Friday, April 28, 2006

Choices

We can learn much from the biographies of Scripture. Consider Joshua. At the end of his life and leadership, he challenged the people of Israel, whom he had led in battle, and now was pointing the way to peace. We can read his challenge in Joshua 24:19-28. The elements of his challenge to Israel are a challenge to us today. He first pointed out that God demanded of His people complete and exclusive surrender – TO HIM. This is hard. Our self does not want to surrender. However, if we are to move forward with Him, He must have control.

Secondly, God gives to His people the responsibility to make the right choices. Some would try to tell us that the only real responsibility we have to make our own choice, to choose our own way. Our children often get this from schools, the television and videos, and their music. Nothing could be more destructive. While it is true that Christ sets us free, He does not free us so that we can return to the paths of rebellion. He sets us free so that we can choose to love, serve, and obey Him. He holds us accountable to make the RIGHT CHOICES.
 
Thirdly, remember that God always holds us accountable for the choices we make. Not all choices are equal. Not all choices have the same outcomes. Not all roads lead to heaven. Our Lord said the narrow path leads to life, while the broad path, the easy road, found by doing what we want, leads to destruction.
 
A couple of ideas are important as you move forward for Him. First, you cannot move forward in and for God unless the Spirit of God transforms our heart and mind. To see this accomplished, you must be His child, by faith in Christ, and you must be living His word. Doing this puts you in the place where His Spirit can change your heart and mind – our life. One other point – you must take our commitment to His as seriously as He does. It is easy today to think that God is like Burger King – you can have it your way. If you are God’s child, when you came to Him you bowed before Him in surrender. He takes that seriously. We must as well.
 
A day, a week, a month, a year – we dare not remain stagnant. We must move forward.

Thursday, April 27, 2006

Regarding God Securing His Word to Us

Regarding God Securing His Word to Us
Robert J. Fuller, Jr.

I believe that God has secured His Word to believers for use in ministry and life (Isaiah 40:8; 2 Timothy 3:16-17; 1 Peter 1:23-25). By this, I mean that, through the many various texts available to us, the actual rendering is available, though not necessarily in any single text.

First, I acknowledge that nowhere in scripture is there any statement determining or demonstrating the method of this securing. Second, I acknowledge that there are many variant texts and textual traditions available. Third, I find no scriptural authority to exalt one text or textual tradition, or one translation over another. Therefore, I understand that this securing is not accomplished in the same manner as inspiration. I am compelled to accept that, while God miraculously originated the Bible through inspiration, He has chosen to secure it to us through secondary means (see Deuteronomy 17:18 and possibly Jeremiah 36:26-28).

Since God has secured His Word to us in the form of a multiplicity of manuscripts, I acknowledge the need for careful and faithful textual analysis as the means to finding the most accurate representation of the text of the original writings. I acknowledge also, that these representations of the text are compilations done by men. Though biblical interpreters may judge some translations more faithful to the "original text" in general, no one translation, or compiled representation of the “original text”, carries a God-ordained superiority, or a universal biblical mandate, above all others. Consequently, some of the variations in the wording of such translations are interpretive, while others present themselves because of a variance in the text used for translation.

Nonetheless, though no absolute determination regarding the actual text is possible, these variations do not necessarily signify a deviation from God's Word. Because the authority and power of Scriptures derives from the God who gave them, and because God has chosen secondary means to secure the text of Scripture to us, God's authority and power follows through with His chosen means (Deuteronomy 17:18-20) to make available to us translations that are reliable, authoritative, and effective (Isaiah 55:11; 2 Timothy 3:16,17; Hebrews 4:12).

I acknowledge that, when based on careful, normal-literal translation of the best representation of the text of the original writings, today's English (or Spanish, Russian, etc.) translations are reliable, and carry God’s authority and power derived from that of the original writings.

I am sympathetic with the notion that, due to the importance of God’s Word, we need to get this right. I understand that there are opposing theories of textual analysis. However, I find no basis in the explicit statements of scripture, or in the larger teaching of the Scripture, that mandates choosing one theory over another. Recognizing that not all can be 100% right, I am content knowing that all, in some way could be wrong. It is up to me, as a careful student of God’s Word, to give due diligence (2 Timothy 2:15) to both the choice of textual theories I accept, and the method of translation and interpretation I utilize. I must also grant that same freedom and responsibility of diligence to my brother.

Saturday, April 08, 2006

Always Forward: Spiritual Development

Recently, I came across another organization that uses the motivational phrase, “Always Forward.” It is 1st Battalion, 34th Infantry Regiment of the 4th Training Brigade, stationed in Fort Jackson, South Carolina. In reading through their mission statement and the principles by which they seek to develop leadership in their soldiers, they have 30 principles for command philosophy. As I search the scriptures to see if they conform to God’s command philosophy, I will share them here.
 
Spiritual Development Enhances The Whole Man. Every day demands of us the best we can put into it. We approach our jobs with thought. We approach our families with understanding (or at least we should). And we approach our health with some degree of concern – evidence the diets and exercise to which we subject ourselves. It is not wrong to think before we act. It is not wrong to consider our spouses and our children before we respond, or act in a way that affects them. It is not wrong to be concerned for our health. Our families, and others who depend on us, want us around as long as possible.
 
However, it is easy the think that these things make us ready for life. As important as these things might seem, they only amount to moving around the furniture in a display window. What we need is to embrace the importance of our spiritual training. The training or lack of training, of our spiritual life will affect every area of our life. When mentoring his protégé, Timothy, the Apostle Paul said, "For bodily exercise profits a little, but godliness is profitable for all things, having promise of the life that now is and of that which is to come" (1 Timothy 4:8).
 
So easy it is to focus on the near term, on the most pressing, on that which inflicts immediate discomfort that we forget that our soul, and our ultimate day of decision with God, depends on a preparation of a different and more important kind. The training of our minds and hearts in godliness benefits us now and will benefit us in our future with God.
 
One more thought, how are we training our children? What are they learning from us? Do they see in us our desire to be instructed in godly character and service? Are we teaching them to dodge God's training? Sit down and read Hebrews 12:7-11. God's training of us has a purpose. But we will never really see all He can do through us, or through our children, if we insist on looking only at the immediate, only at what meets our agenda.
 
Where does spiritual development come from? It comes from the work of God's Spirit in your life as He works through three agencies - God's Word, God's leaders, and God's people. Soldiers learn when they stop setting their own standards, and start looking to and obeying their commander.