now see, is not good.

Without It, Life is Wasted Time

Brother Steve next tells us without this higher love, life is wasted time.  Not only must divine, transcendent love exist, but assuming it didn’t for a moment, life without it would not be worth living.  How miserable people without this Higher Love must be, to be created in the image of someone they have not met — not yet16.  Immediately our thoughts are taken to what many call the definitive love passage of the New Testament, 1 Corinthians 13.  No matter how erudite or persuasive our communication abilities are, says St. Paul, even to the point of being able to converse with the angelic realm, without higher love our insights and offerings become substanceless cacophony.  Even were we to comprehend the mystical unity of knowledge and ideas so fully even Cardinal Newman was jealous17, without higher love our lucidity becomes silent18 and our perspicacity becomes mutely obtuse.  Were we to have faith that could crumble the mountains into the sea19 without higher love, we would be less voluminous than crumbled mountains scattered to the sea (and the mountains would win again20).  If we give ourselves away, and give ourselves away, and we give, and we give, and we give ourselves away21 even to the point of voluntary self-immolation, without higher love we have given nothing and we have gained nothing.  We need this higher love in everything we do but more than that it needs to be who we are.  We need this higher love brought to us, as Brother Steve says: bring me a higher love.  Continuing in 1 Corinthians, Paul encourages us this higher love has already come to us.

Bring Me a Higher Love

How Paul does it is something remarkable: transitioning seamlessly from superlative examples of the absence of this higher love, he metaphorically delineates what this higher love is.  But as N.T. Wright is so astute to remind us, Paul essentially always has the entirety of the Word of God in mind when he writes22 — thus, when Paul quotes or alludes to a particular verse he has the entire chapter or more in mind — and possibly things that weren’t even written down yet, being an apostle who got his revelation directly from God.  Thus, when Paul describes attributes of love it would be fatuous to doubt he has also in mind what was later transcribed for us by St. John in 1 John 4: God is Love.  Paul knew that even if he died before John wrote it.  Since Jesus is God, Jesus is love.  He won’t let you down, and I know He’s mine forever23.  Thus the following attributes are not about an abstract concept, not what some people call just an emotion, these are attributes of God Himself: Higher Love is patient, kind, not envious, not boastful, not arrogant, not rude, does not insist on its own way (as Paul says in Philippians 2, as Jesus did not think His own innate equality with the Father something to be held on tightly, not that He was afraid of losing control, just that He knew emptying Himself for the salvation of us was perhaps a higher priority).  Higher Love does not laugh at what is not funny; it doesn’t wink at sin; it doesn’t rejoice at wrongdoing; it rejoices with the truth (again confirming the intellectual nature of love and its kinship to uniform reality).  Love broke the bonds and loosed the chains and carried the cross and took my shame and took my pain.  You know I believe it24.  Love believes all things (again, a sign of its intellectual community with what is, and love’s ability to see reality also for what it will be, not just for what it was).  Love never ends.  That’s a pretty remarkable litany of qualities of love as incarnated by Jesus — though perhaps it might even be more accurate to think about love as a kind of anthropomorphism of God Himself.

But then Paul starts to do something even more remarkable here: it’s not enough to just think of Jesus when we think of the attributes of Higher Love, though as we have said from the outset worship and abiding in love through living out this love is predominately what leisure and thus our purpose in life is.  Paul continues to tear down our immature comfort levels by reminding us of the evanescent nature of the sort of things we too-easily embrace or look to for identity and security: prophecies, languages, even knowledge itself (in the spiritual gift sense) —  our understandings of these, no matter how many terminal degrees we have attained in them, are actually pale, puny, shadowy versions of the real truth.  All the substance we think we are is in fact just flash.  We know reality, we know God, we know Higher Love — we love — partially, incompletely, ephemerally.  Later, in the life to come, in the next phase of eternity in which we already are, we will stop seeing each other, stop seeing ourselves, stop seeing God dimly, incompletely, in shadows; in the cold mirror of a glass, I see my reflection pass, see the dark shades of what I used to be.  I said Love rescue me25.  We will then see and live and love effulgently, completely, face-to-face.

We yearn for the sunshine of this Higher Love26 — can anybody find me somebody to love?27 we desperately cry.  Love is such an old-fashioned word, this dim world of superficial delight and lust says in response, attempting to dissuade us from Higher Love.  Higher Love dares you to care for the people on the edge of the night and Higher Love dares you to change our way of caring about ourselves28.  This is not easy to do.  The world would much rather have us apathetic toward Love than hate it — and sometimes we are there, too.  We don’t even care as restless as we are; we feel the pull in the land of a thousand guilts29.  We must remember, though, that while we can only love partially now, but we can do it — Jesus came to give us Life and that abundantly — we have a down payment of Eternal Life in us now in the Holy Spirit, which is Jesus’ Spirit.  Higher Love has been brought to us.  Love will overcome; this love will make us men; love will draw us in to wipe our tears away30.  But we have to wait for its completion in the life to come.  The rest of it will be brought to us — or, perhaps more likely, we will be brought to this Higher Love when we have finished shuffling off this mortal coil31 and our curtain has been drawn and our hearts can go where our hearts now belong32, forwarding our mail to the place where the streets have no name33, a place that has to be believed in to be seen, where all that you fashion, all that you make, all that you build, and all that you break, all that you measure, all that you feel — all this you can leave behind; you’ve got to leave it behind34.  You can.  You will.  Higher Love is waiting on the other side.  It’s calling us even now!35  Leave behind the childish (not child-like36) ways of speaking, thinking, reasoning, and become mature, holy, elite (not just excellent) by dwelling in this Higher Love — knowing God, each other, ourselves, as we have been known by Higher Love all this time.  It’s a sort of homecoming35, you see.

This abnegation of our vision in the mirror is not easy to do, as we just said, nor is it easy to grasp.  Worlds are turning and we’re just hanging on, facing our fear and standing out there alone2 (at times, we feel).  We are partially in the dark, in enemy-occupied territory, where fear, the mind-killer37, is rampant and fear’s a powerful thing, baby — it can turn your heart black, you can trust; it’ll take your God-filled soul and fill it with devils and dust38 … if you let it.  But we must turn from fear.  Still there’s a yearning and it’s real to you and me, there must be someone who’s feeling for me.  Things look so bad everywhere in this whole world what is fair?  We walk blind and we try to see, falling behind in what could be2.  This is the danger as we go skating away on the thin ice of a new day39.

To respond to this, Paul now does perhaps the most remarkable thing — almost audacious — with this final verse of the chapter.  Faith — a great thing; impossible to live without it — you gotta have faith, faith, faith, I gotta have faith40.  Hope — a great thing; impossible to live without it.  Love — a great thing; impossible to live without it.  We turn away from fear, but we don’t turn to hope.  We don’t turn to faith.  The greatest of these, Paul tells us, is actually love!  Love is greater than faith; love is greater than hope.  Wowzah.  We turn from fear and embrace love.  As best we can, for as long as we can.  I can’t do it perfectly yet, because I’ve been a prisoner all my life and I can say to you we need this Higher Love to take us home because we don’t remember41 how to do it perfectly yet.  So where is that Higher Love I’ve been thinking of?2  It is here.  It is now42.

Where’s that Higher Love I’ve been Thinking of?

The words that I remember from my childhood still are true that there’s none so blind as those who will not see.  And to those who lack the courage and say it’s dangerous to try, well they just don’t know that love eternal will not be denied.  Yes I know it’s going to happen, I can feel you getting near.  And soon we’ll be returning to the fountain of our youth.  And if you wake up wondering, in the darkness He’ll be there — His arms will close around you and protect you with the Truth.  I know You’re out there somewhere, somewhere, somewhere; I know I’ll find You somehow, somehow, somehow; I know I’ll find You somehow and somehow I’ll return again to You43.  But oh, how I wish You were here44.  Right here, right now45.  Now that we know Higher Love is Jesus, and we know what Higher Love has done for us, we already know the answer to Brother Steve’s final question, though as we saw at the beginning of this brief exploration, he knew it already as well — it is both in our hearts and written in the sky above, though not as covertly as he suspected.  The Heavens declare the glory of God, as David says in Psalm 19.  Love is all around no need to waste it46.  It’s not really a question of where love is — we know it is here in part, we know it will be fulfilled later, we just have to wait for it.  Things will be just fine; you and I’ll just use a little patience47.  Brother Steve recognizes this himself: I will wait for it; I’m not too late for it; until then I’ll sing my song to cheer the night along2.  While we are in the long dark night of seeing in a mirror darkly, we are to sing a new song (see how this all ties together) and worship and wait patiently for the Lord.  How long do we sing this song?48  Until Higher Love comes and rescues us: until we can say I’ve conquered my past, the future is here at last, and I stand at the entrance to a new world I can see, the ruins to the right of me will soon have lost sight of me, love has rescued me25 — the Lord of Lords and King of Kings has returned to lead His children home to take us to the New Jerusalem49.

The issue, then, is what do we do in the meantime before the supper of the Mighty One49 is ready?  Every woman and every man needs to take a righteous stand, find the love that God wills and the faith that He commands38.  In the meantime we live a life of grateful worship, of genuine leisure, a life of reflecting however dimly the Higher Love in which we abide, the Higher Love with whom we have a personal relationship since love is a person.  It may feel like a battlefield50 sometimes, but love is a person.  A person who will return to take us home but for now maybe home is where the heart is given up to the One51 who has shown us what love is.  You want to know what love is?  I know He can show you52.  He already has — we celebrated it a few weeks ago, as we have said already.  So what do we do?  Who are we, while we live this life of love, of leisure? while we wait and sing our song?2  Let’s pull all these cords (chords?) together by looking at our final biblical song (in the sense of actually being in the Bible, since just about all the others songs alluded to this afternoon are biblical in the sense of being parallel with the Bible — and we all want to be parallel with the Bible): Psalm 116.

King David reveals great pain in the first stanza; in the midst of such pain and loss, his opening thoughts which recur throughout force us out of our complacency and the comfort of wallowing in our own miseries: I love the Lord, because He has heard my voice and my pleas for mercy.  Because He has inclined His ear to me, therefore I will call on Him as long as I live.  David doesn’t require God to do anything — he doesn’t say “because God fixed all my problems, I will then worship Him and love Him” — so far all we know God has done was just listened to what David had to say.  That is enough for him; it is probably even enough for David that God exists.  Is that enough for us?  You are Who You are, God — that’s enough for me.  The snares of death encompassed me; the pangs of Sheol laid hold on me; I suffered distress and anguish.  Then I called on the name of the Lord: “Oh Lord,” I pray, “deliver my soul!”  As I have said elsewhen, pretty much all of you have lived lives far more difficult and painful than mine has been.  I don’t say this lightly, nor am I bragging: my life has been far easier than it probably should have been.  You don’t need me to tell you about the importance or even the difficulty of calling on the Lord and struggling to abide in Him when the going gets rough.  Most of the problems and pains in my life have been self-inflicted: a little bowling alley here, a little stop sign there, but nowhere near what most of you have already gone through in slightly less than half the time.  You can probably say even better than I, a posteriori, along with David the next stanza: Gracious is the Lord, and righteous; our God is merciful.  The Lord preserves the simple; when I was brought low, He saved me.  The simplicity of David’s thoughts is so beautiful they almost hurt: here, too, are beauties which pierce like swords or burn like cold iron53.  But what David says next is almost shocking — we expect him to say, in our “work work work” mentality, in our culture that says “producing tangible, material goods is the only way to prove worth,” we expect David to say “get out there and do some good.  Get off your couch and start building bridges and purifying insalubrious water sources — do something to show how grateful you are to God for rescuing your life — go out there and ensure that rescuing wasn’t wasted.”  He says, rather, return, O my soul, to your rest; for the Lord has dealt bountifully with you.  Be at peace, he says — get back to genuine leisure — be comforted once again that you are living a life you don’t deserve and enjoy it, delight in the things above, dwell in Love.  Return to your rest — that is why the Lord has saved us.  That’s why we can sleep while our beds are burning54 — we are commanded to return to rest, sing our song, wait and worship for Higher Love to fully return, because He is who He is and because He has dealt bountifully with us.

For you have delivered my soul from death, my eyes from tears, my feet from stumbling; I will walk before the Lord in the land of the living.  So sad, so fresh, the days that are no more55 — and yet God delivers us through them — you know that better than I.  So we walk and keep on walking with the Lord while we are still in the land of the living.  And we believe God is who He is, we believe God and what He has said even when we must acknowledge “I am greatly afflicted.”  All men are liars … no kidding.  Jesus made it Waterford® clear: in this life we will have trouble, we will be persecuted, we will be lied to, we will be defrauded, we will be cheated, we will be disappointed, we will be harassed, we will be intimidated — and that’s just from our friends.  We will agonize at sickness, at suffering, at loss, at death.  In this shadowy world of seeing and loving and living dimly, we will hurt, we will bend, we will break — but we are also to take heart, for Love has overcome it all.  Glancing ahead to verse 15, this is not something Jesus takes lightly: God does not shrug or yawn when those who stand up for Love51 are cut down in what to us is the prime of life.  He doesn’t because His Son stood up for Love and was cut down in what was seemingly the prime of His life.  I certainly don’t want to belittle or downgrade any of the loss, the scars, the wounds, the battles you have fought, but I do think it would be good for us to remember no matter how much pain we feel, how much hurt we experience, how much sorrow we endure, the worst thing that ever could possibly happen has already happened — and it didn’t happen to us.  The worst thing that could ever possibly happen would be if someone was perfect, sinless, blameless, who did nothing but heal and help and speak the truth in love and yet was somehow blamed, excoriated, tortured, and marred, who didn’t know sin let alone do it, to take sin upon Himself — not just one sin, not just the sins of one person, not just all the sins that had yet been committed up to that point, but every sin by every person, who ever did live, was living, had yet to live, all sins for all time, put upon Himself and become sin itself to take it all away.  That is Love.  The crucifixion of Jesus was the worst thing that could have ever happened.  We, in our utter, damnable self-centeredness think it was a great thing.  Oh happy day56, we say.  We call it Good Friday — how stupid a name is that?  Because God died and we don’t have to we say that is great — and it is, don’t get me wrong — I’m not ungrateful for life eternal; I just know we would do better remember the effects of this exemplar of Love are what are great — that Jesus rose from the dead, that He is alive, that sin is taken away, that Death has lost its sting — up from the grave He arose with a mighty triumph o’er His foe; He arose a victor from the dark domain, and He lives forever with His saints to reign.  He arose!  He arose!  Hallelujah!  Christ arose!57  That’s the happy day.  That is the “good” part.  The crucifixion itself is the worst thing that could have ever happened.  And that is why I am qualified to speak on Psalm 116: because I was there when they crucified my Lord.  I held the scabbard when the soldier drew his sword.  I threw the dice when they pierced His side. … But I have seen Love conquer the Great Divide58.  Amazing Love — how can it be — that Thou my God shouldst die for me!59

What could we possibly do to follow a love like that?  David wonders the same thing in verse 12, the great turning point of the psalm, and one of the great questions in the Bible.  What shall I render to the Lord for all His benefits to me?  What can I give back to God60, who has given me this life and the life to come?  This Higher Love that must exist, that does exist, that could not be conquered by death because no one actually killed Him, He laid his equality with the Father down, He laid his life down, and He took them back up again — what can I give back to Him?  The answer is so obvious it is almost embarrassing.  We give back to God that which He has given to us: life and love.  I will lift up the cup of salvation and call on the name of the Lord; I will pay my vows to the Lord in the presence of all of His people.  If it means living a life of reflecting Higher Love to the point of a painful death, so be it — it’s not anything more than Jesus has already done for me.  We must recognize who we are (we always have to know that first, before we can know what we want and why we are here61): O Lord, says David, king over a nation of millions of people, I am your servant.  I am your servant, the son of your maidservant.  You have broken my bonds.  You have loosed my chains.  You have carried the cross of my shame.  You took the pain24.  (It’s worth saying again.)  What do I do in reply?  I will offer to you the sacrifice of thanksgiving and call on the name of the Lord.  I will pay my vows to the Lord in the presence of all His people, in the courts of the house of the Lord, in your midst, O Jerusalem, wherever I go, whatever I do, whoever I’m with, I will praise the Lord!  As this Love takes us higher and higher9, Brother and Sister Christians, there is a price for flight62.  Thanksgiving is a sacrifice because it means subordinating the sinful desires we want to delight in for the better delights of serving and praising the Lord; it is a sacrifice because we are living sacrifices, our lives are continuous (not continual) lives of singing, worshipping, living, and loving back to God the life and love He has given us.  Brother Steve says it so well: I could light the night up with my soul on fire / I could make the sun shine from pure desire / Let me feel that love come over me / Let me feel how strong it could be / Bring me that Higher Love2.

So we live a life of love.  This is the hallmark of the Christian.  This is the life, the attitude, the direction back to which music so easily refocuses our life.  The two greatest commandments we have seen are to love the Lord with everything we have, will all that we are (which has come from God at the first), and to love each other as ourselves.  This is how all those lonely people63 who are image bearers of someone they haven’t met yet will know we are Christians and what it means to be a Christian — by our love for one another, said Jesus when He was exhorting us to take heart in this dark world that He has overcome.  Paul’s declaration love was greater than faith and hope in 1 Corinthians 13 is not so audacious after all.  The world does not know we are Christians because of our faith.  You can’t see faith (and the world is a superficial place, in case you haven’t noticed).  The world does not know we are Christians because of our hope.  Lots of people have hope.  Though optimists seem far outnumbered by pessimists, it isn’t hope in future restoration or glory or a better life to come that truly distinguishes the Christian from the non-Christian.  They will know who we are, they will know Who is in us, they will know what we are for (preferably not what we are against, at least initially) by our love64 — by our manifestation of Higher Love, our love for each other, for ourselves, for God, and for them.  Bring me that Higher Love.

And when this Higher Love has been brought to us, by us getting back65, being reunited with this Higher Love (and it feels so good66) — what we that be like?  When we all get to Heaven, what a day of rejoicing that will be!  When we all see Jesus, we’ll sing and shout the victory!67  When faith becomes sight (oh Lord haste that day!68), when we stop seeing and living and loving in a mirror darkly and see and live and love face-to-face (not just face-to-face with Jesus but finally face-to-face with each other: we look at each other, wondering what the other is thinking, but we never say a thing69 — this will be replaced by the full, selfless, agape love we should have been loving each other with all this time).  Though, certainly, it is in our best interest, as we’ve said, while we can now, to take off our masks70 and fill each other up with light, Jesus, faith, spirit, joy, love, now71!  You got to live while you are alive.  But how will it be when we are there, when we get back to where we once belonged65 … party? karamu? fiesta? forever?72  All of that and more, for the Higher Love as it (He) continues to conform us to Himself will transform our existence into73 … the high life!

You know, it used to seem to me that my life ran on too fast, and I had to take it slowly just to make the good parts last.  But when you’re born to run it’s so hard to just slow down, so don’t be surprised to see me back in that bright part of town73.  When the Higher Love rescues us and returns us Back in the High Life Again what will that look like you ask?  We’ll have ourselves a time and we’ll dance ’til the morning sun, and we’ll let the good times come in and we won’t stop ’til we’re done73.  And considering when we’ve been there ten thousand years bright shining as the sun, we’ll have no less days to sing God’s praise than when we’ve first begun74 … I don’t think the good times will stop coming in nor will we stop dancing and singing and living and loving for … well … ever.  We’ll be back in the high life again.  All the doors I closed one time (and I’ve closed more than my share) will open up again.  We’ll be back in the high life again.  All the eyes that watched us once (that great cloud of witnesses) will smile and take us in.  And we’ll drink and dance with one hand free and have the world so easily.  You know we’ll be a sight to see back in the high life again73.

In the meantime, while there is time, let’s go out and feel everything.  We must live while we can and drink our cup of laughter.  The finer things keep shining through, the way my soul gets lost in you.  The finer things I feel in me, the golden dance life could be.  Keep shining.  We go so fast, why don’t we make it last.  Life is glowing inside you and me.  Come out and dance with me75.  Come see that Higher Love is alive and well and lifting us higher and higher9 and while we sing our song, dance our dance, live our lives, and love this Higher Love to everyone and especially Him Who first gave it to us, we know soon and very soon76 this Higher Love will return for us and take us back to the high life again73.

Prayer

Lord, you have heard our voice and we love you.  We do not want to overrule your patience but come back for us soon, please.  You have delivered us from death — help us to return to our rest.  As we sing our songs and dance our dances, as we live the lives You have bountifully given us to live, help us Lord love one another, love ourselves, love You with a Higher Love.  And we patiently yet yearningly wait that day when you will rescue us fully, so we can think fully, see fully, talk fully, worship fully, love fully — each other and you, face-to-face forevermore  Oh, I want to be there in Your eyes11.  When the finer things will shine through forever, as our souls get lost in you75 forever, as we come to know and worship and love you increasingly more accurately forever, when we will be back in the high life again, we’ll have ourselves a time, and we’ll dance ’til the morning sun73 (which will never set, truly, on your empire77) and we’ll let the good times come in, and we won’t stop ’til we’re done, when we will drink and dance with one hand free, and have the world so easily, you know we will be a sight to see, back in the high life again thanks to your Higher Love73.  Lord, bring us this Higher Love2.  Amen and amen.

Works Referenced

N.B.: The artist listed is the version in mind when this message was written.

  1. “I Wanna Take You Higher,” Sly & the Family Stone
  2. “Higher Love,” Steve Winwood
  3. See (hear) 2
  4. “Both Sides of the Story,” Phil Collins
  5. See ch. “Hope” in Book 3, Christian Behaviour of Mere Christianity
  6. “Purple Haze,” Jimi Hendrix
  7. “Have I Told You Lately,” Rod Stewart
  8. “Down In My Heart,” Kids Praise!
  9. “(Your Love Keeps Lifting Me) Higher and Higher,” Jackie Wilson
  10. “High Enough,” Damn Yankees
  11. “In Your Eyes,” Peter Gabriel
  12. “The Pass,” Rush
  13. “I’d Do Anything for Love (But I Won’t Do That),” Meat Loaf
  14. “Outside the Wall,” Pink Floyd
  15. “True Colors,” Phil Collins
  16. “She Talks to Angels,” The Black Crowes
  17. Idea of a University, Cardinal John Henry Newman, esp. Discourse V, “Knowledge its Own End”
  18. “Silent Lucidity,” Queensrÿche
  19. “Stand By Me,” Ben E. King
  20. “The Mountains Win Again,” Blues Traveler
  21. “With or Without You,” U2
  22. E.g., Justification: God’s Plan and Paul’s Vision
  23. “Jesus is Love,” The Commodores
  24. “I Still Haven’t Found What I’m Looking For,” U2 (lyrics taken from concert performances, especially Vertigo 05: Live from Milan)
  25. “Love Rescue Me,” U2
  26. “Sunshine of Your Love,” Cream
  27. “Somebody to Love,” Queen
  28. “Under Pressure,” Queen
  29. “1979,” Smashing Pumpkins
  30. “Sparkle,” Līve (emphasis added)
  31. Hamlet, III.i.75, William Shakespeare
  32. “Reunion,” Collective Soul
  33. “Where the Streets Have No Name,” U2
  34. “Walk On,” U2
  35. “A Sort of Homecoming (Danny Lanois Remix),” U2
  36. “Divided We Stand,” M*A*S*H
  37. Dune, Frank Herbert
  38. “Devils & Dust,” Bruce Springsteen
  39. “Skating Away on the Thin Ice of a New Day,” Jethro Tull (cf. “The Thin Ice,” Pink Floyd)
  40. “Faith,” George Michael
  41. “Take Me Home,” Phil Collins
  42. It.,” Genesis
  43. “I Know You’re Out There Somewhere,” The Moody Blues
  44. “Wish You Were Here,” Pink Floyd
  45. “Right Here, Right Now,” Jesus Jones (cf. “Right Now,” Van Halen)
  46. “Love is All Around,” Paul Williams (theme song to The Mary Tyler Moore Show)
  47. “Patience,” Guns N’ Roses
  48. “40,” U2
  49. “Supper’s Ready,” Genesis
  50. “Love is a Battlefield,” Pat Benatar
  51. “They Stood Up for Love,” Līve
  52. “I Want to Know What Love Is,” Foreigner
  53. C.S. Lewis’s remarks about The Lord of the Rings
  54. “Beds Are Burning,” Midnight Oil
  55. “Tears, Idle Tears,” Alfred, Lord Tennyson
  56. “Happy Day,” Tim Hughes
  57. “Christ Arose,” Robert Lowry
  58. “When Love Comes to Town,” U2
  59. “And Can It Be That I Should Gain,” Charles Wesley
  60. Cf. transition between “Bad” and “Where the Streets Have No Name,” U2 from the Elevation 2001: Live from Boston DVD
  61. Cf. Babylon 5
  62. “Sister Christian,” Night Ranger
  63. “Eleanor Rigby,” The Beatles
  64. “They’ll Know We are Christians by Our Love,” Peter Scholtes (sometimes called “We Are One in the Spirit”)
  65. “Get Back,” The Beatles
  66. “Reunited,” Peaches & Herb
  67. “When We All Get to Heaven,” Eliza E. Hewitt
  68. “It Is Well with My Soul,” Horatio Spafford
  69. “Ants Marching,” Dave Matthews Band
  70. “Ghost Story,” Sting
  71. “Fill Her Up,” Sting
  72. “All Night Long (All Night),” Lionel Richie
  73. “Back in the High Life Again,” Steve Winwood
  74. “Amazing Grace,” John Newton (this verse attributed to Harriet Beecher Stowe)
  75. “The Finer Things,” Steve Winwood (cf., “Soul Singing,” The Black Crowes)
  76. “Soon and Very Soon,” Andrae Crouch
  77. Saying attributed to various world empires over the centuries, notably Xerxes’ Persian Empire, Charles V’s Holy Roman Empire, and Queen Victoria’s British Empire

Schmadical

Christopher Rush

According to David Platt, author of Radical: Taking Back Your Faith from the American Dream, one becomes a Christian by having faith in Jesus.  So far so good.  We should reconsider the needs of people around the world and live more sacrificially.  Those warrant a gold star.  Unfortunately, then, comes the other 99.4% of the book.  In order to be a Christian, according to David Platt, one must adopt at least one child from an impoverished country, have a heart for the entire world, and spend time evangelizing in some part of the world that has not yet heard the gospel.  Well … no.  He is incorrect.  Like most of the unfortunate “popular Christian authors” of the recent past (Wilkinson’s Prayer of Jabez, Piper’s Desiring God, Eldredge’s Captivating, Warren’s Purpose Driven Life, in no particular order), Platt takes a couple of verses he thinks are most important, declares they are the sum total of the Bible/message of God/ontology of Christianity, and glosses over verses that contradict or qualify what he wants the Bible to say.  As with most disingenuous self-effacing scribblers, Platt spends a good deal of time prevaricating and apologizing for his examples and how he doesn’t want to make anyone feel bad for challenging their views and beliefs.  Why he continues to use so many specific examples and follow them with “these may not be typical of your experience” is beyond me, and it discredits the entire purpose of using specific examples or narrative samples.  His insinuation if we don’t make the same choice he made about adopting a child from an impoverished country we are not biblical Christians is so ludicrous he almost makes John Piper sound orthodox.  Almost.

Like many of his compeers, Platt’s ideas are built on the faulty premise the church is built on Matthew 28:18-20, not Acts 2:42.  Since his beginning premise is wrong, it follows just about all of his conclusions are wrong.  Similarly embarrassing is his definition of “making disciples.”  Platt can’t even exegete Matthew 28:18-20 sensibly.  First Platt says the verses are a series of commands, and then he says baptizing and teaching are subordinate to and consist of making disciples.  It’s a bit confusing, as I said, since he surfeits his work with seemingly stellar examples of how the people in his “faith community” (he can’t even say “local church” without being embarrassed, apparently) have done such wonderful things (at the end of the book he apologizes again by saying his “faith community” doesn’t always get things right) using this interpretation, but it might not be for everyone.

One example of Platt’s glossing over verses that qualify (or outright refute) his claims is his treatment of Ephesians 4:11.  Platt acknowledges Paul said some people are given to the church as apostles, some as evangelists, some as pastors-teachers, but then Platt essentially says “but really everyone in the church is supposed to be an overseas evangelist in order to be a genuine Christian, since Jesus told the disciples in Mt. 28:18-20 to go.”  Another eisegetical passage is his treatment of Romans 10.  Platt seems to interpret verse 15a (“And how can anyone preach unless they are sent?”) to mean “since Jesus told the disciples to go in Mt. 28:18-20, everyone has been sent to be an overseas missionary to the parts of the world that haven’t yet heard the gospel.”  Let’s consider the repercussions if Platt is correct: all genuine Christians (whom he inanely and incessantly describes with his pet phrase “radical abandonment” and variations thereon) leave America for the un-gospelled areas of the world.  Who will support them financially?  (God, true, but why then does the church need to exist at all?)  If the church exists solely to be a mode of evangelism to un-gospelled areas of the world, why did God give various people to the church who aren’t evangelists?  Why do spiritual gifts other than evangelism exist?  Now we begin to see why Platt is wrong: he homogenizes the church into nothing but individuals with a heart for the world (in his own definition) who spend time overseas evangelizing the un-gospelled (who then must have to adopt at least one child from an impoverished country to be radically abandoned to the gospel).

Another key failing of this book is Platt’s contradictory definition of “the world.”  To him, “having a heart for the world” can only mean “going where the gospel has not yet been preached.”  To him, people who “have a heart for their own city or region in America” are just lazy people who are too much in love with their possessions to really be authentic Christians (who are people who go overseas to evangelize unreached people).  Italy, Germany, France — they aren’t “the world.”  Only people who haven’t heard the gospel yet are “the world.”  This reminds us, then, of what would happen if all American Christians followed what he says — no one in America would be Christians, leaving the entire country unchurched.  Would it be okay, then, for Christians to go to America and spread the gospel?  Most likely not, since authentic Christianity (being radically abandoned to Jesus) means spreading the gospel only to people who haven’t heard it yet (so why all the stories of how he spread the gospel in New Orleans and how other members of his “faith community” reach American inner-city people?).

Despite the subtitle, Platt does not spend much time actually refuting the American Dream.  The only relevant parts of the “American Dream” to him are materialism (the acquisitive kind, not the philosophical synonym to naturalism) and sloth.  At the end of the book, amidst his other apologies, Platt offers some platitudes (I had to do it some time) about how he loves America and is glad for the freedoms God has allowed him to have in America — but, really, he wants us to feel bad for being Americans.  American Christians don’t take Christianity seriously is what he implies throughout the book — otherwise why would he spend so much time comparing American Christians with their luxury cars, luxury clothes, million-dollar buildings, luxury tvs, and luxury everything else with the many Christians around the world he’s visited who have to hide their faith and go many miles out of their way to meet secretly in fear of the government?  Americans aren’t real Christians, because they are too comfortable with their faith and the government, which doesn’t ever persecute Christians (he’s not joking, either).  It’s nice Platt admits his own “faith family” is a hypocrite in this, being a four thousand-member group with their own multi-million-dollar estate — but does he say he is doing anything about it?  No.  They continue to worship in their overly-comfortable multi-million-dollar estate as they send missionaries out to unreached sections of the world.  Leaving aside the question of biblical authenticity of “megachurches” for another time, shouldn’t Platt admit he is doing more in his own sphere of pastoral authority to conform his own church (see we not clearly now the dangers of contradicting Biblical church authority structure of a plurality of lay elders and lay deacons?) to his interpretation of what authentic Christianity looks like in abandoning American materialism?  Yes, he should, but like most of his ilk, he distances himself at the end by saying he is only trying to start the discussion and get his audience thinking — he’s not actually making points that must be followed for the good of everyone (even though he also says throughout he is right and those who don’t do what he says are not living authentic Christian lives radically abandoned to Jesus).

Though he doesn’t come right out and say it explicitly, as said above Platt wants us to feel guilty for being born in America, as if God made a bit of a mistake putting us here instead of some unreached, pre-industrial area that follows after God authentically without distractions.  True, Platt ineffectively says “material goods and riches aren’t intrinsically bad, and sometimes God gives people things,” but he follows that up with the New Testament never says God blesses people financially like he did in the OT (which isn’t exactly what anyone I trust would call “accurate”), and pretty much everything we have in America is a luxury we can sacrifice for the spread of the gospel, according to him.  Perhaps that last thought is true, and it’s nice he doesn’t come right out with a socialistic declaration “genuine Christianity means redistributing wealth equally to all the ends of the earth,” but he gets rather legalistic toward the end about it (even though he says he doesn’t want to be).  I agree most of us have more than we need, and we could certainly give more than we do (if statistics are anything to go by), but that does not equate with “only overseas missions work is the mark of genuine Christianity.”  Isn’t it just possible some of us are put into America (or England, or Germany, or Italy) to minister to the people here, making disciples here, reaching the lost here?  If Christians are only to go to places that haven’t heard the gospel, do we really love the people in countries that have access to the Bible but don’t believe yet by ignoring them and going only to yet-unreached places?  That strikes me as the very opposite of love.

Perhaps the most destructive refutation to Platt’s arguments (calling them “arguments” for the sake of generosity) comes from Platt himself.  During his final chapter enumerating his one-year plan of radical abandonment, Platt gives it all away multiple times.  His first self-damaging point is his claim “we should only try to do this for a year, because we might not be able to sustain it for longer.”  What?  If this is the right way to actually live the authentic Christian life, why should we only do it for one year?  Is he placating us by saying we only have to feel bad about being luxurious Americans for only one year and then we can go back to what we temporarily abjured?  His ambiguous notion we will be changed forever by it may be true, but that doesn’t explain why we can only afford to do this for one year.  He expresses one of his few cogent thoughts here, though, when he says we would all do well to pray for the world through Patrick Johnstone’s important Operation World.  I agree, but I didn’t need David Platt to tell me to do it.

His second point is “read through the Bible in a year.”  How is that radical?  Does he tell us to study it, to memorize it, to learn the languages and read it in Greek, Hebrew, and Aramaic?  No, just read it.  Check it off the list — go to your grave knowing one year (only once, since it’s too costly a program to do for more than one year) you read through the Bible.

Point three is to sacrifice your money for a specific purpose: he hesitates to tell us to whom (and apparently one’s own local church is not good enough), and selling your luxuries and giving that money away is likewise not good enough.  Only sacrificially is good enough, lowering your standard of living until you are more like the real Christians in nonindustrial countries.  Throughout the book he refers to the oft-misunderstood “rich young ruler” encounter in Mark 10.  Lucidly, Platt makes the point Jesus doesn’t tell everyone who wants to follow Him to “sell all you have and give to the poor,” which was refreshingly accurate — but then he contradicts himself and intimates we are to do it, and if we don’t, we aren’t being radically abandoned enough to be an authentic follower of Christ.  Jesus doesn’t tell everyone to sell all and give it to the poor, but David Platt does.  (But only for a year.)

The most self-destructive part of the work comes in point four of the one-year plan: spend time in another context.  Several times, Platt tells us the real Christian life is not just checking off a “to-do” list (which he himself asks us to do with reading the Bible, and the rest of this chapter, basically), and genuine Christianity is solely about spreading the gospel overseas, making disciples of previously unreached people.  Now, though, Platt gives it all away: it doesn’t matter where we go, it doesn’t matter how long we go, it only matters that we go, he says.  As incredulous as I was for the first eight chapters, when I read that thought from Platt I truly could not believe Multnomah Books actually let that through.  According to David Platt, God’s will for our lives is so undefined it’s up to us to decide where we are to go and for how long.  We can’t possibly be wrong as long as we go for a brief time to some place that hasn’t yet heard the gospel.  But, if it doesn’t matter how long we stay, how does that align with the need to “make disciples”?  Doesn’t that take a while?  Never you mind — what really matters is that we have gone.  Check it off the list, and you are being radically abandoned to Jesus (and thus, the only authentic Christians in the world).  Is it possible for non-American Christians to be radically abandoned to Jesus, since they can’t abjure American luxury and go overseas?  Apparently they are so innately Christian they don’t need to follow the plan Platt has for them.  Just go and get it over with, backslidden American pseudo-Christians.

If that completely self-refuting point was not enough, Platt wraps it up with point five: commit to a multiplying community (which is his phrase for an authentic local church — but since America doesn’t have any authentic churches being too consumed by materialism, one must go overseas to find the real thing).  Once you have fulfilled your radical conscription to temporarily go someplace where the gospel has never been heard before, you can come back and relax and support the church as it sends out the next batch of radically abandoned short-term missions trip recruits.  But if the whole point of the church is solely to send out overseas missionaries, how will the church grow in ways other than numerically?  Perhaps this is where all the other parts of the Bible Platt has ignored or inaccurately commentated on could help the church grow in non-numerical ways, but Platt has run out of room and time to expound on them.

Finally, now, we have the Five Pillars of Authentic Radically Abandoned Christianity.  If we need more assistance, Platt tells us his website has more encouraging stories and insights by which to live radically, and we should also contribute our stories to the site while we are on and once we have completed our one-year radical commitment (but, isn’t the Internet just another American luxury distracting us from authentic Christianity? and if we have a computer, shouldn’t we be selling that to give sacrificially to a good cause?).  More we could say, but I think even this little response has said enough about why this book from the world’s youngest pastor of a megachurch (please turn down your hypocrisy meters, where applicable) can easily be eschewed.  Had Platt actually taken the time to Biblically refute key (and specific!) flaws of the contemporary incarnation of the “American Dream,” this may have been a pretty good book.  It is, instead, just a long-winded rant about David Platt’s personal misinterpretations about the gospel message and his own pet definition of “Christian.”  His ubiquitous “radical abandonment” phrase is never defined (only imaged through diverse and contradicting examples) and gets rather annoying by the end (of chapter one).  Yes, we should give sacrificially and be more concerned with the entire world, but that doesn’t mean we are all called to go overseas (and certainly not on little short-term missions trip jaunts of our own design and duration) or that checking off these five pillars/procedures is in anyway radical or even authentic Christianity.  The “whole world” includes our own neighborhood and our own country (is Acts 1:8 true as well as Matthew 28:18-20?); some send missionaries overseas, some support them, some are them.  Not everyone in the body of Christ fulfills the same function.  Fortunately, those of us who know God’s role for us (at least in its present form) feel not one iota of shame or compunction that we don’t match up to David Platt’s standards or definitions.  Perhaps he will someday write the book the subtitle of this book suggests — I might want to actually read it; but that’s not what this book is about.  This book is about what David Platt wants Christianity to be.  He is not correct.

Twenty Questions

Caitlin Montgomery Hubler and Christopher Rush

The following questions and answers came from a semester-long interchange primarily during 12th Grade Bible class during the first semester of the 2011-2012 school year.  Caitlin Montgomery wrote her questions on index cards and gave them to  me (Mr. Rush) after class, and I typed my answers to them throughout the term.  Most of the questions relate to topics addressed in the curriculum, though some (usually the more interesting ones) stray somewhat afield.  They are presented here in their original order for your edification and joy.  Note: the beliefs, ideas, and opinions expressed herein solely belong to Redeeming Pandora and do not necessarily reflect the beliefs, ideas, and opinions of either Summit Christian Academy or Peninsula Community Church.

Q1. Christians believe that all parents should raise their own kids & that the gov. should not have a part.  What about kids from secular humanist parents (who believe it’s the gov’s job to raise their kids, so they don’t)?  If the Christians got their way then those kids would be “reared” neither by their parents NOR by the government…so would they just have to get thrown into life and learn on their own?

A1. Despite the comparative volume of those who advocate governmental rearing of children, few people (even atheists) truly want the government to raise their own children — I suspect most of the talk is from people who don’t actually have children.  (Percentages, even in 2011, are rather small on the side of those who truly embrace socialistic tendencies in the home and education — though, unfortunately, most of that percentage consists of high and influential decision makers.)  Similarly, if Christians truly “got their way,” the parents would be Christians themselves; I’m not too certain too many Christians really are motivated to take children away from atheistic parents simply because they aren’t Christians (certainly direct physical/emotional abuse is another issue).  Christians would more likely prefer the parents raise their children over the government in virtually every case (for a variety of reasons, tax dollars not the least), since Christians in the sphere of influence of that home would be able to lovingly and respectfully influence the home for Godly outcomes.  I truly doubt Christians would really want kids to be “thrown into life” without any actual parenting or rearing — even if giving them a library card would do more for them than a contemporary public school education.  (Depending on the teachers, once in a great while a public school education can be all right, though certainly a Christian education is, hopefully, going to be more accurate.)

Q2. Is it right to say that the original meaning of separation of church & state or 1st amendment is that there would be no one religion established?  If so, then isn’t the teaching of the “secular humanist” religion in classroom contradictory to the idea of separation of church and state because it does establish a (de facto) religion?

A2. Mostly and yes.  Mostly: the “separation of church and state,” though not a legal aspect in the Constitution per se, element of the 1st Amendment was designed (keeping in mind I’m no expert on the Constitution) to prevent governmental intrusion in the religious lives of the country’s citizens — that was, in part, why the Pilgrims (some of them) left Great Britain in the first place.  The Pilgrims/Separatists of the 17th century inherited the religious turmoil of Henry VIII’s schism from Rome (as you recall from Michael Wood); the Founding Fathers (to an extent) desired to prevent the same thing from happening again by preventing the government from declaring what religion the people could/could not embrace.  Yes: those who inaccurately demand the “separation of church and state” today, i.e., secular humanists, want “church” out of “state,” not “state” out of “church” (they do want the secular state to muck around with the church, that’s for sure).  This means they want the Christians out of the way so they can teach atheism in public schools as a fact, promulgating the religion of atheism, indeed.  Of course, with most hypocrisy, they feel they are doing the right thing and thus not really being hypocritical.  Good use of “de facto,” as well.

Q3. Do you think the standards for good government can be derived from Natural Law alone?

A3. You should read Frédéric Bastiat’s The Law (we are reading it now for Intro. to Humanities).  It’s a good question.  Augustine linked Natural Law with man’s pre-fallen condition, so Man can’t really uphold Natural Law anymore with his sin nature (plus the fallen condition of Nature itself).  I’d hesitate to disagree with St. Augustine.  Paul seems to imply in Romans Natural Law is somewhat akin to conscience, which would also make sense, since God created the rest of reality and thus everything we conceive of as “natural” is/was made by God.  As far as “good government,” though, I would hesitate to say Natural Law is sufficient, especially because of the fallen condition of Nature now as well as man’s fallen condition (or even the war of natures going on in Christians).  Because Nature itself is fallen and needs restoration, it is not a sufficient model of legality or corporate behavior.  Even Adam and Eve needed divine law (or at least guidance) to most benefit from their unfallen state.  Fallen man can still create beautiful and true things (because of their imago dei), but it’s not a sufficient standard for law (likewise, as much as I enjoy Romantic poetry, I know it is flawed because Nature, no matter how beautiful, is never superior to the Creator).  Certainly the basic laws of nature (or God’s created pattern) of life, subordinated to Divine Law would be the way to go.

Q4. Do you think Hitler had a different standard of morality (like he really believed Aryans were superior) than everyone else, or did he know what he was doing was wrong?

A4. This question will be asked and somewhat answered in our final video journey toward the end of 4th quarter, The Question of God.  I think Hitler, like most dictators and despots, embraced a thoroughly atheistic view of life and morality — without trying to sound insensitive, we shouldn’t be surprised when natural man is allowed to live out what sin is truly about or when we see its effects.  We sometimes think the Holocaust is some sort of aberration, but any honest appraisal of the late 20th century around the world (Darfur, Somalia, Rwanda, et al. — not to mention the US government’s “Indian Removal Act” a century earlier) should remind us sinful man truly does not pursue good in any substantial way.  I would not be surprised if Hitler truly believed Aryans were superior (or at least was so antagonistic to his enemies, begun, in part, by the Allies’ treatment of Germany at the end of WW1, he felt the need to eradicate them).  Did he know what he was doing was wrong?  I doubt it.  The Bible does tell us people can harden their hearts (like Pharoah did at times) and so damage their consciences they no longer can suspect the difference between basic right and basic wrong.  Hate and anger can easily lead to hardened hearts, which is most likely why Paul says in Ephesians not to let the sun go down on one’s anger.  We should all do well to remember, though, every person outside of the kingdom of light has a “different standard of morality,” one totally depraved (imago dei not withstanding).  We are all born into a state of rebellion against God — the fact people can transcend their sinful state at times to make beautiful music or a humorous movie or something along those lines (and aren’t necessarily taking up arms against fellow human beings or promulgating genocide or hate speech en masse) should not make us forget fundamentally their souls are against God.

Q5. Is it bad for Christians to believe in separation of church and state since we believe the state should enforce God’s laws?

A5. Christians should not accept and embrace the secular misunderstanding of either the 1st Amendment or Thomas Jefferson’s letter to the Danbury Baptist Association.  Christians should be more aware of the genuine nature of the issues and vote/be active more accurately.  Of course, Christians should not confuse the need for symptom reform (politics) with a more fundamentally important “disease” reform (salvation/evangelism).  Though we should understand we are in “enemy occupied territory,” as C.S. Lewis calls Earth, we shouldn’t let that mean we continue to cede territory over to him, even if his minions are seemingly-decent atheist chaps who want everyone to get along and be nice to one another.  If only one Reality exists, and it operates only one “right” way, we shouldn’t just sit back and keep our fingers crossed hoping Jesus will come back any day now and believe whatever the secular majority (especially if it’s in actually a minority, percentage-wise) says we should accept/believe.  Paul refutes that lackadaisical attitude pretty thoroughly in 2 Thessalonians 3.  If the state is not enforcing God’s laws, it is not truly operating in accordance with reality, genuine law, or authentic justice.  (This is not to say I think the church should be running the government — I’m not in favor of a theocracy this side of the millennial kingdom — as we said in class, the state has its role, the family has its role, and the church has its role.  Thus, Christians should be individually operating in these roles and levels of society, without fear their “religious” views are affecting their job performances, in much the same way secular humanists do the very same thing today but with tacit governmental approval.)

Q6. How can we expect courts to apply “God’s justice” if the justices aren’t Christian?  Is that really practical?

A6. There’s nothing more practical than truth.  However, we can’t really expect non-Christians to apply “God’s justice,” no — which is why America desperately needs authentic Christians in every area of civil/government life!  America needs Christian lawyers, auto mechanics, politicians, court judges, fry cooks, homemakers, novelists, school teachers, musicians, actors.  Remember what Dr. Noebel says in UTT: “Christians should be involved in every area of society: in education as teachers, administrators, board members, and textbook selection committees; in government as leaders at the local, state, and federal levels; as artists, developing the best art, recording the most inspiring music, and writing books and producing cutting edge movies with compelling storylines that capture the imagination of every reader or viewer; in families, as loving parents and role models; in communities, as business leaders and civic club members; in the media, as reporters and writers who are seen and read by millions.  In the midst of these endeavors, we should share God’s wonderful love story with those who will listen.  When we participate in the Great Commission conjoined with the Cultural Commission, we are fulfilling God’s purpose for us during our earthly sojourn” (281).  If we continue to allow residents of the kingdom of darkness make and interpret laws and morality for us, we shouldn’t complain when they take prayer out of schools, replace “Merry Christmas” with “Happy Holidays,” and legalize same-sex marriage.  Remember: power is never taken; it is always given.

Q7. Why is communion so important?

A7. Considering communion was one of two ordinances Jesus gave us to do (the other being the one-time event of baptism), it’s a very significant element of the Christian life.  Paul’s elaboration in 1 Corinthians 11 indicates it is a continual and regular aspect of corporate church life: essentially, whenever we get together in a corporate church setting, we are to “do this in remembrance of [Him].”  Acts 2:42, as I mentioned in class before, makes it pretty clear the New Testament church did four things: apostles’ teaching, fellowship, breaking of bread, and prayer.  That seems pretty clear how important and regular it was (and should be).  Those groups of Christians who celebrate communion or “the Lord’s Supper” (or the Eucharist) every week, often with a special service dedicated primarily for it, such as the Plymouth Brethren (though not all agree that’s what their name is) are the Christians who really have it right.  Why Virginia churches think getting together every week for an hour for the sole purpose of singing hymns, praying, and discussing the Bible culminating in doing exactly what Jesus said to do could ever get dull or boring (or that we could ever run out of things to say about Jesus) is preposterous and borderline heretical.  I suspect the church leaders who advocate “doing communion” only on special occasions do so because, frankly, they aren’t really good at being church leaders.  Perhaps they didn’t go to a good Bible college or majored in “Youth Ministries” or something (not that there’s truly anything wrong with majoring in “Youth Ministries” — some of my best friends were Youth Ministries majors).  Such is the danger, though, of having paid leaders and one “head pastor” instead of following the New Testament’s directions on plurality of elders and deacons (who don’t “get paid” for doing it).  Of course, I could be wrong — and I know, dimly, how difficult being a church leader is, so I’m not trying to defame anyone.  My main point is the Bible makes the regular (not quarterly) celebration of the Lord’s Supper a main, foundational element of corporate church life.  Those who don’t do so are not doing what the Bible says.

Q8. Why should the church not be the main method of evangelism?  Are you saying that the church should equip individuals and then evangelism is the individual’s job?

A8. To answer your second question first, yes — rephrase your question as a statement and you’ve pretty much got it.  As indicated above, the four-fold function of the church is enumerated overtly in Acts 2:42.  All the missiology work done throughout Acts was done by small groups (sometimes pairs or even individuals) sent out by the church, fully supported by the church, but not directly the purview of the church, per se.  Paul makes it clear throughout his epistles Christians have different spiritual gifts for the growth and betterment of the entire whole.  The church corporate is primarily an inward-looking body, designed for the strengthening and developing of itself to enable its members, and thus itself, toward Christlikeness through the four-fold functions of Acts 2:42.  This is, then, why the church should not be the main method of evangelism in that sense as a corporate body.  It should be fully invested in evangelistic and missionary efforts, of course.  I’m not saying church meetings should never talk about missions work, since Paul makes the cooperation of the church and missionaries clear in Romans 10.  Certainly the church should train up and send out missionaries, as mentioned above in your second question.  These should be long-term, mainly, though.  The recent fad of short-term missions trips is not good (perhaps mainly, as I’ve said before, in its presentation — since moving to Virginia, the only things I’ve heard about short-terms missions trips is they benefit the people who go, not that they are intrinsically important or beneficial to those who need to hear the gospel; a very selfish sort of enterprise, really, especially since the “Great Commission” indicates the process of making disciples is a long-term investment, not a two-week “go help people for a couple of weeks without much strain on your life and then you’ll feel really good about yourself” thing missions work is often conceived of as being today, sadly.  A close reading of Acts tells us most of Paul’s missionary work was longer than two week little jaunts to places; he stayed quite a while, developed leaders to replace him, and then went back regularly (when the Spirit allowed) to follow up (and then he wrote letters to them, too).  Paul and his little team went together, with support from various local churches, to places that hadn’t heard the gospel yet — but he made it clear in several epistles that wasn’t necessarily the pattern others were to follow, so those who look at his short trips to various places as a model to follow for short-term trips today are not really accurate.  Churches are to raise, train, educate, send, and support missionaries, but the church is designed to corporately “do” Acts 2:42.

Q9. Why is gambling bad?

A9. Primarily gambling is “bad” for two reasons: 1) it believes in a made-up thing called “luck,” instead of believing in the sovereignty of God over all situations in life; and 2) it is horrible stewardship of the money God has given people.  It doesn’t matter at all how much money the dog track donates to the fine arts of the community or how many textbooks they purchase for the schools.  God has given us resources to use wisely and responsibly for His service: spending money in the blind hope more will be gotten from it, even if with the delusion “I’ll give a whole lot of it to the church if I win,” is essentially a rejection of both the skills and abilities God has given us to use to earn sustenance and pursue genuine leisure (again see 2 Thessalonians 3), while simultaneously wasting money that could itself be given to the church or other Godly organizations for furthering His kingdom.  Saying “maybe it’s God’s will I win the lottery” is outright nonsense.  Certainly God can (and does) use the effects of badness to work His will as Romans 8 makes clear, but Romans 6 also reminds us we shouldn’t pursue sin or other detrimental things so God can shine His mercy or grace through even more.

Q10. Isn’t it wrong to mandate Christian values (like no gay marriage or abortion) to a gov’t who is not expected to obey them since it’s “living in the dark”?  At least on the sole basis that those things are against our worldview.  Shouldn’t we try to outlaw them from a secular point of view? (P.S.: I know that is probably wrong but I don’t know why!)

A10. Since reality is the way God made it, it is not wrong to mandate Christian values in the public sphere (provided they are truly biblical in authenticity and not just preferential — e.g., hymns vs. “praise and worship”).  What is truly wrong has been Christianity’s relinquishing of public well-being to atheistic values and relativistic morality.  As above, the genuine solution, though, is not through politics — fundamentally, the solution is through regeneration: proclamation of the gospel to the effect of people being born again, putting off the old self and putting on the new self, transferring them from “living in the dark” to “living in the light” (done by the power of the Spirit, not our wise words and rhetorical eloquence solely).  That is the only effective way to bring about social reform or governmental effectiveness.  Of course, electing Christian politicians and governmental officials (in every area of the government) would be a wise and efficacious policy, as well (the response, I believe, from, as you said, a “secular point of view,” using the system as it is designed in a democratic republic) — giving the people what they need instead of what they want (akin to the way a parent must raise and discipline a child, giving the child veggies and fruit instead of marshmallows and M&M™s for dinner).  As you indicated above, secular humanism is doing exactly what it claims Christianity should not be doing: foisting its religious (atheistic) views on society, claiming it is for the good of all (particularly those who have been oppressed and suppressed in the past).  Thus, it’s not just changing political or legal policy simply because “it is the Christian worldview” as opposed to a “secular worldview” (though it would in part be doing it according to the “secular worldview,” in that it is the same comparable argument, just accurately phrased and supported) — it is because the Biblical Christian worldview is the only view of private and public life that conforms to actual reality.

Q11. What is so bad about John Piper?

A11. This would take a lot more time and effort to create an adequate response, so I shall begin the discussion by quoting an edited (for mistakes in the original, only) brief book review I wrote last year (2010) after reading Desiring God.  Admittedly, some might find the tone juvenile and petulant, but such was my honest reaction when reading a book that poses as an asset to genuine Christianity.  In the rating system for which this review was written, I gave the book 1½ stars out of 5.

Finally I’ve read Desiring God by John Piper.  I am experiencing great joy now that I’ve read it, only because it’s finally over and done with — done over with — and I can move on to books that actually bear some resemblance to reality.  I gave this book one star for its quotations of Bible verses and half a star for its sporadic quotations of other sources worth reading.  What Piper does with these quotations, though, is ridiculous.  I know (since I’ve now read the book) that he tries to defend calling his pet project “Christian Hedonism,” and his companion dictionaries apparently give him permission to use “hedonism” in that liberal sense, but for the rest of us who live in this actual reality, when we hear “hedonism,” we don’t think of “pursuing God’s pleasure on the missionary field sacrificing immediate sinful pleasures for the joy of enjoying God’s joy,” even when he slaps “Christian” on it.  Piper makes it clear he doesn’t really know what “hedonism,” “Epicureanism,” or, frankly, “Christian” means.  This book has great contradictory tensions throughout it: are we to pursue “our” joy or God’s glory? which is it?  If they are the same, why call it different things?  Why, after almost 300 pages of licking Jonathan Edwards’s boots, does Piper suddenly say “sacrifice on the missionary field is the key point of life as a Christian,” as if the only way to honor God is by becoming a missionary in the 10-40 window?  He certainly does not make missionary work appealing with all the stories of missionaries who went to the field and had all their children die.  Piper never adequately deals with the objections to his ideas (and I would say they are his — and Edwards’s — ideas, not St. Paul’s or St. Peter’s).  Like high school students trying their hand at refutation for the first time, Piper basically says “yes, you say that, but let me repeat my fabricated proofs for my points without addressing the substance of your counterargument, thus restating my own points again as if that substantiates what I claim.”  Even with the verses he quotes that directly contradict what he is trying to preach (Jesus talking about not expecting anything in return!), Piper ignores the aspects he apparently feels he can’t honestly make fit his program.  Another poor tactic Piper uses is his lack of interaction with his quotations, as if stepping back, slapping a lengthy quotation down, and walking away is somehow self-evident and earthshattering.  Not everyone is called to the mission field, which the Bible itself makes clear.  What Piper forgets is that discipling and instructing Christians into growing Christlikeness (sanctification) is just as important as “spreading the gospel” (justification).  For those of us given as teachers and preachers, we know our roles are just as important to the health of Christ’s body.  Piper’s section on 1 Corinthians 15, about how Christians are the most to be lamented if they are wrong, is probably the most embarrassingly eisegetical section in the work — as if Roman hedonists thought “eat and drink for tomorrow we die” meant “enjoy casual, decent life-affirming portions of food and drink without going overboard”!  As I said above, Piper does not display any understanding of the differences between hedonism and Epicureanism.  When I finished this book, I had no clear idea of what “desiring God” meant, and how it was supposedly different from pursuing my own joy.  Perhaps that’s why Piper wrote so many other books about this subject.  I think I will pursue my joy, though, by eschewing them.

Now that about a year has passed since reading Desiring God, though, I think I may contradict the final sentence and read others of his books (I currently own two others by him, given to me as gifts, which I will get to soon) to see if his lack of expositional accuracy continues throughout his oeuvre.  Having recently read Radical by David Platt (and seeing many of the same flaws and glaring inaccuracies) [Editor’s note — see the review later in this very issue], I am increasingly saddened by the state of Christian writing today (such a sorrowful heritage in “popular Christian works” in recent years — Prayer of Jabez, Purpose Driven Life, Desiring God, Radical) and am wondering if God is perhaps calling me to write more (accurate) books for better, biblical, sanctification of His people.  I don’t say this to sound hubristic, merely to voice my concern for the genuine well-being of the body of Christ in the 21st century.  I don’t think I have all the answers, or that I’m better than C.S. Lewis or the best writer of all time, or that Piper, Platt, Warren, and the gang should be excommunicated (or executed), but I do know a great majority of what they claim to be biblical Christianity is not, in fact, actual biblical Christianity.

Q12. Is rap bad even if it’s Christian rap?

A12. In one way, I addressed that above, with John Piper’s misappropriation of “hedonism” and attaching “Christian” to it.  As with most Christian reactions and responses to movements in the, for lack of a better word, secular world, suspicion and skepticism naturally (perhaps justifiably) follow.  Certainly a great deal of disagreement exists (in all cultures and sub-cultures of the world) about the origins, natures, purposes, and expediencies of rap and hip-hop (and all the other offshoots in recent decades), and I certainly am no expert on the subject.  My limited experience with it has been one of disappointment in that most “Christian rappers” “back in the day” were merely copying the sounds, styles, and forms of their not-as-Christian peers in the industry, most likely to reach the kids while missing out completely on what the real message and mode of the movements were truly about.  This only made being a Christian more embarrassing (especially while many high schoolers around the country were wearing “Austin 3:16” t-shirts).  Perhaps the authenticity and skills of Christian rappers today are more in touch with not only musical/lyrical skill but also reaching the people with what they need (not what they want), and if that is the case, perhaps I would be more accepting of Christian rap as an, if you’ll allow the expression, art form.  But, much like “gym nights” at most youth groups around the country (perhaps), giving the kids 98% contemporary culture and 2% “Jesus loves you” is neither evangelism nor what Christianity is about.  There is still great truth (and caution) in the expression “what you win them with is what you win them to,” and that’s true not only for Christian rap but everything else as well.  True, many rappers and hip-hop artists (if you’ll allow the expression) are quite adept at rhyme, rhythm, and ingenuity (though I still am too much wrapped up in traditionalism to liken it to a Shakespearean sonnet, and I’m not yet at the point of considering the Sistine Chapel as a forerunner of graffiti, no matter how skillfully the graffiti is done), and, provided the lyrical content and musical background conform to Truth and Beauty, could, no doubt, be truly enjoyed.  (I think, as a personal aside, most of us can agree that dc Talk became a much more skillful and enjoyable band when they put aside their early musical styling in favor of more melodic and musical sound at the end of their career on Jesus Freak and Supernatural, but perhaps they are an exception.)  The issue, really, as indicated above, is what the movement is fundamentally about, and whether or not it aligns with Christianity.  If so, and if genuine Christian rappers/hip-hop artists can reach a population of the fallen world for Christ that most likely couldn’t be reached in other avenues, certainly the world needs Christian rappers to bring the truth of the gospel there (just as the world needs Christian lawyers, Christian athletes, Christian judges, etc.).  But, if it is just parroting the forms with shoddy craftsmanship (Facing the Giants) just because it is the “in thing” the kids enjoy or misappropriating terms and showing how ignorant Christians are about their world (Desiring God), it needs to stop at once.  Certainly we would never embrace a “Christian Adult Film Industry” in the hopes of winning pornography-addicted people to the gospel (would we?).  If the cultures/ontologies of “rap”/“hip hop” and “Christianity” are fundamentally incompatible, then they should not mix (which is different from “associate,” mind you).  If, though, it is possible for Christian rap to be truly both “Christian” and “rap,” go for it.

Q13. Is secular humanist natural law transcendent?  I think it couldn’t be if it’s found in nature, so then wouldn’t morality change with culture?  Then it wouldn’t be objective!

A13. Secular humanists differ in law, remember: some still cling to a form of Natural Law outside of man but separate from God — as you indicate, this is a contradiction most no longer embrace with positivist law.  Natural Law is somewhat transcendent, being outside of man but still subject to evolution, as you said and thus not absolute or immutable.  Positivist law ignores this conflict by fully embracing a materialistic evolutionary approach to law, claiming laws do in fact change with the culture that makes them, adapting to the needs of the moment.  Positivist law denies objectivity anyway, claiming everything is evolutionary, ephemeral, and subjective (except for “the needs of humanity” in general).

Q14. Does the fact that slavery used to be considered moral in 19th-century America (was it?) support the idea that morality evolves over culture/time?

A14. “Right” and “wrong” never change, considering they are grounded in and originate from the immutable character of God.  Just because people get things wrong (for a time) does not validate evolutionary moral theory.  There was a time in which at least 50% of the human race thought God said “don’t touch the fruit” when, in fact, He hadn’t.  Certainly a section of America (even before and after the 19th century) believed slavery was moral (or, at least, justifiably expedient), but that didn’t make it so: majority ≠ right “just because.”  People have been misinterpreting and misapplying the Bible for a few thousand years (America’s constant use of slavery and the Holocaust as the only examples of morality shows its ignorance in the history of ideas and is rather disheartening — though I understand your question is a reaction to things we discussed in class), but that doesn’t mean morality is depending upon custom or consensus.

Q15. You said that according to secular humanism, humans couldn’t have moral responsibility since they don’t have free will.  But we as Christians see that humans are free agents and how that makes us special.  But if it’s true that animals have moral responsibility, aren’t they free agents, too?  If animals are free agents, is that somehow bad for Christianity?

A15. Actually, I said if secular humanism would be consistent with its own claims, they would have to claim no free will (since we are products of environment and behaviorists, they claim) and thus they aren’t “responsible” for anything they do since they have no choice to do otherwise (which is why secularism spends so much time blaming society and social systems instead of culpable individuals).  All systems of thought devalue mankind and the importance of individuals except Christianity.  I’m not sure animals have moral responsibility, since they act according to instinct and were not created as culpable free moral agents in the image of God (like mankind was).  Since animals are not free agents, Christianity is not negatively affected in any way.

Q16. Do Postmodernists believe that science is real only to the scientific community?

A16. Since Postmodernism primarily deals with the Humanities (sorry to say), it and its adherents have little to do with science, certainly the Natural/Formal Sciences.  One of the basic inconsistencies within Postmodernism is it claims nothing is true or absolute for everyone, everywhere, always — except their declaration truth, morality, legality, et. al. are decided by the community.  Thus, claims to truth to which all must adhere (be they Christian or atheist) must be rejected.  With no credence in the existence of a metaphysical, objective reality to be fully understood in any way (that would be true for all, be it through science or intuition or revelation), Postmodernism considers “science” to be, in effect, “scientism,” just one more faulty view of reality ignorant people are trying to foist on other communities.  Because the scientific community is trying to impose its findings on everyone, Postmodernists may go so far as to deny even the scientific community’s right to claim it for themselves — but I don’t know of anyone who has actually done it so blatantly or totally.  Less stringent Postmodernists might, indeed, claim “science” is only true for the “scientific community,” since it works for them as one “little narrative” among others, and thus they are free to live by it so long as they keep it to themselves (though, not-so-deep down, they would deny its validity since it claims absolute truth for all).

Q17. If Postmodernism comes after Modernism, what’s next?

A17. Some consider “Postmodern” a misnomer, in that much of what loosely constitutes “Postmodernism” is actually, they say, the natural outgrowth of Modernism; thus it should be called “Late Modernism.”  Others, such as CNU’s own Dr. Silverman, claim outright Pragmatism is the next cultural step and that, in fact, we are pretty much there already.  Rejecting the need to be bound and/or driven by the declarations of the community, people will be (and are) driven solely by what works: what works for them, what works best (for them), what works fastest (for them).  Only time will tell, and that’s about all I can accurately say about the foreseeable future (sorry if that sounds like a “cop-out”).  I can say, though, soon enough what is coming is the rapture, the seven-year tribulation culminating in the return of Jesus and the inauguration of His millennial kingdom, the judgment of the living and the dead, the destruction of the present heavens and earth and creation of the New Heavens, New Earth, and the descent of New Jerusalem, followed by the rest of eternity.  If the Word of God is anything to go by.

Q18. Should the Bible be interpreted figuratively or literally?  If some parts can be taken figuratively, isn’t that a step toward Postmodernism?

A18.  The Bible should be taken literally, unashamedly so, including the parts that are figurative.  Understanding the Bible as accurately as possible depends, in part, on understanding and knowing the different genres and intents of its various parts: some parts are history, some law, some poetry, some prophecy, some hortatory, some proverbial wisdom.  It should be understood according to itself, and what its different sections ontologically are.  When Jesus tells parables, those sections should be understood and exegeted as such.  The proverbs do not contradict each other, since they are different (inspired) bits of proverbial wisdom that apply at different times/situations in our lives (without being “relativistic”).  When the prophetic sections of the Bible use figurative language, symbols, and types, those elements should be understood and interpreted (as accurately as possible) as figures and symbols and types.  Interpreting the Bible based on what it actually is/says is good hermeneutics, not Postmodernism.  Postmodernism claims no intrinsic meaning to a text exists: all is cultural, relative interpretation.  That’s a far cry from interpreting a work based on its actual, innate content/genre/theme/meaning.  The same hermeneutical principles apply to virtually every other writing in the history of mankind.  The Bible, though, just happens to be fully inspired by God Himself, too.  Dr. David Reid’s Web site “Growing Christians Ministries” located at (www.growingchwristians.org) is a great resource for hermeneutical treasures.  Check out the heading on the left-side panel.  [Editor’s note: it is with a heavy heart I must report since this answer was first created, Dr. Reid passed away suddenly on January 31. 2012.  We take great comfort knowing he is much better off than we are at home with the Lord, and take further comfort and pleasure from the lifetime’s worth of insights, materials, and resources Dr. Reid left behind for us to continue to worship God accurately by rightly dividing the Word of Truth through good hermeneutics.  “More we could say….”]

Q19. How is the church giving in to Postmodernism?  As in what do they believe/do differently than a Bible-believing church?

A19. With all the different possibilities of Postmodernism, it’s hard to say “the church” is doing “such-and-such.”  Churches that value contemporary interpretation/applications over accurate/innate/traditional meanings most likely are on that slippery slope.  (Certainly churches that encourage their constituents to go out and read only the latest works — or even singing only the recent songs — instead of familiarizing themselves with church history, the Church Fathers, and the great works of the past are in great danger of trending toward postmodern tendencies.)  The church has been fighting various heresies since its inception; Postmodernism is not really anything new.  Those that focus on the love of God over His other attributes are in danger of “tickling the ears of its hearers” instead of giving them the entire truth of the Bible.  Those that don’t follow Acts 2:42 as the basis for what they are about are misrepresenting what a New Testament biblical church is — that may not be “Postmodern,” per se, but it certainly isn’t good.  Churches that feel compelled to enlarge their buildings instead of planting new churches with new leaders may be dabbling in contemporary, community-driven elements of Postmodernism.  Churches that don’t have time for regular communion celebrations but have plenty of time for emotive sermons devoid of Biblical exegesis may be more postmodern than biblical.  Some may argue churches with female pastors are more postmodern than biblical.  Certainly churches with homosexual pastors are more postmodern than biblical.  As with the “gym night” sort of practices discussed above, anything a church does that is more like the world than it is biblical principle is, in some form, postmodern.  Some may even argue “trunk or treat” nights as a “safe alternative” to regular “trick or treating” could be essentially a thin church-patina over an essentially secular-world practice or culture.  True, it may be more generically secular than postmodern, but it is still a good example of the basic idea behind your question.  Certainly any church that considers Biblical texts open to contemporary interpretations based on the needs of the time regardless of what they meant when initially written (the essence of deconstruction) are abhorrently postmodern.  Any time a Bible story or verse is taken out of context to placate or groundlessly hearten an audience, postmodern eisegesis is taking place.  Certainly Jeremiah 29:11 and Philippians 4:13 are the most abused verses in this respect: most Christians who “claim” either of these verses as “their favorite” do so only because the words make them feel good, not because they understand what the verses actually mean in context (in other words, what they actually mean).  Any time a speaker (especially a guest speaker) offers a “new interpretation” on a passage, or calls for a “new understanding” or appraisal, or wants to “redefine Christianity for the 21st century,” we should be alert and prepared to refute what may very well be nothing but a postmodern manipulation of the past for the exigency of the moment.  Thus we must be like the Bereans (Acts 17:11), always weighing what our churches, friends, family members, teachers, co-workers, social network associates, employers, media personalities, and anyone else we encounter against what the Bible actually says and means.  If you aren’t sure what the Bible says/means, enroll at Emmaus Bible College (www.emmaus.edu).

Q20. Which worldview do most Americans have?

A20. As indicated above, America is such an unwieldy, diverse place, it’s difficult to accurately estimate (even by voting results) what most Americans believe.  Statistically, most Americans claim to be Christians, but I think it’s safe to say most Americans don’t actually know (let alone believe or follow) what the Bible even says.  I wouldn’t be surprised if Dr. Silverman is correct, in that most Americans embrace (whether they can cogently voice or acknowledge such a belief) a kind of pragmatism: they value what works, what works now, what works fast (if the course of technology in America is any signifier of what its citizenry delights in and values).  Thus, it’s a most likely a syncretism of a modified Secular Humanism/Modernism and Postmodernism, trending toward outright Pragmatism.

Reflections on the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints (Mormonism)

Caitlin Montgomery Hubler

Most people have Mormon friends or have been in the church themselves, and I think what is widely perceived is The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints is just another denomination of Christianity.  After all, Jesus is in the name of their church, how could they not be?  First, I’ll go through the fundamental differences between orthodox Christianity and Mormonism.  However, the main reason I am writing this is because I believe Mormonism, on a purely evidential basis, to be false.  I believe the Book of Mormon was not divinely inspired, and Joseph Smith was a false prophet.  I hope no one will take offense to that without first reading why I have this position.

My first point is Mormonism is fundamentally different from Christianity.  Merely because the Mormon church’s official name is “The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints” does not make it Christian.  It is a religion’s beliefs that are its foundation — not its name.  In fact, Mormonism differs from Christianity in two very central issues to each doctrine: 1) How are we saved/what happens after we die?  and 2) Who is Jesus?

How are we saved/what happens after we die?

Mormonism’s answer: Depending on the life one lives, there are 4 different possibilities for what happens after you die.  The best you can hope for is to become a god yourself, but that only happens if you have been completely cleansed of sin and lived a life full of good works.

There are three main kingdoms of Heaven according to LDS doctrine:

1. The Celestial kingdom is for those who accepted Jesus, received the necessary ordinances (such as baptism), and followed the commandments.  This level is divided — and the upper half consists of the people who will become gods themselves because of the greatness of their works.

2. The Terrestrial kingdom is for those who lived good lives but did not accept Jesus in their lifetimes.

3. Lastly, the Telestial kingdom is for those who did not accept Jesus nor live good lives.

The only people who go to Hell are the really wicked people — we’re talking like a Cain or a Judas here.  Hell, called “outer darkness,” is really not an option for most of humanity.

Take this excerpt from an article on the LDS doctrine of salvation (reformatted for simplicity’s sake here, all emphases in original source):

Salvation, according to Mormonism, can mean many things.  LDS doctrinal authority Bruce R. McConkie, for many years one of the 12 “apostles” of the Mormon Church, taught that there are three distinct categories of salvation.  In his highly respected book, Mormon Doctrine, McConkie wrote:

1. Unconditional or general salvation, that which comes by grace alone without obedience to gospel law, consists in the mere fact of being resurrected.  In this sense salvation is synonymous with immortality; … [this] salvation eventually will come to all mankind, excepting only the sons of perdition …

But this is not the salvation of righteousness, the salvation which the saints seek.  Those who gain only this general or unconditional salvation will still be judged according to their works and receive their places in a terrestrial or a telestial kingdom.  They will, therefore, be damned; their eternal progression will be cut short; they will not fill the full measure of their creation, but in eternity will be ministering servants to more worthy persons.

2. Conditional or individual salvation, that which comes by grace coupled with gospel obedience, consists in receiving an inheritance in the celestial kingdom of God.  This kind of salvation follows faith, repentance, baptism, receipt of the Holy Ghost, and continued righteousness to the end of one’s mortal probation. (D. & C. 20:29; 2 Ne. 9:23-24.) … [D. & C. = Doctrine & Covenants, one of the books considered to be Mormon Scripture; 2 Ne. = 2 Nephi, one of the books contained in the Book of Mormon.]

Even those in the celestial kingdom, however, who do not go on to exaltation, will have immortality only and not eternal life.  Along with those of the telestial and terrestrial worlds they will be “ministering servants, to minister for those who are worthy of a far more, and an exceeding, and an eternal weight of glory.”  They will live “separately and singly” in an unmarried state “without exaltation, in their saved condition, to all eternity” (D. & C. 132:16-17).

3. Salvation in its true and full meaning is synonymous with exaltation or eternal life and consists in gaining an inheritance in the highest of the three heavens within the celestial kingdom.  With few exceptions this is the salvation of which the scriptures speak.  It is the salvation which the saints seek.  It is of this which the Lord says, “There is no gift greater than the gift of salvation” (D. & C. 6:13).  This full salvation is obtained in and through the continuation of the family unit in eternity, and those who obtain it are gods (D. & C. 131:1-4; 132).  (Article by Dave Johnson, “The Mormon View of Salvation.”)

Christianity’s answer: There are only two possibilities for the afterlife: Heaven or Hell.  The only way to get to Heaven is through faith in Jesus Christ.  “Salvation” and “eternal life” have the same meaning because there is only one Heaven.  “Whoever believes in Him [Jesus] is not condemned, but whoever does not believe stands condemned already because he has not believed in the name of God’s one and only begotten Son” (John 3:18).  “Whoever believes in the Son has eternal life, but whoever rejects the Son will not see life, for God’s wrath remains on him” (John 3:36).

These verses make it very clear that unless one has faith in Christ as the one who made it possible to be right with God, he will not enter Heaven — in fact, he will be eternally condemned to Hell.  This stands opposite to Mormon teaching, which states that even if one does not accept Christ he can still avoid Hell and even go to Heaven, if only the telestial or terrestrial kingdoms.

There is also a faith versus good works issue here.  Christians believe we are saved by grace through faith: “For it is by grace you have been saved, through faith — and this not from yourselves, it is the gift of God, so that no one can boast” (Ephesians 2:8).  It is clear from the passages from Mormon doctrine above that in order to receive full and individual salvation, much more than faith is required.  This idea one can ascend to godhood through a combination of good works and baptism is central to the next point of disagreement between Mormons and Christians — the person of Jesus Christ.

Who is Jesus?

Mormonism’s answer: There was no true virgin birth — Jesus is the human child of Mary and God the Father.  “The birth of the Saviour was as natural as are the births of our children; it was the result of natural action.  He partook of flesh and blood — was begotten of his Father, as we were of our fathers,” (Journal of Discourses, vol. 8, p. 115).  “Christ was begotten by an Immortal Father in the same way that mortal men are begotten by mortal fathers” (Mormon Doctrine, Bruce McConkie, p. 547).

To support their view of Jesus being the physically conceived son of God, Mormons appeal to John 3:16, which states Jesus is the “only begotten.”  The Greek word used there is monogenes, which means “unique” or “one of a kind.”  It does not mean “procreated,” but emphasizes “uniqueness.”

Mormons also appeal to Colossians 1:15, which calls Christ the “Firstborn over all creation.”  The Greek word for firstborn is prototokos, meaning “first in rank, preeminent one.”  It carries the idea of positional supremacy.  Christ is the firstborn in the sense He is preeminent over all creation.  Also, Jesus was born in Jerusalem (Book of Mormon, Alma 7:9, 10) and is of the Tribe of Benjamin.

Jesus is not eternally God — He started out as a human, and through His good works, ascended into godhood, or attained the state of exaltation.  He is the physical first-born spirit child of God the Father, who was also once a mere human.

Central to Mormon doctrine is the idea God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit are not just three persons but three different Gods altogether, therefore claiming the Christian doctrine of the “three-in-one” trinity as heretical.  “It is the first principle of the Gospel to know for a certainty the character of God. … He was once a man like us; … God himself, the Father of us all, dwelt on an earth, the same as Jesus Christ himself did” (Teachings of the Prophet Joseph Smith, p. 345-46, emphasis added).  Also, Jesus practiced polygamy (Journal of Discourses, vol. 4, p. 259).

There was nothing special about Jesus (as in, He was not divine to begin with) other than that He did enough good works to ascend into godhood.

Christianity’s answer: Jesus was born of the virgin Mary (Isaiah 7:14, Matthew 1:23).  “According to the Bible, Jesus was born in Bethlehem, of the Davidic, kingly line of Judah (Matthew 2:1, Hebrews 7:14).  Jesus is the Lion of the Tribe of Judah (Revelation 5:5).  Jesus is a descendant of David, a Bethlehemite (Matthew 1:6, 1 Samuel 16:1).  Several other verses refer to Jesus as ‘Son of David’ (Matthew 15:22, 21:9; Mark 10:47).  The line of King was through the Tribe of Judah and not Benjamin (Genesis 49:9-10)” (Christian Apologetics & Research Industry).

Jesus was born in Bethlehem and is of the Tribe of David.  Jesus is God incarnate.  “Jesus Christ is the same yesterday, and today, and forever” (Hebrews 13:8).  “In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God … All things were made by him … He was in the world, and the world was made by him, and the world knew him not …  And the Word was made flesh, and dwelt among us” (John 1:1, 3, 10, 14).  “I [Jesus] and my Father are one” (John 10:30).  “For there are three that bear record in heaven, the Father, the Word, and the Holy Ghost: and these three are one” (1 John 5:7, emphases added).  The last verse also supports the doctrine of the trinity that Mormons reject.  Lastly, according to the Bible, Jesus was not married and did not have wives.

It can be seen the Book of Mormon and the Bible contradict on central issues.  It is for this reason Mormons must accept the Bible only as far as it is translated correctly — “We believe the Bible to be the word of God as far as it is translated correctly…” (8th Article of Faith of the Mormon Church).  These differences are at the core of each religion — issues such as the nature of God, Jesus, the Holy Spirit, and the afterlife are doctrinal essentials.

It is interesting that for most of Mormon history, their church refused to be equated with the mainstream Christian church: “And he said unto me: Behold there are save two churches only; the one is the church of the Lamb of God, and the other is the church of the devil; wherefore, whoso belongeth not to the church of the Lamb of God belongeth to that great church which is the mother of abominations; and she is the whore of all the earth” (1 Nephi 14:10).  “My object in going to inquire of the Lord was to know which of all the sects was right, that I might know which to join.…  I was answered that I must join none of them, for they were all wrong; … their creeds were an abomination in his sight” (Pearl of Great Price, “Joseph Smith — History” 1:18, 19).  However, it makes sense for Mormons to insist nowadays they are Christians.  It is easier to obtain converts if those converts from Christian denominations are unsuspecting of the true nature of Mormonism.

It is clear that since Mormonism and Christianity differ on the most significant and foundational ideas of their respective faiths they cannot be one and the same.  In fact, either one is true and the other is false, or they are both false.  If Mormonism is true, then Biblical Christianity is a lie, but if Biblical Christianity is true, then Mormonism is a lie.

Now, once it is understood that Mormonism and Christianity cannot both be true, the real task of showing Mormonism false begins.  Note that if Mormonism is false, that has no effect on the truth of Christianity.

Mormons are part of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, meaning they believe in another prophet of God — a man named Joseph Smith.  A man living in the early 19th century in Palmyra, New York, he claims to have received a revelation from God written on golden plates.  It is his translation of these plates that we know today as the Book of Mormon.

Joseph Smith’s background, trustworthiness, and character must be examined in order to support the truth or falsehood of his famous claims.  The first question needing to be addressed with regard to Mormonism is “Did Joseph Smith stand to gain by making this all up?”  Of course, even if he did, that in itself is not nearly enough to disprove Mormonism — but it is just one piece of circumstantial evidence which can be used in this argument.

There are usually three main motives detectives look for when building a case against someone: sexual lust, financial gain, and power.  If someone stood to gain one or more of those by committing whatever crime, the case against him strengthens.  Did Joseph Smith stand to gain any of these three?  The answer is yes — he stood to gain in all three of these areas.

1) Sexual lust: Joseph Smith gained through justifying his polygamy.  He had 30 wives, many of whom were underage — but if he could prove polygamy was a holy practice condoned by God, there would be no problem.

[I]f any man espouse a virgin, and desire to espouse another, and the first give her consent, and if he espouse the second, and they are virgins, and have vowed to no other man, then is he justified; he cannot commit adultery for they are given unto him; for he cannot commit adultery with that that belongeth unto him and to no one else.  And if he have ten virgins given unto him by this law, he cannot commit adultery, for they belong to him, and they are given unto him; therefore is he justified.  For they are given unto him to multiply and replenish the earth, according to my commandment (Doctrine & Covenants 132:61-62, emphases added).

Note Smith justifies polygamy in so far as it helps reproduce more spirit-children for God.  However, take this quotation from historian Todd Compton, a faithful LDS member himself:

In the group of Smith’s well-documented wives, eleven (33 percent) were 14 to 20 years old when they married him.  Nine wives (27 percent) were twenty-one to thirty years old.  Eight wives (24 percent) were in Smith’s own peer group, ages thirty-one to forty.  In the group aged forty-one to fifty, there is a substantial drop off: two wives, or 6 percent, and three (9 percent) in the group aged fifty-one to sixty….  The teenage representation is the largest, though the twenty-year and thirty-year groups are comparable, which contradicts the Mormon folk-wisdom that sees the beginnings of polygamy were an attempt to care for older, unattached women.  These data suggest that sexual attraction was an important part of the motivation for Smith’s polygamy… (emphasis added).

One of Joseph Smith’s own followers pointed out that Smith may have had an ulterior motive for including the doctrine of polygamy in his translation of the golden plates.

2) Financial gain: Joseph Smith also gained financially from sharing about his revelation with God in the Book of Mormon.  He claimed God told him to start a bank that, as is shown in the quotation below, would be the best there ever was.

Warren Parrish, who had been an officer in the bank and had apostatized from the Church, made this statement: “I have listened to him [i.e., Smith] with feelings of no ordinary kind, when he declared that the audible voice of God, instructed him to establish a banking/anti-banking institution, who like Aaron’s rod shall swallow up all other banks (the Bank of Monroe excepted) and grow and flourish and spread from the rivers to the ends of the earth, and survive when all others should be laid in ruins” (Painesville Republican, February 22, 1838, qtd.  in Conflict at Kirtland, p. 297, cited from Mormon Shadow or Reality? p. 531).

The fate of that institution is worth noting: “ … The bank failed.  This affected Joseph’s status.  People who were convinced that Joseph had intended a swindle at the outset attacked him verbally and threatened him physically.  This disruption forced Joseph to leave the city frequently….  In April 1837 Joseph went into hiding without seeing Emma [his wife] before he left” (Mormon Enigma, p. 62).

3) Power: Joseph Smith claimed to be the singular spokesperson for God Himself — talk about influence!  His followers of that time called him “King of the Kingdom of God.”  He also ran in the 1844 Presidential race but died before the race was over.  (It is also noteworthy that he predicted America would fall within a couple of years of around 1843, and that didn’t happen.)

There certainly stood much to be gained if Joseph Smith created the Book of Mormon himself.  Again, even if he had a motive, that fact alone does not prove Mormonism false.  However, this is just the beginning of the case against the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints.  To better understand the Mormon faith, we must next examine the environment in which it arose.

Joseph Smith was born in Vermont in 1805 but at the age of about 10 moved to the city of Palmyra, New York, around which Mormonism originated.  It is significant that this is one of the areas most affected by the 2nd Great Awakening, which began in 1800 but really took off in 1820.  This awakening was a time of spiritual revival in which church membership soared.  Heightened emotion was no doubt a part of this, and it gave rise to many new religious groups.  The problem with this was people who had made decisions to convert out of mere emotion did not make for long-lasting converts, and the church seemed more interested in short-term revival than long-term discipleship.  There was little guidance for these new converts after the revivals, and this is perhaps what led to so many new groups being created.  Some of these new churches were the Seventh-day Adventists from which we have the Jehovah’s Witnesses, the Evangelical Christian Church of Canada, Christian Church of Disciples of Christ, and, of course, Mormonism.

These new churches, like Mormonism, hold beliefs that seem similar at first, but when truly examined have fundamental differences.  Many, like the Jehovah’s Witnesses, claimed to be the “restoration of Christianity” and the “one true church.”  All of these spin-offs on Christianity emerged around the same time, around the same place, in response to and as a result of the 2nd Great Awakening.  Certainly, this does not necessarily prove Mormonism false; at this point perhaps only a hint of suspicion is warranted.

Now we have to look at the character of Joseph Smith.  Was he the humble, uneducated, virtuous and sincere man Mormonism depends on him to be?  Was he inexperienced in treasure digging, making the discovery of the golden plates more miraculous?  If he was a man of great moral standing, this would make the divine inspiration of the Book of Mormon more believable.  However, the evidence points in the opposite direction — that which causes more doubt to be cast on the validity of the Mormon scriptures.

The first point needing to be established is that Joseph Smith was by no means aimless — he worked as a local treasure digger near Palmyra, and even assisted others with finding treasure.  Smith operated using a “seer stone,” a magical stone he claimed to use to find treasure.  He claimed to see ghosts and spirits, as well as jewels through it, and learned its use from a local magician.

Once, two men hired Smith to find treasure for them — Josiah Stole and Isaac Hale (whose daughter Emma soon became Smith’s wife).  He never found the treasure he had been hired to find, and his employers eventually became tired of waiting.  We see from this quotation not only did he not accomplish the task of finding treasure, but he was arrested for fraud:

In late 1825 a wealthy Pennsylvania farmer named Josiah Stowell (sometimes spelled Stoal) came 150 miles to hire Smith because of Smith’s reputation.  Smith was hired to help Stowell locate a supposed old Spanish silver mine on Stowell’s farm.  During this time two significant things happened.  First, Smith met his future wife, Emma Hale, and in later interviews her father explained how he didn’t like Joseph Smith when he first met him because Smith was a money-digger, and Mr. Hale didn’t want any criminals marrying his daughter!  Perhaps even more damaging, however, was the fact that Smith was tried and convicted in court in March 1826 for “glass-looking.”  The charge had been brought up by Stowell’s nephew, who saw through the con that his uncle didn’t.  Mormon historians now acknowledge that this trial happened and that Smith was convicted on this charge….  [Of significance] are the affidavits and statements made by a number of Smith’s neighbors in Palmyra, about Smith’s lifestyle in the 1820’s.  Several neighbors have stated that Joseph Smiths Senior and Junior were both money-diggers, and that Jr. (i.e., the Mormon founder) was particularly good at it and was the head of a group of money-diggers (History of the Church, vol. 1, chapter 2, emphases added).

Peter Ingersoll (family neighbor and friend of Joseph Smith) Affidavit, Palmyra, Wayne County. N. Y. Dec. 2, 1833 (emphases added):

In the month of August, 1827, I was hired by Joseph Smith, Jr. to go to Pennsylvania, to move his wife’s household furniture up to Manchester, where his wife then was.  When we arrived at Mr. Hale’s, in Harmony, PA. from which place he had taken his wife, a scene presented itself, truly affecting.  His father-in-law (Mr. Hale) addressed Joseph, in a flood of tears: “You have stolen my daughter and married her.  I had much rather have followed her to her grave.  You spend your time in digging for money — pretend to see in a stone, and thus try to deceive people.”  Joseph wept, and acknowledged he could not see in a stone now, nor never could; and that his former pretensions in that respect, were all false.  He then promised to give up his old habits of digging for money and looking into stones.

Smith admits all his accounts from the seer stone were false.  That will become very significant once we discuss how he translated the golden plates into the Book of Mormon.

A closing quotation summarizes Smith’s character: “We have not only testimony impeaching the moral characters of the Smith family, but we show by the witnesses, that they told contradictory stories, from time to time, in relation to their finding the plates, and other circumstances attending it, which go clearly to show that none of them had the fear of God before their eyes, but were moved and instigated by the devil” (Mormonism Unveiled, p. 232).

It is clear from these quotations from the Mormons’ own church history as well as eyewitness accounts that Joseph Smith was less than virtuous.  He was arrested while doing what he claimed to do to find the Book of Mormon.  Smith was still involved in fraud when he was making discoveries about the golden plates.  Which is more likely: that he was a true prophet of God, or a charlatan?

Now for the important discussion of how the golden plates were translated.  While many paintings and pictures in Mormon visitor centers depict a prayerful Smith concentrating on the plates, many eyewitnesses admit Smith used only his seer stone and a hat for this translation.  Take this excerpt from Mormonism Research Ministry’s article, “A Seer Stone and a Hat: ‘Translating’ the Book of Mormon” (slightly reformatted for our purposes here):

“In his Comprehensive History of the Church (CHC), LDS historian and Seventy Brigham H. Roberts quotes Martin Harris, one of the three witnesses whose name is found in every edition of the Book of Mormon since its original edition.  Harris said that the seer stone Smith possessed was a ‘chocolate-colored, somewhat egg-shaped stone which the Prophet found while digging a well in company with his brother Hyrum.’  Harris went on to say it was by using this stone that ‘Joseph was able to translate the characters engraved on the plates’ (CHC 1:129).

“Martin Harris was one of the scribes Joseph Smith used to record the writing on the plates.  This enabled him to give a first-hand account of how Smith performed this translation.  Harris noted, ‘By aid of the Seer Stone, sentences would appear and were read by the Prophet and written by Martin, and when finished he would say “written”; and if correctly written, the sentence would disappear and another appear in its place; but if not written correctly it remained until corrected, so that the translation was just as it was engraved on the plates, precisely in the language then used’ (CHC 1:29).

“Harris’s description concurs with that of David Whitmer, another one of the three witnesses whose testimony appears at the front of the Book of Mormon.  Whitmer details exactly how the stone produced the English interpretation.  On page 12 of his book An Address to All Believers in Christ, Whitmer wrote,

I will now give you a description of the manner in which the Book of Mormon was translated.  Joseph Smith would put the seer stone into a hat, and put his face in the hat, drawing it closely around his face to exclude the light; and in the darkness the spiritual light would shine.  A piece of something resembling parchment would appear, and under it was the interpretation in English.  Brother Joseph would read off the English to Oliver Cowdery, who was his principal scribe, and when it was written down and repeated to brother Joseph to see if it was correct, then it would disappear, and another character with the interpretation would appear.  Thus the Book of Mormon was translated by the gift and power of God, and not by any power of man.

Robert N. Hullinger, in his book Joseph Smith’s Response to Skepticism, cites a personal interview….  [He writes,] ‘Smith’s wife Emma supported Harris’s and Whitmer’s versions of the story in recalling that her husband buried his face in his hat while she was serving as his scribe.’”

We see the plates were simply not used in the translation process whatsoever.  In fact, Smith refused to let anyone see the plates and even hid them in the woods for safe keeping.  He relied entirely on the “revelation from God” he received through the seer stone.  Remember that he previously admitted he could never see through the stone and hence he himself invalidates the Book of Mormon’s claim to divinity!

Another point is the way Smith described the golden plates would have made them over 200 pounds.  According to Joseph Smith, the Book of Mormon was “engraven on plates which had the appearance of gold, each plate was six inches wide and eight inches long and not quite so thick as common tin….  The volume was something near six inches in thickness…” (Joseph Smith, Times and Seasons, 3:9, March 1, 1842, 707).  “[T]his mass of gold plates, as they were not so compactly pressed as boxed tin, would have weighed nearly 200 lbs.” (John Hyde, Mormonism, Its Leaders).  This casts more doubt on the supposed fact of him carrying them while running from captors through the woods toward his house.

The plates were secreted about three miles from home…Joseph, on coming to them, took them from their secret place, and wrapping them in his linen frock, placed them under his arm and started for home….  After proceeding a short distance, he thought it would be more safe to leave the road and go through the woods.  Traveling some distance after he left the road, he came to a large windfall, and as he was jumping over a log, a man sprang up from behind it, and gave him a heavy blow with a gun.  Joseph turned around and knocked him down, then ran at the top of his speed.  About half a mile further he was attacked again in the same manner as before; he knocked this man down in like manner as the former, and ran on again; and before he reached home he was assaulted the third time.  In striking the last one he dislocated his thumb, which, however, he did not notice until he came within sight of the house, when he threw himself down in the corner of the fence in order to recover his breath.  As soon as he was able, he arose and came to the house (Lucy Mack Smith, mother of Joseph Smith, in Biographical Sketches of Joseph Smith the Prophet, 1853, p. 104-105; reprinted by Bookcraft Publishers in 1956 under the title History of Joseph Smith by His Mother, p. 107-108).

Mormon apologists maintain that critics’ calculations are wrong, that the plates were truly only 50-60 pounds.  Even if this is true, it is still highly unlikely that anyone could run 3 miles with 50-pound golden plates while escaping from and assaulting various attackers, as well as dislocating his thumb on the way.

Certainly, if Joseph Smith is telling the truth here, God could have performed a miracle and given Smith the strength to carry these plates.  This piece of evidence cannot be laid out on its own, only on top of other pieces, to establish the unlikelihood of Smith being able to carry these plates without divine intervention.  The reason I add this piece of evidence is not to say it was impossible for Smith to have carried these plates, but to say without the divine access Smith claimed to be connected with, (and indeed my task is to prove that divine access less and less likely) it would have been physically impossible for him to carry these plates.

However, I’m afraid this is only the beginning of the troubles with the inconsistencies in the Book of Mormon.  There are three main eye-witnesses mentioned in every copy of the Book of Mormon: Oliver Cauldry, David Whitmer, and Martin Harris.  Credible eyewitnesses add believability, so it is important to examine these witnesses and their real relationship to Mormonism.  History has proved these witnesses unreliable: first, Oliver Cauldry was later excommunicated from the LDS church because of the fact he publicly renounced the faith.  He even described Smith as “a leader of scoundrels of the deepest degree.”  This does not sound like a very faithful eyewitness!  David Whitmer was also later excommunicated from the LDS church — he claimed to see the golden plates “through the eye of faith,” yet kept changing his story.  Martin Harris was perhaps the most faithful of the three, as he was technically excommunicated, but it was never official.  The point is these three weren’t exactly the loyal witnesses the LDS church paints them to be.

After realizing his witnesses weren’t really going to do him any good, Joseph Smith grouped 8 other people to show them the plates and have them sign saying they had seen them.  All 8 of these people were either Joseph Smith’s or David Whitmer’s close relatives.  The five from Whitmer’s family eventually were excommunicated, and it turns out the only witnesses who stayed faithful were Joseph Smith’s father and two brothers.  Though it is true these three never recanted their testimony, “in 1838 a former Mormon leader, Stephen Burnett, claimed Martin Harris had told him that ‘the eight witnesses never saw [the plates] & hesitated to sign that instrument for that reason, but were persuaded to do it’” (“Facts On The Book Of Mormon Witnesses”).

If we are serious with ourselves when we look at the evidence, there are no credible testimonies that affirm the Book of Mormon as a divine book, or even that the golden plates existed.

Another instance worth noting was during the translation process when Martin Harris asked permission to take some pages home to show his skeptical wife Lucy.  Eventually, this was allowed, and the pages were never returned.  It is widely believed Martin’s wife burned them.  The reasoning behind this is if God was the source of the translation, re-translating the plates word-for-word for the 116 pages that were stolen would be an easy feat.  Joseph Smith was very distraught upon hearing the news about the pages, but then reports another revelation from God.

He was told that he should not retranslate those lost pages because Satan’s cunning plan was to have evil men alter the words in the original translation and wait until Joseph retranslated those pages.  The evil men would then produce the original lost 116 pages with the alterations to prove that Joseph was a fraud.  God, of course, knew of Satan’s eventual plan and had Nephi make two sets of plates that cover essentially the same material but written a little differently.  Joseph was instructed to now translate from the smaller, abridged plates of Nephi, instead of from the larger plates of Nephi that he had translated from earlier.  This way the same basic information that should be included in the Book of Mormon was there, but it would not be expected to match exactly the original lost 116 pages that were first translated by Joseph (Mormonthink.com, “The Lost 116 Pages of the Book of Mormon”).

If this is true, then God, foreseeing that the 116 pages of the Book of Mormon would be stolen, told the ancient prophet Nephi (500-400bc we’re talking) to make two copies of the same plates of information (one with many details and one vaguer).  If not, then Joseph Smith simply had to re-fabricate the story and didn’t include as many details the second time because he was afraid if the lost pages were somehow recovered and he had misremembered its details, he would be called out as a false prophet.  Ask yourself: with the new knowledge of Joseph Smith’s character, and lack of any credible witnesses to attest to his work, which is more likely?

However, there is still more evidence proving the incredulous nature of the Book of Mormon.  Perhaps it will be helpful to begin with a swift summarization of the events recorded in it.  The Book of Mormon is an account of Jesus visiting and interacting with two fighting groups of Native Americans, the Lamanites and the Nephites.  A more detailed account follows:

[The Book of Mormon] tells the story of a man named Lehi, his family, and several others as they are led by God from Jerusalem shortly before the fall of that city to the Babylonians in 586BC.  The book describes their journey across the Arabian peninsula, and then to the promised land, the Americas, by ship.  These books recount the group’s dealings from approximately 600BC to about 130BC, during which time the community grew and split into two main groups, which are called the Nephites and the Lamanites, that frequently warred with each other…  The book of 3 Nephi is of particular importance within the Book of Mormon because it contains an account of a visit by Jesus from heaven to the Americas sometime after his resurrection and ascension.  The text says that during this American visit, he repeated much of the same doctrine and instruction given in the Gospels of the Bible and he established an enlightened, peaceful society which endured for several generations, but which eventually broke into warring factions again…  The book of Mormon is an account of the events during Mormon’s [a prophet-historian and narrator of the entire Book of Mormon] life…  The Book of Moroni [the final book] then details the final destruction of the Nephites and the idolatrous state of the remaining society.  It mentions a few spiritual insights and some important doctrinal teachings, then closes with Moroni’s testimony and an invitation to pray to God for a confirmation of the truthfulness of the account” (Book of Mormon Chronology Chart).

The first point to make about the translation Joseph Smith completed is it is in the formal King James Version style.  For the time period in which he lived, many terms used in 17th-century England were obsolete, appearing nonsensical to 19th-century American readers!  It would have made much more sense for God, being all-powerful, to give Smith a vernacular translation so people could understand it.  For example, 2 Nephi 13:18-23, uses terminology for women’s jewelry very specific to the culture in which the King James Version was written: “In that day the Lord will take away the bravery of their tinkling ornaments, and cauls, and round tires like the moon; the chains and the bracelets, and the mufflers; the bonnets, and the ornaments of the legs, and the headbands, and the tablets, and the ear-rings; the rings, and nose jewels; the changeable suits of apparel, and the mantles, and the wimples, and the crisping-pins; the glasses, and the fine linen, and hoods, and the veils.”  By the time the Book of Mormon is even supposedly given to Smith, these terms were largely obsolete and nonsensical to his audience.  This was taken directly from the King James Bible, without modification.

Secondly, the Book of Mormon contains pages upon pages of exact quotations from the Old Testament — it is not a complete, original document.  2 Nephi 12-24 is literally Isaiah 2-14.  13 chapters of straight verbatim prophecy from Isaiah is copied, and that’s just one instance of this!  That’s quite a quotation!  In addition, the scribal errors later found to be contained in the KJV were transferred into the Book of Mormon.  It is literally a word-for-word copy in many areas.  Again, if this were divinely inspired text, it would be no problem for God to prevent those small errors from entering the Book of Mormon.

In addition, there are a number of passages within the King James Version of the Bible which we know now are really just late additions to the text — with the more ancient manuscripts we find, we see these additions were not present in the earliest writings and are able to be corrected.  One such passage is Matthew 6:9-13, also known as the Lord’s Prayer: “Our Father which art in heaven, hallowed be Thy name.  Thy kingdom come.  Thy will be done on earth, as it is in Heaven.  Give us this day our daily bread.  And forgive us our debts, as we forgive our debtors.  And lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil: for Thine is the kingdom, and the power, and the glory, forever.  Amen.”  We now know this last line, “For Thine is the kingdom, and the power and the glory, forever,” is a late addition to the text — it was not originally part of the inspired Scripture.

This is why modern translators such as those of the NIV and NASB versions have either removed the line altogether or marked it out as not having belonged to the earliest and most trustworthy manuscripts.  However, when Joseph Smith quotes the Lord’s Prayer in 3 Nephi 13:9-13, this passage is kept!  If God was guiding the translation process, it does not make sense for Him to have left those passages uncorrected.

Another example of this is in the use of Mark 16:16-18 (from the KJV) found in Mormon 9:23-24: “He that believeth and is baptized shall be saved; but he that believeth not shall be damned.  And these signs shall follow them that believe; in my name shall they cast out devils; they shall speak with new tongues; they shall take up serpents; and if they drink any deadly thing, it shall not hurt them; they shall lay hands on the sick, and they shall recover.”  This, too, is a late addition to the text, and now we see it was not originally part of the divine scriptures.  Yet Smith still quotes it verbatim in the Book of Mormon!  Smith is lifting entire passages out of the KJV and placing them in the Book of Mormon, including those passages which did not even exist originally!  Surely if God were guiding the process of translation, He would correct the error out of the newly-inspired text.  However, the evidence is just not there for the Book of Mormon.

These examples are just a couple of what are called the “textual anachronisms” in the Book of Mormon, meaning “the state or condition of being chronologically out of place.”  From a point of view which rejects the divine authority of the Book of Mormon, these essentially are times when Joseph Smith forgot he was supposed to be translating records of events which happened 2,000 years before his time and inserted details or events that would not become known until hundreds of years later.  Perhaps the textual anachronism most threatening to the LDS doctrine is its quotation of Jesus hundreds of years before He lived or the New Testament hundreds of years before it was written.  For example, take John 10 when Jesus uses the analogy for Him and His followers of a shepherd and His sheep, saying “there shall be one flock and one shepherd” in verse 16.  This is found also in 1 Nephi 13:41, where supposedly Jesus states, “for there is one God and one shepherd over all the earth.”  Remember 1 Nephi was supposed to have been written around 588bc.  Besides the fact the Nephi quotation is clearly a paraphrase of the New Testament gospel not written until hundreds of years later, it also quotes Jesus — who wasn’t alive and wouldn’t have been alive for hundreds of years.

In addition, the Book of Mormon quotes other passages from the New Testament before it was written.  For example, the phrase “Jesus is the same yesterday, today, and forever,” found in Hebrews 13:8, is seen in many verses in the Book of Mormon.  Here are two examples (emphases added): “And I would exhort you, my beloved brethren, that ye remember that he is the same yesterday, today, and forever” (Moroni 10:19).  “For he is the same yesterday, today, and forever; and the way is prepared for all men from the foundation of the world, if it so be that they repent and come unto him” (1 Nephi 10:18).  This same phrase is also used in 2 Nephi 23:27, Alma 31:17, and Mormon 9:9.

The Book of Mormon quotes not only the gospels before they were written, but it also quotes New Testament letters: “For this corruptible must put on incorruption, and this mortal must put on immortality,” found in 1 Corinthians 15:33.  Note that this is a very unique phrase; however, Smith inserts it into the mouths of various Book of Mormon characters centuries before it was first written from Paul to the Corinthian church.  Here are three examples (emphases added): “Even this mortal shall put on immortality, and this corruption shall put on incorruption, and shall be brought to stand before the bar of God” (Mosiah 16:10).  “Behold, I say unto you, that there is no resurrection — or, I would say, in other words, that this mortal does not put on immortality, this corruption does not put on incorruption — until after the coming of Christ” (Alma 40:2).  “Therefore, all things shall be restored to their proper order, everything to its natural frame — mortality raised to immortality, corruption to incorruption” (Alma 41:4).

Another such example is a saying from Jesus that we find instead later in Paul’s letter to the Corinthians.  “For whoso eateth and drinketh my flesh and blood unworthily eateth and drinketh damnation to his soul” (3 Nephi 18:29).  This passage is strikingly similar to 1 Corinthians 11:29, “For he that eateth and drinketh unworthily, eateth and drinketh damnation to himself” (emphasis added).

Another anachronism is found when Jesus appears to be quoting Peter’s sermon at the Day of Pentecost in 3 Nephi 20:23-26:

Behold, I am he of whom Moses spake, saying: A prophet shall the Lord your God raise up unto you of your brethren, like unto me; him shall ye hear in all things whatsoever he shall say unto you.  And it shall come to pass that every soul who will not hear that prophet shall be cut off from among the people.  Verily I say unto you, yea, and all the prophets from Samuel and those that follow after, as many as have spoken, have testified of me.  And behold, ye are the children of the prophets; and ye are of the house of Israel; and ye are of the covenant which the Father made with your fathers, saying unto Abraham: And in thy seed shall all the kindreds of the earth be blessed.  The Father having raised me up unto you first, and sent me to bless you in turning away every one of you from his iniquities; and this because ye are the children of the covenant.

This seems to be directly quoting Peter from the Day of Pentecost, Acts 3:22-25:

For Moses truly said unto the fathers, A prophet shall the Lord your God raise up unto you of your brethren, like unto me; him shall ye hear in all things whatsoever he shall say unto you.  And it shall come to pass, that every soul, which will not hear that prophet, shall be destroyed from among the people.  Yea, and all the prophets from Samuel and those that follow after, as many as have spoken, have likewise foretold of these days.  Ye are the children of the prophets, and of the covenant which God made with our fathers, saying unto Abraham, And in thy seed shall all the kindreds of the earth be blessed.

Often the writers of the New Testament will quote or paraphrase something from the Old Testament in their writings.  Another problem with the Book of Mormon is that instead of quoting or paraphrasing from the Old Testament, it takes the New Testament paraphrase of the Old Testament.  This is a problem because the events in the Book of Mormon were supposed to have taken place before the New Testament was written.  It is a giveaway of sorts.  For example, let’s examine this quotation from the Book of Mormon: “A prophet shall the Lord your God raise up unto you, like unto me; him shall ye hear in all things whatsoever he shall say unto you” (1 Nephi 22:20).  That sounds an awful lot like Deuteronomy 18:18: “And God told Moses: ‘I will raise them up a Prophet from among their brethren, like unto thee, and will put my words in his mouth; and he shall speak unto them all that I shall command him.’”  However, Joseph Smith is not quoting this passage from the Old Testament; he is quoting its paraphrase in Acts 3:22, which states, “A prophet shall the Lord your God raise up unto you of your brethren, like unto me; him shall ye hear in all things whatsoever he shall say unto you.”  This passage is nearly identical to the one found in the Book of Mormon.  How could Smith have had access to the New Testament paraphrases of the Old Testament when the New Testament would not have been written for at least another 500 years?  This simply doesn’t add up.

In addition, the writers of the New Testament repeatedly mention the message of the gospel was a mystery until the incarnation of Christ.  It did not become fully understandable, fully clear, or fully known, until that point.  We see that in Paul’s letter to the Ephesians 3:2-5 (emphasis added): “If ye have heard of the dispensation of the grace of God which is given me to you: How that by revelation He made known unto me the mystery; (as I wrote afore in few words, whereby, when ye read, ye may understand my knowledge in the mystery of Christ) which in other ages was not made known unto the sons of men, as it is now revealed unto His holy apostles and prophets by the Spirit.”  There is clearly this idea that in other ages before the incarnation of Christ, salvation could not be fully understood.  This idea is repeated in Colossians 1:26, 1 Peter 1:1-12, and Romans 16:25-26.

However, Joseph Smith disregards this.  The characters in the Book of Mormon reveal the gospel exactly how the New Testament writers reveal it, whereas the New Testament writers state that before their time all the specifics on salvation were a mystery.  He reveals this out of sequence — about 570 years prior to the coming of Christ.

There are also several conceptual anachronisms present in the Book of Mormon chronology, discrepancies between the Bible and the Book of Mormon as to when certain concepts were introduced.  For example, the church is described far before it was actually founded.  Matthew 16:18 states the church is something yet to come, not already present: “And I tell you that you are Peter, and on this rock I will build my church, and the gates of Hades will not overcome it” (emphasis added).  This is Jesus talking, and note He indicates the building of His church as a future act.  The church is not something already existing prior to the incarnation.  In Acts 2:47 this idea is repeated.  In contrast, the Book of Mormon claims the church was founded around 147bc.  “And they were called the church of God, or the church of Christ, from that time forward.  And it came to pass that whosoever was baptized by the power and authority of God was added to his church” (Mosiah 18:17, emphasis added).  The time of this writing, around 147bc, clearly precedes Jesus’ own words about the timing of the founding of the church.

Additionally, discrepancy occur as to when followers of Christ were first called “Christians.”  As Acts 11:26 states, “And when he found him, he brought him to Antioch.  So for a whole year Barnabas and Saul met with the church and taught great numbers of people.  The disciples were called Christians first at Antioch” (emphasis added).  Again, Smith has a different idea.  “And those who did belong to the church were faithful; yea, all those who were true believers in Christ took upon them, gladly, the name of Christ, or Christians as they were called, because of their belief in Christ who should come” (Alma 46:15, emphasis added).  At least as early as when the events in this book supposedly took place, 73bc, Smith is stating Christians had their name.

A third difference is the timing of the bestowing of the Holy Spirit.  “I am going to send you what My Father has promised; but stay in the city until you have been clothed with power from on high” (Luke 24:49).  The Bible teaches the Holy Spirit was not received by anyone until the day of Pentecost (in the New Testament era).  Jesus promises it right before His ascension, but it is not actually bestowed until that day.  The coming of the Holy Spirit is described in Acts 2:1-4: “When the day of Pentecost came, they were all together in one place.  Suddenly a sound like the blowing of a violent wind came from heaven and filled the whole house where they were sitting.  They saw what seemed to be tongues of fire that separated and came to rest on each of them.  All of them were filled with the Holy Spirit and began to speak in other tongues as the Spirit enabled them” (emphasis added).

However, Smith writes in 2 Nephi 31:12-13, “And also, the voice of the Son came unto me, saying: He that is baptized in my name, to him will the Father give the Holy Ghost, like unto me; wherefore, follow me, and do the things which ye have seen me do.  Wherefore, my beloved brethren, I know that if ye shall follow the Son, with full purpose of heart, acting no hypocrisy and no deception before God, but with real intent, repenting of your sins, witnessing unto the Father that ye are willing to take upon you the name of Christ, by baptism — yea, by following your Lord and your Savior down into the water, according to his word, behold, then shall ye receive the Holy Ghost; yea, then cometh the baptism of fire and of the Holy Ghost; and then can ye speak with the tongue of angels, and shout praises unto the Holy One of Israel” (emphases added).  The Book of Mormon describes the bestowing of the Holy Spirit as early as 545bc — this is centuries before the Bible describes it as being bestowed.

There are not only literary and conceptual anachronisms, but also physical or cultural anachronisms found in the Book of Mormon.  Certain details were included in the Book of Mormon describing various physical items or parts of culture in 5th-century bc America we know to be false.  Remember that in writing the Book of Mormon, Smith is claiming to chronicle the history of the American continent.  If his claims are true, then we should find what we know about items available in 5th-century bc America lines up with how he describes it.

From the perspective of paleontology, Smith’s claims do not add up.  The first anachronism of this type worth discussing is the Book of Mormon’s repeated mentioning of horses — we see this in many verses: “Behold, he is feeding thy horses.  Now the king had commanded his servants, previous to the time of the watering of their flocks, that they should prepare his horses and chariots, and conduct him forth to the land of Nephi” (Alma 18:9, emphases added).  “And it came to pass in the seventeenth year, in the latter end of the year, the proclamation of Lachoneus had gone forth throughout all the face of the land, and they had taken their horses, and their chariots, and their cattle, and all their flocks, and their herds, and their grain, and all their substance” (3 Nephi 3:22, emphasis added).  The allusion to horses is also made in Alma 18:12 and throughout Alma 26.  Horses are clearly something Smith supposes to be commonplace in 5th-century bc America.  We know from history horses were in fact present on the North American continent at some point, however they had long gone extinct before this time period, by about 8,000bc.  In fact, horses did not reappear on the North American continent until they were imported by the Spaniards in the 15th and 16th centuries.

Ether 1:19 is another verse mentioning not only horses but elephants as well, which were not present in 5th-century bc America either: “And they also had horses, and asses, and there were elephants and cureloms and cumoms; all of which were useful unto man, and more especially the elephants and cureloms and cumoms” (emphases added).  We know creatures such as mastodons and mammoths lived in primordial, very ancient times (they also vanished by about 8,000bc), but again, they would be extinct long before this civilization supposedly took place.  Such is the case with the Book of Mormon’s mentioning of cows, goats, and pigs.  “[The house of Emer had] also all manner of cattle, of oxen, and cows, and of sheep, and of swine, and of goats, and also many other kinds of animals which were useful for the food of man” (Ether 9:18, emphases added).  “And it came to pass that we did find upon the land of promise, as we journeyed in the wilderness, that there were beasts in the forests of every kind, both the cow and the ox, and the ass and the horse, and the goat and the wild goat, and all manner of wild animals, which were for the use of men” (1 Nephi 18:25, emphases added).  Smith is implying these cows, goats, and pigs were domesticated by the people of North America.  However, there is simply no evidence of any of these animals even being present on the North American continent at this time.  Not until Europeans bring them over in the 15th and 16th centuries do we see evidence of their existence, much too lengthy a gap for the Book of Mormon to be considered historically accurate.

In addition to these animals, we also have food being described here in the Americas long before it was ever harvested.  For example, barley and wheat are described as present throughout the Book of Mormon.  We know barley and wheat are not native to North America, and they, too, are only introduced after the Europeans brought them after Columbus.

However, the most alarming physical anachronism found in the Book of Mormon is its description of weapons used by its characters.  For example, chariots are often mentioned either as an everyday method of transportation or a war-time vehicle.  “The king had commanded his servants, previous to the time of the watering of their flocks, that they should prepare his horses and chariots, and conduct him forth to the land of Nephi….  Now when king Lamoni heard that Ammon was preparing his horses and his chariots he was more astonished, because of the faithfulness of Ammon” (Alma 18:9-10, emphases added).  The fact is simply no evidence exists for the use of any wheeled vehicle at this time in the history of the American continent.  The wheel is completely unknown to pre-Columbian cultures.  We do not see its use in any other culture of this time; even the Incan culture then reflected a similar lack of wheeled vehicles.

The insertion of the use of metal swords into the Book of Mormon narrative is another physical or cultural anachronism found.  “And I, Nephi, did take the sword of Laban, and after the manner of it did make many swords, lest by any means the people who were now called Lamanites should come upon us and destroy us” (2 Nephi 5:14, emphases added).  “And again, they have brought swords, the hilts thereof have perished, and the blades thereof were cankered with rust” (Mosiah 8:11, emphases added).  Again, there is a clear lack of evidence when it comes to the use of metal swords in the time period these events supposedly took place.  There is no evidence these people even had the ability to create swords in the first place.  On the other hand, ample evidence supports  the use of other weapons: wooden clubs, stone weapons, even wooden swords — however, the description of swords in the Book of Mormon describes them as rusting, meaning they were supposedly metal swords.  Historical evidence shows this as merely a false, unsupported claim.

At the famous Mormon temple in Utah, in the films shown throughout the temple center, it seems the Mormons themselves have to admit to this anachronism.  These films depict events from the Book of Mormon, and during battle scenes only wooden weapons are depicted.  It is interesting even the Mormons themselves see this allusion to metal swords to be an anachronism and choose to simply remove them from the original narrative and insert the use of a more reasonable weapon into their films.

In addition to weapons are other chronological problems in the Book of Mormon.  Other inventions are supposedly being often used before they were even created.  Metal-based exchange systems are one such invention.  The idea a monetary exchange system took in place in 5th-century bc America using precious metals is seen throughout Alma 11, yet the same problem occurs in this claim of Smith’s: there is no archeological or historical evidence to suggest this metal-based exchange system existed in this time period.  The most common exchange system in Meso-America (around Central America) at this time was that of cocoa beans, but we have no evidence for any culture using metal-based exchange systems at this time.

The use of silk is another anachronism in many Book of Mormon verses: “And it came to pass in the eighth year of the reign of the judges, that the people of the church began to wax proud, because of their exceeding riches, and their fine silks, and their fine-twined linen” (Alma 4:6, emphasis added).  “And they did have silks, and fine-twined linen; and they did work all manner of cloth, that they might clothe themselves from their nakedness” (Ether 10:24, emphasis added).  Allusions to silk are also found in 1 Nephi 13, Alma 1:29, and Ether 9:17.  Silk was certainly common to Joseph Smith in his time, but it did not arrive in the Americas until the 15th and 16th centuries with the Europeans.

The Book of Mormon also includes a wealth of references to the use of compasses.  “And it came to pass that as my father arose in the morning, and went forth to the tent door, to his great astonishment he beheld upon the ground a round ball of curious workmanship; and it was of fine brass.  And within the ball were two spindles; and the one pointed the way whither we should go into the wilderness” (1 Nephi 16:10).  “And now, my son, I have somewhat to say concerning the thing which our fathers call a ball, or director — or our fathers called it Liahona, which is, being interpreted, a compass; and the Lord prepared it” (Alma 37:38, emphasis added).  Remember the invention of the compass doesn’t occur until in China around 1100ad.  In addition, no remains of this device supposedly in existence in 5th-century bc America have been found: another cultural anachronism building the case the Book of Mormon is historically and archeologically incorrect.

Smith’s description of windows also presents a problem in the Book of Mormon’s chronology.  “And the Lord said unto the brother of Jared: What will ye that I should do that ye may have light in your vessels?  For behold, ye cannot have windows, for they will be dashed in pieces; neither shall ye take fire with you, for ye shall not go by the light of fire” (Ether 2:22-23).  Note Smith is putting forth the idea a type of window that could be “dashed into pieces” as the text reads (apparently meaning a modern window with glass panes) was extant at the time of the Jeredites.  According to the Book of Mormon itself, the Jeredites supposedly came out of the Towel of Babel — many hundreds of years before the first invention of such windows in 11th-century Germany.  To be fair, glass in the form of beads was certainly present even in ancient Egyptian times.  However, saying there existed glass windows capable of being “dashed into pieces” in this time period is an unfounded claim as far as history goes.

Smith also uses yet another form of anachronism in the Book of Mormon: he employs words that did not exist at the time the events supposedly took place.  For example, the word “Bible” was not used until centuries after the characters in the Book of Mormon supposedly lived; however, it seems to be commonplace in the narrative: “And because my words shall hiss forth — many of the Gentiles shall say: A Bible!  A Bible!  We have got a Bible, and there cannot be any more Bible … Thou fool, that shall say: A Bible, we have got a Bible, and we need no more Bible.  Have ye obtained a Bible save it were by the Jews?” (2 Nephi 29:3, 6).  In these two verses the word “Bible” is used 8 times.  This is a problem because the Greek word biblos is not used as the title for the Christian canon of Scripture until the 5th-century ad, ranging from centuries to a millennium later.

The use of the word “Christ” or “Messiah” also presents a chronological problem for the Book of Mormon.  We have these characters from the Book of Mormon using the term centuries before the term was used, and centuries before the Greek word Christos, transliterated to the word “Christ,” had its origin.  “And now, my sons, remember, remember that it is upon the rock of our Redeemer, who is Christ, the Son of God, that ye must build your foundation” (Helaman 5:12).  This term is being used here about 545 years before the term “Christ” is coined.

Smith’s use of the word “synagogue” is also premature.  He uses this term in Alma 16:13: “And Alma and Amulek went forth preaching repentance to the people in their temples, and in their sanctuaries, and also in their synagogues, which were built after the manner of the Jews” (emphasis added).  Scholars now know the synagogue did not exist in the way we know it today before the destruction of the temple and the Babylonian captivity.  This concept would have been nonsense to Jews before that time, and therefore nonsense to all of these Book of Mormon characters Alma is supposedly speaking to, including himself.

Finally, Smith also puts the French word “adieu” into the mouths of the Book of Mormon characters.  “And I, Jacob, saw that I must soon go down to my grave; wherefore, I said unto my son Enos: Take these plates … and to the reader I bid farewell, hoping that many of my brethren may read my words.  Brethren, adieu” (Jacob 7:27, emphasis added).  This word is being used hundreds of years before the creation of the French term — Jacob would not even know the meaning of this word, yet Smith inserts it into his language as if the term were commonplace.

Even some names of the Book of Mormon characters are names not in use until long after these characters supposedly lived.  For example, the name “Isabel” in Alma 39:3: “And this is not all, my son.  Thou didst do that which was grievous unto me; for thou didst forsake the ministry, and did go over into the land of Siron among the borders of the Lamanites, after the harlot Isabel” (emphasis added).  This name does not come into use until the later Middle Ages in French and Germany — quite a jump from 5th-century bc North America.  This name would not be known to anyone nor used by anyone before that time.

Another kind of anachronism the Book of Mormon deals with is events, often describing in the past tense events which have actually not yet occurred if the narrative is in the time period it claims to be.  The most notable example of this is the coming, death, and resurrection of Christ.  These events, which did not even occur until centuries after the Book of Mormon was supposedly written, are described as already having happened by the Book of Mormon characters:

And now, I would ask of you, my beloved brethren, wherein the Lamb of God did fulfill all righteousness in being baptized by water?  Know ye not that he was holy?  But notwithstanding he being holy, he showeth unto the children of men that, according to the flesh he humbleth himself before the Father, and witnesseth unto the Father that he would be obedient unto him in keeping his commandments.  Wherefore, after he was baptized with water the Holy Ghost descended upon him in the form of a dove (2 Nephi 31:6-8, emphases added).

“I glory in plainness; I glory in truth; I glory in my Jesus, for he hath redeemed my soul from hell” (2 Nephi 33:6, emphasis added).

Notice all the past-tense verbs in the above passages.  Again, 2 Nephi is supposed to have been written 5 or 6 centuries before Christ, much before these events even took place.  If the Book of Mormon’s chronology is correct, Nephi would not have stated Christ’s redemption as already having taken place since we know for a fact it does not happen until centuries later.  He easily could have instead said, “for he will redeem my soul from hell,” but that is not what Smith translates him as saying.  What he does insert we know to be an anachronism, further building up the case against Mormonism.

Keep in mind through all of this that although these events, concepts, or items were foreign to what we know of 5th-century bc North America, they would have been commonplace notions to Joseph Smith in the time he was writing the Book of Mormon.  Smith had access to the New Testament writings and lived after the incarnation of Christ.  He would not have had to think twice if horses or pigs existed in his time period.  Terms such as “Christ” and “adieu” were not unusual, but commonplace terms with which he would have been familiar.  Having said this, let’s examine again which option is more likely: that Joseph Smith was a true prophet of God who recorded true events which coincidentally do not line up with anything else we find in history, or that while making up his own story he occasionally forgot certain events, concepts, or ideas available to him were not available to the characters in the time period he was supposed to be chronicling?

At this point, the case for the divinity of the Book of Mormon is not promising.  However, still more evidence remains to be put forth before a final verdict is reached.  As has been shown, the Book of Mormon contains a lengthy set of anachronisms: many events, concepts, or items are claimed to be present in a time and place the rest of history rejects.  These anachronisms are all internal evidences proving the Book of Mormon as not divinely inspired.  I would venture to say that even if we did not have these inconsistencies within the Book of Mormon itself, sufficient external evidence exists to support its falsehood as well.

The Book of Mormon bears a striking resemblance to another work written about 5 years before the Book of Mormon was published called The View of the Hebrews.  Written by a man named Ethan Smith (no relationship to Joseph), the book’s main thesis argues the Native Americans were descended from the Hebrews.  In several ways, this literary work seems to parallel the Book of Mormon.  As examples, both use extensive quotations from Isaiah; both describe the future gathering of Israel and reuniting of the tribes; both describe a migration with a religious motive of the Native Americans and their breaking into two groups, the civilized and the uncivilized; both argue the Native Americans were descended from the Hebrews; both describe the Native American government moving from a monarchy to a republic; and both describe the spreading of the gospel in North America.

The fact there is a work this similar to the Book of Mormon, which preceded the Book of Mormon, and would have been prominent around the time Joseph Smith wrote the Book of Mormon, should concern us.  In fact, all those parallels were pointed out by Mormon apologist B. H. Roberts, who himself began to doubt the validity of the Mormon scriptures after discovering the similarities.  Doesn’t it seem more likely Joseph Smith merely stole Ethan Smith’s story and added a divine twist to it than that he was actually recording true events ironically similar to another book circulating at the time?

But setting even that aside, if we really wanted to look for some way to validate the truth claims of the Book of Mormon, there is one simple way.  Remember that the Book of Mormon is said to be deeply rooted in the history of the American continent.  Like the Bible, it claims to be the true recorded history of a vast population — a civilization that built buildings, engaged in commerce, waged wars, developed a complex culture, and so on.  We see archeologists have been able to verify many of the details of the Bible from their research.  If the Book of Mormon is claiming to be divine Scripture just as the Bible does, we must submit both to the same methods of examination.  An easy way for the Mormon to prove his case reasonably is simply to point out some piece of archeological evidence proving the historical account of the Book of Mormon.  Can the Mormon provide us with even this as an evidential basis for his beliefs?  No; there has never been an archeological discovery confirming a specific detail of the Book of Mormon.  If the events recorded in it actually took place, we should undoubtedly find something indicating that.  But not a single coin, not a single weapon, not a single wheel, not a single skeleton has been found.  Given the vast history recorded in the Book of Mormon, isn’t it reasonable to expect to find thousands of such artifacts?  Of all the cities talked about, shouldn’t we find foundations of ruined cities?  But we have found nothing of the sort.

During the same period of time when archeologists have made hundreds of discoveries about the Bible which confirm its reliability and accuracy, not one has been made to verify the Book of Mormon.  The typical Bible contains a number of detailed maps of the Holy Land, showing where certain events took place.  These events are archeologically verified.  Such is not the case with the Book of Mormon — no single map depicting any events exists because no geography can be found to match the Book of Mormon.  Even the best Mormon scholars can only produce rough sketches or diagrams of the geography described, and these sketches lack archeological support as well.

Two trustworthy institutions, the National Geographic Society and the Smithsonian, refuse to conclude there is any archeological evidence supporting the Book of Mormon.  The National Geographic Society, in a 1998 letter to the Institute for Religious Research, stated, “Archaeologists and other scholars have long probed the hemisphere’s past and the society does not know of anything found so far that has substantiated the Book of Mormon.”  During the early 1980s, rumors were circulating within the LDS church it was being used by the Smithsonian to guide their research.  Once this report reached the ears of one of the Smithsonian directors in 1996, a letter was sent to the church clearing up this misconception, along with a list of reasons why the Smithsonian considered the narrative of the Book of Mormon “historically unlikely.”

At this point we have to go back again and examine where we stand in light of the evidence that has been offered.  Along the way, while new pieces of evidence were being introduced, we stopped occasionally to consider in light of the building evidence which case was more reasonable: the divine inspiration of the Book of Mormon or lack thereof.  Now we have come to a point where we need to do that again.  Can we really say Mormonism has an evidential basis to its faith in light of what has been offered?  Or is it more likely Mormonism is a complex lie invented by Joseph Smith for his sexual, monetary, and influential gain, in which Smith does a poor job of lining up the narrative of his story with historical fact and known archeological and geographical evidence, borrowing the content of his narrative from writers before him?

If we were to stop here, I think we have a pretty solid case.  But there is one more crucial piece of evidence.  If one is at all on the fence at this point, this is likely the point after which the case can be closed.  Indeed if we knew no other piece of evidence but this, it is a strong indicator by itself the book of Mormon is not divinely inspired.

Joseph Smith is known to have translated another ancient text — the Book of Abraham.  The only difference between this and his translation of the Book of Mormon is we actually have the original papyri from which Smith translated the Book of Abraham.  We may not have the original plates for the Book of Mormon, but by examining how effectively and truthfully Smith translated the Book of Abraham, we are able to examine his methods of translation in this way as well.  When those originals were discovered, they were found to be nothing at all like what Smith had translated them to be.  There is not a single parallel.  Smith translated the Book of Abraham from Egyptian hieroglyphics from his claimed divine inspiration.  It is important to know during the time in which Smith lived, 19th-century America, these hieroglyphics were undecipherable.  He was free to tell the story of the Book of Abraham any way he wanted since no one else would be able to check his work.  However, today we do have that capability, and we see no parallels between the original and Smith’s translation.  This says a lot about Joseph as a prophet and exposes him for what he is.  If we’re looking for a test that examines the ability of Smith to translate ancient texts effectively, the Book of Abraham is that test — and he fails that test miserably.  Even if one could somehow justify all the other evidence presented thus far, it simply cannot be reconciled with the Book of Abraham.

This, I would say, is the final nail in the coffin for the divine inspiration of the Book of Mormon, and therefore the truth claims for Mormonism as a whole.  Now we have to ask ourselves this question one last time: which is more likely?

Mormonism arose in an environment prime for spinoffs of Christianity as a result of a historical happenstance, not divine influence.  It shouldn’t surprise us something like this would emerge.  We know Joseph Smith stood to gain by founding this new religion of Mormonism.  We know Smith had a past of fraudulent activity, in which he was still involved while making important discoveries about the golden plates.  We know Smith fraudulently utilized his childhood knowledge of using a seer stone to convince others he was translating ancient texts.  We know Smith dictated the Book of Mormon while falsely claiming he was translating an ancient text because of its wealth of anachronisms.  We know the Book of Mormon contains no archeologically verifiable information.  Lastly, we know Smith was ultimately exposed as a fraudulent author of a text he claimed was Scripture from God, the Book of Abraham.  In light of this, it can be reasonably concluded Mormonism is a lie, and Joseph Smith is a false prophet.

I know this will sound terribly harsh to anyone who is a Mormon, but my point in writing this is certainly not to bash Mormons in any way for their beliefs.  Neither would I advocate fellow Christians using these arguments to intentionally bash the beliefs of Mormons for the sake of appearing intellectually superior — as 1 Peter 3:15 states, we are to defend our faith with gentleness and respect.  However, I sincerely believe Mormonism to be false, from the basis of looking at the evidence.  I believe it is my duty as a Christian to “not be tossed back and forth by the waves, and blown here and there by every wind of teaching and by the cunning and craftiness of men in their deceitful scheming,” and to encourage others to do the same.  If Mormonism is false, then the 13,824,854 Mormons in the world are believing a false gospel, indeed, “which is really no gospel at all,” according to Galatians 1:7.

I would like to emphasize it is from a purely evidential standpoint I believe Mormonism to be false.  Undoubtedly there are many kind, generous Mormons in the world, but there are also many kind, generous atheists, Buddhists, Muslims, you name it — and surely many unpleasant Christians as well!  It is the beliefs and evidential basis of a religion that make it true or false, not the character of its followers — and Mormonism simply does not pass the test or critical examination.

However, I know many Mormons do not in fact see the need to even examine their faith from an evidential standpoint — instead, they believe all that is necessary is a “burning in the bosom,” a mere feeling given by God Mormonism is the one true religion, the one correct lens through which to view reality.  In fact, here is an excerpt from an actual message sent to me by a missionary from the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints during a discussion:

I encourage you to read at least the first 26 verses [of the history of Joseph Smith] and then ponder the good things he did that follow the invitations God has given us to ask and knock when we need things.  Finally, when you feel it is appropriate, honestly ask God if this account is true or how He feels about it and what He wants you to learn from it.  That’s what I did, and I can logically see good fruits of the restored Gospel (as explained in Matthew) as well as have felt a confirming peace and conviction of truth through God’s Spirit on multiple occasions.

So, is a feeling of a conviction of truth good enough?  This idea would assume God, the author of reason, wants us to abandon reason so we are able to believe in Him — which on its face doesn’t make sense.  Neither does this claim make sense when weighed against the Bible, specifically the book of Acts.  In Acts 1:3 Jesus appeared to the apostles after His resurrection and “showed Himself to these men and gave many convincing proofs that He was alive.”  In addition, we see it was Paul’s routine to reason with the people to whom he witnessed.  Acts 17:2-3 states, “He reasoned with them from the Scriptures, explaining and proving that the Christ had to suffer and rise from the dead.”  Because of this, as recorded in Acts 17:4, “Some of the Jews were persuaded and joined Paul and Silas.”  God intends us to use the reasoning skills He has given us to examine everything — and the Bible is clear He is not offended when we use these skills to examine our own faith.

We know we must use reasoning and evidence to be able to “provide an answer to everyone who asks us the reason for the hope that we have,” as 1 Peter 3:15 commands, and that reason must be grounded in evidence, not emotion, as seen throughout Acts.  I invite you to consider this and other evidence for yourself and make your own decision regarding which worldview is the most reasonable.  As the famous astronomer Galileo, a Christian, stated, “I do not feel obliged to believe that the same God who has endowed us with sense, reason, and intellect has intended us to forgo their use.”

The Pragmatic Christian

Erik Lang

In our culture, the mindset prized above all is else to be logical and efficient.  America was born through hard work and innovation.  As Christians in America, it is easy to twist, ever so slightly, the Biblical teachings of Scripture to fit the new modern version of American Christianity.  We need to recognize the dangers this new way of thinking presents and re-educate ourselves to think and act in a true Christian manner.

Since America was founded, Christian values have been chipped away to leave just a basic form of Christianity that questionably meets the requirements for the faith.  The non-believers of our society have constantly repeated the same messages of hedonism and acceptance of new beliefs so much even Christians are affected by them.  What we are left with is a re-defined religion that is a far cry from Christianity.  Part of that way of thinking has been heavily influenced by the American media.

The morality of movies and television shows has declined dramatically.  America started off with films like Casablanca and Singing in the Rain and is now producing movies like Saw and Sex in the CitySaw features gratuitous, unlawful violence and hatred, while Sex in the City is a flick about middle-aged women who seduce anyone they can.  Television shows are just as bad, if not worse.  Every episode of every show is at least half an hour long, so the writers need to pack as much as they can into the program.  Each hour of a show is packed with about as much information as a whole movie.  Programs are filled with mindless violence, unashamed sex, and blasphemy.  Such themes in early America would be unthinkable.  The sad part is many Christians view this as the norm.  Most do not speak out against such obvious infractions of the Bible.  Just as American secular values have dropped in the film industry, so have Christian values.  We’ve accepted this change because it came slowly over time.

These decisions not only affect our social life but issues in our government as well.  Operating strictly pragmatically doesn’t always pertain to the governmental budget.  Being pragmatic could entail performing abortions.  Why shouldn’t a woman be allowed to murder her child because she can’t afford to keep it?  She claims it would be an inconvenience, and therefore it would be pragmatic to abort her child.  This is not an extreme example at all.  It happens every day.  This is one of the worst permissible activities in America today.  Surprisingly (yet now unsurprisingly), a fair amount of professing Christians believe abortion is an acceptable, pragmatic alternative to not being a parent.  Right here Christianity has been “sanitized” to the American mindset.

A milder, yet still wrong belief of the Christian-American public is the hoarding of income.  When I say hoarding, I mean the denial of and lack of participation in tithes, donations, charities, etc., all of which are activities Christians are called to participate in by God.  Now, the American culture preaches to save, invest, and spend your income at your leisure.  Many Christians now totally ignore this seemingly insignificant command.  It is not pragmatic to give money to the church; it isn’t pragmatic to give money to charities or organizations.  They want it for themselves.  They want to spend it as they see fit.  It doesn’t matter as long as they are saved, right?  Other Christians realize God has commanded their tithes at least, but rationalize the “problem” of giving away.  These are the ones who always have bills to pay, children to send to college, or whatever.  All are important, but what is possibly more important than following a command from God Himself?  The answer should be absolutely, unequivocally “nothing.”  Those who don’t give to God: why should God give to you?  God says He will provide for you no matter what life may throw at you.  Holding on to income with a loose hand is a Christian virtue, yet sadly ignored, forgotten, or rationalized away by the general Christian-American public.

An example of my personal experience with pragmatism and my Christian walk can be seen in my class’s discussion of the morality of the death penalty relating to Christianity.  For the longest time I fully supported the death penalty.  “Why should recidivist murderers be given yet another chance at life in the public?  It is far more costly to house inmates for sustained periods of time in federal prison than it is for them to be executed.  If they reject Christianity now then they’ll always reject it, and we’ve done all we can as Christians.”  These are the issues circulating in my head.  I’m still undecided what I believe on this point, but let’s take a step back and look at this issue through the eyes of Christianity and Christ Himself.  God commands us to love all, so that applies to recidivist murderers, too.  Have we truly done all we can to persuade these people Christ is the key to salvation?  Does their refusal to accept Christ merit an execution, or should we incarcerate them for life?  These are all questions and observations for abolishing the death penalty.  All are scripturally inspired.  Now, there are similar questions and observations in favor of a death penalty that are scripturally based, and so the debate for this issue continues, but notice how the way of thinking changed from a strictly pragmatic way of thinking to one using only scripture to support ideas and arguments.  This is exactly how we as Christians should think and ultimately act, especially regarding policies dealing with levels of morality.  The death penalty is not an issue to take lightly.  Maybe God frowns upon America’s use of the death penalty, and all we have to do is think not about what would be logical, but what is Christian.

Shifting our mindset from a pragmatic to a truly Christian mindset will be difficult.  It’s not supposed to be easy.  For any issue regarding morality and belief, consult the Bible to see what it says.  It is usually black and white.  Do not steal, do not rape, do not have sex before marriage, let your mind dwell on all that is wholesome and uplifting, etc.  If you ever are participating in something or thinking something you feel any reservation about, you need to examine thoroughly what it is you are doing.  Would God approve?  It sounds trite and overused, but that’s because we don’t follow the advice, no, commands of God and the Bible.  Think about it.

The Importance of Pilgrimage

Connor Shanley

A pilgrimage: it sounds old and like something only people in the Middle Ages did.  Many people these days still go on pilgrimage, but why would they decide to do such a thing?  Are all these people Catholic or Muslims?  Where can one go on a pilgrimage?  All important questions to consider, but first pilgrimage must be defined.  A “pilgrimage” as defined by the Catholic Catechism is “any journey in which one desires to grow closer to God.”  So is a pilgrim just someone who takes one of these journeys?  The word “pilgrim” comes from the Latin peregeniusi which means “foreigner.”  The Orthodox Church teaches all Christians at heart are pilgrims, because all our life is a spiritual journey, and also because this is not our true world.  As C.S. Lewis puts it, “We must always remember that we are like spies in enemy territory; we’re here but this is not our home.”  Is pilgrimage something for just Catholics and the Orthodox?  No.  There are many reasons why a pilgrimage is good for everyone’s spiritual walk.

Now when most people hear the word “pilgrim” they think about Thanksgiving.  The first thing that comes to mind is the Puritan pilgrims who landed on Plymouth Rock and who spread peace and love to the Natives (at first), but why are they called pilgrims?  Because they were foreign to England, they needed to escape in order to get closer to Jesus.  This was the Puritans’ quest: they were after religious freedom; in their old world they were persecuted and put down.  They decided to leave; it seemed to be the most sensible option, so they separated from their world to grow closer to God.  Now whether or not that was all of their purpose is a question for another time.  For now, we should ask what does one need to do to earn this title?  A pilgrim is anyone who looks to get closer contact with God, and that is just one demonstration of a protestant pilgrimage, but where and how did pilgrimages start, and why did people start doing them?

The first pilgrimages can be dated back to the Old Testament in Deuteronomy 16:16-17: “Three times in a year shall all thy males appear before the Lord thy God in the place which he shall choose: in the feast of unleavened bread, in the feast of weeks, and in the feast of tabernacles.  No one shall appear with his hands empty before the Lord: but every one shall offer according to what he hath, according to the blessing of the Lord his God, which He shall give him.”  This is the first pilgrimage shown in the Bible; God commands all men to go to a point that He appointed in order that they may receive blessing.  When Jews would go on this pilgrimage, they would sing the “pilgrims song,” Psalms 119-133.  This pilgrimage lasted until Jesus’ day: when He got separated from Mary and Joseph in the temple, He was on this same pilgrimage.  This pilgrimage would continue until the temple was destroyed in the 1st century ad.

The New Testament also gives us an example of pilgrimage; Jesus Himself gives us the example.  In Mathew, Mark, and Luke, Jesus ventures into the desert and is confronted by the Devil.  This is a great example of what a modern day pilgrimage should be; the destination doesn’t matter as much as the journey.  It should be something done to help deal with temptations and spiritually cleanse one’s self.  Jesus also gives us a command in Mathew 16:24: “If any man come after Me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross and follow Me.”

There are a few places in history to which major pilgrimages happened and are still happening.  In the early church most pilgrimages were made to Jerusalem; the spiritual meaning of this city can never be understated.  Another popular route was to Rome.  For those who lived in the western part of Europe, (later to become the Roman Catholic part) Rome was far more accessible than Jerusalem, and in the early days of the church considered almost as important.  It was known as “The City of Martyrs” because there the two great fathers of the early church, Peter and Paul, were martyred and buried.

Another route that became very popular and is still popular today is the pilgrimage of “Santiago de Compostela.”  This pilgrimage started in the fourth century and begins in Saint Jean, France and ends in Santiago de Compostela, Spain.  What’s so great about Santiago de Compostela?  It is where St. James the Apostle is buried.  Unlike some other former sites of Catholic pilgrimages where apostles were said to be buried and weren’t, it is proved with historical documentation Santiago de Compostela is where his remains are.  This route is still one of the most traveled routes in the world.

Geoffrey Chaucer immortalized the fourth-most used pilgrimage route, which is, of course, to Canterbury.  Pilgrims really started to flock to Canterbury after the death of Thomas Becket in 1170.  Becket was considered a martyr for the faith because of how he stood up for the rights of the Church over the rights of his king.  This is still one of the most popular pilgrimages in the world, especially to the English.

To the Orthodox one of the most traveled pilgrimages is to Mount Athos in Greece; this mountain is the sight of many miracles.  There are 13 monasteries on the mountain.  Access to the mountain is very limited: they only allow 100 visitors on it per day.  To the Orthodox, especially the Greek Orthodox, it is a very important place.

A pilgrimage, however, is not really about the destination; it is about the journey.  Jesus’ “pilgrimage” was into the desert: there was no temple to visit, no remains of saints to see.  Jesus shows that the pilgrimage is all about humbling oneself.  One is to go on a pilgrimage like Jesus did with no earthly goods or riches to slow oneself down.  The focus should always be on God.  In the old days, pilgrims were supposed to rely on God and the kindness of others to make it through their journeys.  This is so all the thanks for making it through the journey goes to God.  Jesus gives the command to all pilgrims in Mathew 16:24, “…let him deny himself, and take up his cross and follow Me.”

The main point of a pilgrimage is to deny ourselves.  A pilgrimage forces one to rely on God.  We walk away from society in order that we may grow closer to God; it is like a retreat, but the main thing is the journey not the destination.  A pilgrimage gives us the chance to put away the world for a bit and just be in God’s presence.  On a pilgrimage, God will provide; it is our chance to be reminded of that.  A pilgrimage also reminds us this earth is not our home; we are foreigners wandering with a God who is looking out for us.  A pilgrimage should not be a chore but a deep and meaningful vacation away from all the worries of the world and into God’s peace.

A Fight for a Church

Connor Shanley

New York, September 11th, 2001: as the Twin Towers collapsed, the world watched in horror.  Everyone was in shock at the destruction of one of America’s greatest landmarks, but the towers weren’t the only buildings destroyed on 9/11.  On that fateful morning another building was opened before the towers; Matins at St. Nicolas Greek Orthodox Church began at six am.  Matins, thankfully, were over when the first plane struck, and the church was empty when the towers collapsed right on top of it.  St. Nicolas was the only place of worship destroyed on 9/11.  It had been in New York since 1916, but it has taken ten years to finally reach an agreement on it being rebuilt.

In recent years there has been quite a controversy over the building of a mosque at Ground Zero.  Mayor Bloomberg has been in full support of this mosque and has let the proper paper work come through; St. Nicolas is a different story.  It is a story with a lot of mystery and a lot of finger pointing.  The parish of St. Nicolas has been fighting for many years now; St. Nicolas isn’t just a place of worship to the parishioners, however: it has a deep history; it has the history of their ancestors.

St. Nicolas was founded in 1832 by Greek immigrants.  These immigrants were very poor and not very well accepted in the local community.  They had a hard time finding funds to pay the priest, let alone build a building.  The church was started in a house on Liberty Street in New York.  For the Greeks it was their place of worship that still reminded them of home.  To those immigrants, it allowed them to hold gatherings and talk about their old country.  In the eastern United States, this is how Orthodoxy spread; it was carried to America by immigrants.

The church continued switching from house to house.  The church’s community was growing quickly, though, and house churches were no longer working, so in 1899 the church moved outside.  The church had no permanent building because the Greek Archdiocese couldn’t raise money for it.  The Greek immigrants were very poor at this point in time; they were struggling to make ends meet.  Then, in 1916, a bishop of the Russian Archdiocese, (Saint) Raphael made an appeal back to Russia to send funds to help the struggling Orthodox community of New York.  The letter sent back to Russia did not make it into the hands of the church authorities but rather into the Tsar’s.  He gave a very generous donation; the amount is still unknown, but it was enough for the construction of a new church building.

The building itself was one of the last gifts ever given by a Tsar to a foreign country.  After the building went up, it didn’t just serve as a house of worship but also as a gathering place for all Orthodox Christians.  It was an important staple in the community until the day it was destroyed.  St. Nicolas was the only religious non-World Trade Center building destroyed on 9/11.  The Orthodox community lost one of the oldest standing Orthodox churches on the east coast.  Perhaps more shocking than the church’s destruction, however, is how long it has taken just to get a deal to rebuild it.  It has taken ten years just to make a deal on beginning construction.  Both sides don’t trust each other, and the outcome of the current deal still looks bleak according to the Greek Archdiocese.

The confusion started in 2003, when the Greek Archbishop went to go meet with the head of the New York Port Authority to discuss reconstruction efforts.  The appointment never happened.  The Port Authority said no appointment was scheduled and that he’d have to come back.  The Archbishop did come back at a later time, but the Port Authority did not offer much help.  Negotiations on the rebuilding of the church would take place over ten years.  Every time the two sides would reach an agreement, a little while later the other side would ask for more.  The church was asking for some funds in the form of a loan to help the rebuilding process; when that happened in 2008, the Port Authority stopped all discussion.

The church was outraged, but it could do nothing.  The church and the Port Authority were locked in a stalemate.  Both sides, of course, blamed each other for the fact no agreement could be reached.  Mayor Bloomberg also got his say in the matter; he wanted to raise the price of the building permit of the new church by 5 million dollars.  This was just kicking a man while he was down — the church at this point had decided to yield somewhat to the Port Authority, but when Mayor Bloomberg asked for the raise in permit cost, the church took it as an insult.

What Mayor Bloomberg didn’t realize was he got himself involved in a case that would show his own hypocrisy more than anything else he’d done while in office.  When Mayor Bloomberg raised the price and talks started to stall, it was in 2010, right at the height of the “Ground Zero Mosque” debate.  Mayor Bloomberg defended the mosque by talking about freedom of religion and equality for all.

The Mayor wanted to build a mosque at Ground Zero, but he refused to even try to help St. Nicolas, the only place of worship destroyed in the 9/11 attacks.  The debate of there being a mosque at Ground Zero is a debate for another time.  The point is Mayor Bloomberg defending the rights of the mosque by saying it will show “American principals of equality” is just a lie, really.  He treated the Muslims better than the Christians.  He was going to charge the Church more to rebuild than he was going to charge the mosque to start building.  That was his plan, but some news organizations got ahold of the story.

Fox News was the first tv station to run a nationwide story on the church.  It was now becoming a point of public outrage in New York City.  Eventually, the mayor yielded; he dropped the permit price back to normal.  After that, talks started back up, and after much passionate debate and arguing, the Port Authority and the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese reached an agreement in October of 2011.  The agreement states the Port Authority will give the church land three blocks from its old location, and the Port Authority will also give 20 million dollars to help make the building’s parking garage bomb-proof.

This story will not be the last of its kind.  In modern day America is an obsession of being politically correct.  This means we should all be more accepting of other cultures and religions; what this is starting to lead to, however, is a disdain for Christianity.  Christianity does teach to respect people of other backgrounds, but it also says that those religious backgrounds are wrong.  In this new politically correct world some of the media and people in charge are trying to make, there will be no such thing as “right” or “wrong” — only what one’s culture teaches.  This goes against Biblical Christianity, and as a result the backlash against Christianity will be harsh; it is already seen in the media.  Christians are often pictured as narrow minded and judgmental.  We must show love to all humans, even the lost ones, instead.  The warning signs are there: Christianity is no longer “politically correct,” and it will be treated that way in the media and by government officials, such as Mayor Bloomberg.

Bibliography

Abdal, Fr. N. “St. Nicolas and the Mosque.” The Word. 13 June 2011: 23-30. Print.

Berger, Judson. “What About The Ground Zero Church? Archdiocese Says Officials Abandoned Project | Fox News.” Fox News — Breaking News Updates | Latest News Headlines | Photos & News Videos. Fox News, 26 Aug. 2010. Web. <http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2010/08/17/ground-zero-church-archdiocese-says-officials-forgot/&gt;.

“NYC: St. Nicholas Greek Orthodox Church Seeks to Rebuild After 9/11.” Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.). Web. 26 Oct. 2011. <http://www.realcourage.org/2010/08/st-nicholas/&gt;.

I Bet I Can Make People Mad at Me in 2500 Words or Less

Lia Waugh Powell

Those who know me very well, which in all honesty at Summit only consists of very few people, know I am absolutely in love with studying Systematic Theology.  I never even knew what that meant before I stepped through the threshold of Summit, for which I am very grateful.  I would have been completely unaware of the many topics Christians should be very educated in — predestination, transubstantiation, the meaning of Jesus’ sacrifice, etc.: essentially, the main topics that divide the church to this very day.  For some odd reason, people began to think they could fully understand God and decided if people are against their beliefs and interpretations of what the Bible says, then the people need to leave.  This is where humanity’s biggest issues lie — pride.  We all think we know more than the other person, and we all immediately judge, whether we admit it or not, when someone disagrees with us.

For example, since the time I have been at Summit, I have heard the argument about predestination versus free will countless times: “This person believes that; oh my goodness, they are going to Hell.  How can they believe that?”  “Well, if God is the type to predestine people to Hell or Heaven before they even live, then He’s not a God I want to serve.  That is not love.”  You get my point.  Where I stand on this subject has wavered countless times as I let people manipulate me into believing one thing.  This is why I strongly advise whether you agree or disagree with my stance on this subject, you research and read the Bible yourself and get a good, solid understanding of what you believe.  My beliefs are my beliefs; I am not pressuring you, saying you are wrong, or anything of that nature.  I am simply stating my belief and why I believe it with Biblical support along with other theologians’ ideas and my ideas as well.  Where you stand on the predestination versus free will “argument” is your choice, and it certainly will not affect whether you go to Heaven or Hell.  Just know what you believe and live it out is all I am asking.

Now after that preface, here is my stance.  (Please do not start the “Pie a Senior” Contest again; just leave only my bucket out there to collect the money.)  I believe in predestination.  And here is why: first, we must fully understand the term “predestined,” and we must understand it from a Biblical perspective.  The Greek word for “predestination” (the word from where we derived predestination, the very word in the original text of the Bible) is proorizw (proorizō), which means “to determine beforehand.”  Therefore, no logical arguments can be made against the term “predestination” or misinterpreting it, because that is the very definition used in the original text.

Now, from the time I’ve been at Summit I’ve wrestled with this belief.  If God were a God of love, why would He predestine people?  That is not fair; it does not seem right.  As I was uneducated with the area (I am NOT saying those who are for “free will” are uneducated, do NOT twist my words around, or I will refer you back to this very line), I could not understand nor wrap my mind around this idea.  As I’ve researched it more, I realized my problem.  I envisioned Santa Claus as God.  I envisioned the God who patted my back when I sinned and gave me presents and blessing when I asked.  To me, God loved everyone, and He would fulfill me, give me what I want, and get me into Heaven when I die.  This, unfortunately, is the God multiple people believe in.  But it is incredibly wrong.  Our God is not fair — he is just.  “Fair” means “superficially pleasing” and “just” means “guided by truth and reason.”

Those who are parents, or who have ever babysat a kid, know very well being “fair” is not the way to go in parenting.  For example, Little Susie is 7 years old and could be described as rowdy, loud, and rebellious.  Yet your other daughter, Little Betsy, is 8 years old, more mature, and listens to adults.  Little Betsy would be allowed to attend sleepovers because you can trust her, and you know she will behave.  However, Little Susie cannot attend sleepovers yet, because she is not at the maturity level to leave the house alone.  Susie would see that as unfair, but it is indeed just.  Even though there is only one year separating Susie and Betsy, Betsy is far more mature than Susie is and can be trusted.  Being “fair” is not being wise — it’s being pleasant.  And we do not, as the faulty human beings we are, filled with disgusting sin and drenched with burdens and shame, do not by any means need a “fair” omnipotent power.  If God were fair, He would not truly love us.  Nor would He be a trustable God; I know I would not want to put my faith in a God who blessed people by saying, “Oh hey, Corey hasn’t received a car yet but Missy has, so I should get on that.”  That actually seems a bit lazy.  If God were fair, everyone would receive what they think they deserve.

This brings me to the question, “Why would God create people if He knew some would go to Hell?”  That is also something I struggled with for a very long time.  Here is the deal.  God is God.  How, under any circumstances, can we ever question His actions?  You and I are so far below His intellect and wisdom.  Let me phrase this in a real-life situation the way my pastor once did.

In 2004, Oprah Winfrey gave away 271 free cars, fully loaded with gas and everything, to every person in her audience that day.  Now how would you feel if you had just been on the show a day prior to that?  Or the day after?  A bit gypped?  I know I would.  But if you were to go ask Oprah, “Oprah, what is up with this?  I was just at your show….  Are you sure you don’t have one more set of keys somewhere around here?  One more car?  Even just a free fill up for my gas tank?”  And you know what Oprah would say?  “Nope!”  And you know why?  Because it is her show!  She did not need to buy everyone in her audience a car.  She didn’t need to get them anything.  It’s her show.  She can choose what she wants to do!

And that is where we are with God.  God did not have to give us His only Son to be beaten to a state no man ever should be beaten.  Jesus Christ did not have to come to Earth to experience the heartache and temptations we go through every day.  He did not need to carry a rugged cross only to be hung on it Himself to die for someone as evil and wicked as myself, or for you.  He did not have to have His flesh torn, His hands and feet pierced, nor did He have to be spit on and mocked and hated by many.  But He did, and He did it for you and me.  We have been predestined — OUT OF LOVE — so we may be able to be in the very presence of our God and Savior for all eternity: “For He chose us in Him before the creation of the world to be holy and blameless in His sight.  In LOVE He PREDESTINED us for adoption to sonship through Jesus Christ, in accordance with His pleasure and will — to the praise of His glorious grace, which He has freely given us in the One He loves” (Ephesians 1:4-7).

Also, in scripture God has chosen/appointed people and favored others multiple times.  God loved Jacob, but hated Esau.  God chose David over his other, more accomplished brothers, to defeat the giant.  God favored the Jews.  Those are only some of the examples; I could continue on, but I trust you can also think of some on your own from your own Bible study.  But just because God favors some does not mean He ever rejects anyone who turns his/her heart to Him.  In fact, I am willing to bet my life on the fact God will never turn away someone who truly searches for Him, with all of his or her heart and soul.  But God is also outside of time.  This means He already knows who will accept Him and who will not.  In addition to God predestining us, we must also choose Christ in order to be saved.  “Because, 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.  For with the heart one believes and is justified, and with the mouth one confesses and is saved” (Romans 10:9-10).  You are not saved without giving your life to Christ, but because of God’s sovereignty He already knows who will do so.  For it is said, “No one can come to me unless the Father who sent me draws him.  And I will raise him up on the last day” (John 6:44).

I determined I believe in predestination because it is what I feel is the most Biblical belief.  I do not want to believe in something not supported by scripture, because to me that seems self-righteous.  I have, and always will, lean toward what the Bible says, regardless of my emotions.  However, I do not feel in any way predestination is a “wrong” belief as far as the moral spectrum.  This is because I know God is a just God, as well as a God of love.  I know He knows more than I will ever be able to conjure through my time on Earth.  I know God is a God of order, thus He has a plan, for everything and everyone.  Predestination does not scare me; it does not make me see God as this terrible being.  If anything, it is the exact opposite.  But, my opinion can very well be as faulty as the next; I am not telling you what to believe.  This is what is important to know: I do not deserve grace.  You do not deserve grace.  We deserve to be in a burning lake of fire for all eternity.  Seem a bit harsh?  Reflect on your thought life this past week.  Reflect on the images that passed along your computer screen, or the words you uttered under your breath or to another person.  Reflect on the gossip or lies you spread because someone upset you.  We need to face the facts — we deserve Hell.  The belief in predestination does not mean if you are predestined you can go out and do whatever your heart desires because you are getting to Heaven anyways.  That is unbelievably wrong.  If you claim to be a Christian, you need to live the life.  You can raise your hands in church to a worship song, and you can go get baptized, but those do not mean your heart is aligned with God’s.  Anyone can do those things.  As a Christian, you should be set apart from the crowd, and you should be proud of your love for Christ.  You should display His love to others through your actions and words, and you shouldn’t just be that way on Sunday morning.  We aren’t going to be able to achieve this (obviously) all of the time — but we do need to strive toward it.