How were people saved in the Old Testament?

The only way there is to be saved, by trusting in the work of Christ alone. Because God is just, sin must be punished. Because we are sinners, that is bad news for us. The promise of God to Adam and Eve, however, was that the Seed of the Woman would have His heel bruised, while He crushes the head of the serpent. God took the man-made coverings our first parents fashioned and gave them animal skins to cover them, foreshadowing the need for the shedding of blood by a substitute.

These shadows continued throughout the Old Testament. With each passing generation, however, the shadows of the promise began to recede. The gospel, in its most nascent form, was given in Genesis 3, but it grew in clarity. Abraham’s sacrifice of Isaac, Joseph’s multiple deaths, burials, “resurrections,” Moses striking the rock in the wilderness, all these pointed to the coming of a substitute. The sacrificial system God gave His people made the promise still more clear.

We are all, however, given to confusing the sign with the thing signified. Adam and Eve were not redeemed by the animals whose skins they wore. And not a soul was saved by the sacrifice of bulls and goats. Were such sufficient, Christ would not have ever needed to come. Instead they pointed forward to the future hope, the future hope that secured redemption for those who believed. The redeemed in the Old Testament were redeemed by the work of Christ that was to come, which they appropriated by faith. As we look backward to His finished work for us, and rest in it, so they looked forward to His coming work for them, and rested in it.

For Adam and Eve the object of their faith was that first simple promise. I doubt they had a deep understanding of what the promise meant, but I believe they believed it was their only hope. For the earlier generations in the Promised Land the object of their faith included a better understanding of what the sacrificial system meant, and they believed it was their only hope. With the prophet Isaiah the meaning of the promise became more clear still, as he described for God’s people the suffering servant who would be bruised for our healing.

There is but one people of God, those who are covered by the blood of Christ. There is but one way to peace with God, resting in the work of Christ. There is but one gospel, the promise of God that He has reconciled us to Himself in pouring out His wrath for us upon Him. As they looked forward through the sacrifices, so we look backward through the table of the Lord. To rest in either would be deadly. To rest in the one each represents is to be at peace with the living God, to be adopted into His family, to eat as His children at His table. There are not two ways into the kingdom, just one.

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Atin-Lay, Posse Peccare; Catechism 84; Curating Books, Gilbert Keith Chesterton

Today’s Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

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Paradise Remembered


 
Nostalgia has as its lightly buried foundation a longing for a place we have never been to, Eden.  Home is but an echo, a shadow of our first and final home. I understand that most were not blessed as I was, to grow up in an idyllic combination of peace and beauty, that many suffered early the curse of Cain, to wander east of Eden. Others had a childhood fueled more by the fruit of the fall than that which preceded the fall. For all the hardships I have been through, a traumatic childhood was not one of them. Indeed of all the blessings I give thanks for that flowed through hands of my parents I count among the dearest that they raised me in the mountains of western Pennsylvania, a stone’s throw from the Mayberry like hamlet of Ligonier, Pennsylvania. It certainly helped that my beloved Pirates, in addition to playing in the postseason when I was 7, 9, and 10 won the World Series when I was six and 14, while the Steelers made the playoffs every year I lived from 7 to 14, winning the Super bowl while I was 9, 10, 13 and 14. But all that was just icing on the cake of a boyhood marked by glorious fall festivals, summers tromping through a 20 acre wood and winters marked by a blazing fireplace, hot chocolate and sleds careening down sundry hills.
 
Each time I visit Ligonier I feel a perceptible weight lifted off my chest, breathing my air. While of course the apostle is right when he tells us of eternity, that our minds cannot begin to imagine what awaits us, there is a contrary corollary- eternity is everything good and blessed we enjoy now. When John Denver sang “Almost Heaven, West Virginia” he was right. Just keep driving north over the Pennsylvania border and you will be there.
 
My goal in writing isn’t to persuade you of the glories of my youth, and my hometown. Rather it is to give thanks, and to encourage you to do the same. While we were certainly sinners, indeed totally depraved sinners, there yet remains an innocence to youth, a trusting, wide-eyed wonder that could not help but give thanks. There was in our youth a perspective not just on the gifts but the Giver that inverts the wisdom of CS Lewis. You remember when Lucy, coming upon Aslan in a later adventure remarks at how much bigger he had become. Aslan gently corrects her, explaining that he had not grown, but she had grown in her capacity to see him. All true, gloriously true. But it is likewise true that the weight of growing up, the burden of our daily wounds in time dulls our eyes to what we once knew by His common grace- that He was here, and He was with us.
 
Youth, we must come to understand, isn’t so much something we are to grow out of, but something we are to grow into. For of such is the kingdom of God. It is a deep blessing to know that home is where I am going. We remember innocence that we might long for it; we taste eternity that we might hunger for it. We believe He takes us there, and there, feeds us.

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The Gospel at Work- Dan Smithwick

Today’s Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

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New Theses, New Reformation

Thesis 85 We must be quick to listen.

Movements move, eventually, off the mark. This may be because movements require two dangerous but potent ingredients- single-mindedness and certainty. One does not give birth to a movement while spinning multiple plates. One doesn’t change the collective wisdom of the world from a position of uncertainty. These two ingredients, however, have a rather short shelf-life, inevitably souring into tunnel vision and arrogance.

A reformation is a movement of sorts, but for it to succeed it needs to steer clear of such spoilage. The Bible gives us the antidote in reminding us to be quick to listen, slow to speak and slow to become angry (James 1:19). What though are we to be listening to? First, we are to listen to the Word of God. One of the distinguishing qualities that sets Reformation apart from Revolution is that the latter always wishes to start from scratch, to tear down everything that had come before. The former recognizes that our past, like our present and our future, is a mixed bag. Where the church remains faithful to God’s Word, we are called to agree. We don’t toss it aside to make room for our own ideas.

Second, we are to listen to our fathers. Rome made the mistake of ascribing infallibility to church tradition. The radical reformation made the mistake of tossing the wisdom of our fathers overboard. The magisterial Reformers rightly found a balance. We ought to follow in their footsteps. We ought to honor our fathers, while being careful not to venerate them.

Third, we need to listen to those we are seeking to serve. The very purpose of Reformation, in the end, isn’t the increased health of institutions but the growth into godliness of the people in those institutions. The sheep know the voice of their Great Shepherd. Under-shepherds, on the other hand, must also know the voice of their flocks. This is one way we steer clear of the dangers of movements. Luther led the Reformation not to make a name for himself, but for the sake of the souls under his care. Every moment he devoted translating the Bible into the German vernacular was a moment he didn’t give himself to grandiose abstract disputations. He set aside feeding his ego that he might be used to feed His sheep

Finally, we need to listen to the voice of the Spirit of God. We are commanded to walk in the Spirit, to be led by the Spirit. When He speaks we not only must listen, but must act. He speaks to those sins we must become convicted of. He speaks to the needs of others we must seek to meet. He speaks of the glory of the Son that is our guiding light and our reason for being. He speaks the words that He would have us to speak to the watching world. He speaks the words that assure us of the love of the Father for us. Two ears, one mouth. Good counsel.

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Cronyism and Nepotism; Rich Man and Lazarus; Are These the Last Days?

Today’s Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

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Why doesn’t God save everybody?

The idea that God chooses not to save everybody is horrifying to some. The idea that He wants to save everybody and would save everybody but His desire for such is trumped by a deeper desire to leave room for free will is horrifying to me. I have a hard time imagining the damned complaining about the heat but finding some consolation in the blessings of their free will. God has the power to save all people. The value of the suffering of Christ is sufficient to cover all the sins of all God’s people. Protecting man’s free will is not something the Bible says God has the least interest in. So why?

The Bible tells us, explicitly, and clearly why. It says, “What if God, wanting to show His wrath and to make His power known, endured with much long-suffering the vessels of wrath prepared for destruction…” (Romans 9:22). God doesn’t save everybody because He wants to show His wrath and make His power known. Now He also delights to show His grace, as the text says, “…and that He might make known the riches of His glory on the vessels of mercy which He had prepared beforehand for glory” (verse 23).

This verse does nothing to shroud or push back against the verse before. Paul is explicitly, by using that word “and” denying this argument- that hell must exist that we might know the glory of our redemption. Hell is the black velvet on which God places the diamond of His grace. No, hell doesn’t exist to make heaven more glorious. It exists to manifest the glory of the One who made heaven and hell.

Hell isn’t a necessary evil. It isn’t the result of the dark side of God that He’d rather we not know about. It is something that glorifies Him, which means, in turn that it is something that He glories in. That we find that puzzling reveals just how worthy we are of hell. That we think it unseemly that people are in hell, rather than think it shocking that people are in heaven shows why we all deserve to be in hell.

It also explains why Paul had to explain, once again, the very nature of grace. The moment we come to believe it is owed, or necessary is the moment it stops being grace. Paul writes,

What shall we say then? Is there unrighteousness with God? Certainly not!  For He says to Moses, “I will have mercy on whomever I will have mercy, and I will have compassion on whomever I will have compassion.” So then it is not of him who wills, nor of him who runs, but of God who shows mercy. For the Scripture says to the Pharaoh, “For this very purpose I have raised you up, that I may show My power in you, and that My name may be declared in all the earth.” Therefore He has mercy on whom He wills, and whom He wills He hardens (Romans 9: 14-18).

I understand that this truth is difficult for us to swallow emotionally. It is not, however, difficult to understand intellectually. It is instead clear, simple. Our duty is to get our hearts in line with our minds, and to glorify Him for all that He glories in, all that He is.

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Sacred Marriage- Love, Honor and Cherish; Bible in 5, I Corinthians

Today’s Jesus Changes Everything Podcast

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Sniffing Out the Truth

Opinions are like noses, they say, everyone has one. One very common nose is that this bit of received wisdom means that we can never really know the truth. Which, of course, is a truth claim, and so contradicts itself. But perhaps one of the reasons that our post-modern culture has a tendency to embrace relativism is because we are coming out of a modernist culture that was over-confident in its capacity for knowledge. Being tired of living in a culture of know-it-alls, we have become the know-nothing culture.

The pseudo-science of psychology was perhaps most given to epistemological hubris. One pop-psychologist claimed to be able to read people’s posture, telling us in the best-selling Body Language that crossed arms are a sign of hostility, folded fingers a sign of perceived superiority. Freud claimed to be able to tell us why some folks chewed pencils, and others were overly fastidious. The sub-conscious mind, we were told, was out there in the open for all of us to read. The underground man is always coming up for air.

The truth is that we don’t always know the truth. Such should not send us scurrying into skepticism, just appropriate humility. We ought not to claim to know more than we do, especially about the motives of others. Such should make us particularly cautious about making judgements about others. That all men are wicked doesn’t mean we should ascribe the basest motives to others. Instead it should give us pause before we trust our own assessment. It also means we should beware of base motives when others are speaking well of us.

Consider Paul’s trial before Felix. The Sanhedrin has hired a mouthpiece, a lawyer named Tertullus to make the case against Paul. First Tertullus sets the stage for Felix, “We have enjoyed a long period of peace under you, and your foresight has brought about reforms in this nation. Everywhere and in every way, most excellent Felix, we acknowledge this with profound gratitude. But in order not to weary you further, I would request that you be kind enough to hear us briefly” (Acts 24: 2-3). Had you been Felix what you should have heard is that you are about to hear from a manipulative lick-spittle with no interest in the truth. What Felix probably heard was a wise man, one of the few to recognize his own beneficent rule. Here both speaker and hearer are caught up in their own deceitful hearts.

Gentle Tertullus then turns his attention to the accused, “We have found this man to be a troublemaker, stirring up riots among the Jews all over the world. He is the ringleader of the Nazarene sect and even tried to desecrate the temple; so we seized him” (verses 5-7). It may very well be that Tertullus believes that he is now speaking the truth. This may in fact be his perception of the events surrounding Paul in Jerusalem.

The distinction, however, between truth and falsehood is not grounded in the sincerity of the believer. Paul is equally sincere in his belief that he is guilty of none of these charges. The wise in our age would affirm that both are right, and that neither is right. Because people sincerely disagree, it is all a matter of perception, and no real truth exists. The wise in our age are fools. Paul went and preached the gospel. He did so with a clean conscience. His goal was that his brothers in the flesh would come to worship the Messiah for which they had been waiting. That preaching pricked the hearts of those who heard, and they in turn caused trouble, and rioted. The truth is that it was neither Paul, nor the truth that caused the trouble. Instead it was the hatred toward the truth that caused the trouble.

Had Paul not been sincere, however, he still would not stand guilty. Were there a battery of court appointed psychologists there at the trial to testify that Paul did have a titanic case of megolomania, (see, look at the way he folds his fingers, and how he signs his name with such big letters), he would still not be the cause of the riots. The only issue for Felix to decide is whether or not the message of Paul was true. If it was true, those who rejected it were to blame. If it were false, then Paul is to blame.

Sins are like the pores in our skin, everybody has a lot of them. One of the reasons that we go out in search of knowledge that we cannot possibly find, one of the reasons we seek to probe our darkest parts, is so that we can use the knowledge we think we have to trump the knowledge that is as plain as the nose on our face. If Felix can get at Paul’s motives, then we don’t have to trouble over the truth claims that he makes. And if he can avoid that, then Felix can avoid the claim of Jesus Christ on his life. We seek what we cannot know so as to hide from what we do know. At the end of the day, Tertullus’ message to Felix is one of praise and peace. And if Paul is right, Felix must repent, admit his sins, and serve another King. And so Paul remains a prisoner.

We would do well to judge better than Felix, to aspire to believe that which is true, because it is true, no matter what it says about us. We would do well if we would heed the wisdom of the true King, who told us that the truth would set us free. We must believe what we know, and leave the rest in the hands of the One who knows us.

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More Pious Than God; The Church and the Sexually Unrepentant

That accusation, “You’re more pious than God,” when rightly used isn’t an argument against piety, but against impiety. That is, when our scruples line up with the law of God we are not being anything other than faithful, as we should be, even if the world thinks otherwise. No, what the expression means is we have a law that’s even more narrow or strict than God Himself.

Consider if you will the openly sexually immoral. This would include practicing homosexuals, adulterers and fornicators. The Bible says, with the utmost clarity, that we in the church are not to keep from associating with immoral people. To do so we’d have to leave the world (I Corinthians 5: 9-10). We would indeed be more pious than God were we to avoid the sexually confused of the world.

If, therefore, we are to treat the sexually immoral of the world with forbearance, how much more professing Christians who embrace sexual immorality? If we are free, according to God’s law, to “associate” with sexually immoral unbelievers, if failing to do so brings us under God’s condemnation for being judgmental, that must mean that we are to be especially gracious with our brothers and sisters in Christ who unrepentantly embrace sexual immorality.

Except that’s not what the Bible says. Paul says, under the inspiration of the Holy Spirit and against the inspiration of the spirit of our age, that if a professing believer embraces sexual immorality, (along with many other forms of immorality), believers are not to so much as share a meal with them. The grace that we are to show toward the unrepentant professing believer is the grace of church discipline. The grace we are to show is cutting them off from table fellowship for their own sakes, no matter how much it might pain us. The grace we are to show is a grace that is willing to take on the slings and arrows of being accused of being more pious than God by those who are more pious than God.

The spirit of the age is having his way with the church in our day. He has disguised debauchery as freedom, cowardice as kindness and worldliness as grace. He leads us about by the nose because he knows there’s nothing we crave more than the approval of the world. Respectability is our idol and we give up anything to have her.

The piety we are called to is that which submits to the plain teaching of the Word of God, that doesn’t look for ways to re-shape God’s Word to fit the zeitgeist. The piety we are called to is a humility that says, “When God speaks all I can say is ‘Amen.’” The piety we are called to does not lead us to respectability and the approval of the world but to disgrace and to the lion’s den. May He never give allow us to presume to be more pious than He is. And may we ever rest in the piety He gives us.

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