Tuesday, June 27, 2017

What is Unfortunate About Genesis 1?


How can such a wonderful description of God’s act in the creation of the entire universe end on such an unfortunate note? I am not referring to the Fall of Man, but I am speaking of something that occurs much sooner — the chapter break.

With the end of the sixth day, chapter one is brought to a close. I have a tremendous amount of respect for the men and women involved in the translation and organization of Scripture in breaking it up into segments comprised of chapters and verse references but, I am convinced that this chapter was concluded four verses too soon.

While a new chapter, Genesis 2:1-4 continues the account of the very first week. As a result of this poor division, some have speculated that these four verses begin a new section. The truth of the matter is, however, that Genesis 2:4 is concluding the first section by restating what has just happened. Scholars refer to this as an inclusio — a literary device by which an author places similar material at the beginning and end of a section (see Gen. 1:1; 2:4). A clear example of this is found in 1 Chronicles 1:28-31 in naming the sons of Ishmael:

28The sons of Abraham: Isaac and Ishmael. 29These are their genealogies: the firstborn of Ishmael, Nebaioth, and Kedar, Adbeel, Mibsam, 30Mishma, Dumah, Massa, Hadad, Tema, 31Jetur, Naphish, and Kedemah. These are the sons of Ishmael.

As you can see, the division between Genesis one and two is not a perfect slice. The words that are written are perfect because God is the Author. However, we must always remember that the chapter and verse divisions are not necessarily inspired by God. These references were put in place by imperfect people attempting to assist others in quickly and easily locating specific passages so that they may better understand God’s Word.

Sunday, June 25, 2017

The Prayers of a Man Pardoned a Nation

 
Numbers 14:11-20 details the account of when the people of Israel rebelled against God and the LORD threatened to remove them from the face of the earth. God presented the possibility of killing the whole nation and starting over with Moses because of the evil report from the spies who had returned from surveying the promised land of Canaan. Their pessimistic attitude and outright disbelief in the power and promise of God swayed the people of Israel to reject God’s provision and view Him as weak and frail.

If we are not careful, a quick skimming of this passage can leave us with a somewhat fickle view of God and His character. However, upon further reflection, the way God handled the situation was absolutely brilliant! God is not capricious as evidenced throughout all of Scripture. On the contrary, God was working to establish and equip His servant-leader, Moses, for the next thirty-eight years of patiently bearing with and leading these people through the wilderness. God had brought His chosen leader to truly realize where his passions and commitments lay. By the end of this interaction, Moses hit a major growth spurt.

Opposed to selfishly accepting the opportunity to make a name for himself as a second father figure of the nation, Moses showed that his greatest concern was for the reputation of God and the welfare of God’s people. His response, given in Numbers 14:13-19, demonstrated that he truly was ready to shepherd this congregation. He was not seeking praise for himself but rather sought the benefit of other people. His true motives had officially been revealed and found to be the same as that of God’s, others-centered.

Tuesday, June 20, 2017

The Inexcusable Revelations of God


All of us know about the inexcusable revelations of God through nature and the written Word, but how many of us have ever sat down to think about what this actually means? The Bible tells us there are two forms of revelation through which God has chosen to reveal Himself to humanity:

1.      General Revelation.[1]

This is the testimony of God to mankind through all of creation. The reason it is general is because all men have been given this degree of understanding.

 

General Revelation allows us to understand three of life's four most important truths:

 

a.      There is a God.

 

Paintings come from artists, buildings from architects and creation from the Creator.

 

b.      He is very good.

 

Life could have been boring and even torturous, yet every day we are blessed with a number of different tastes, smells, sounds and sights which we are more than pleased with. We are surrounded by goodness in every direction which gives us confidence that God is good.

 

c.       Something is seriously wrong.

 

Since there is a God and we know He is good, then where is He? Why is there separation between us? Why does death and suffering occur in such a beautiful world?

 

Although these three points of knowledge mentioned above are greatly needed and necessary for salvation in Christ, no one will be saved apart from knowing and believing the fourth and final truth which is:

 

d.     God has made a way for sinners to be saved only through the death and resurrection of His Son — the Lord Jesus Christ.

 

2.      Special Revelation.[2]

Special revelation speaks directly to the specific details of the Gospel of Christ for salvation.

 

1 Corinthians 15:3-4 states, “For I delivered to you as of first importance what I also received: that Christ died for our sins in accordance with the Scriptures, that He was buried, that He was raised on the third day in accordance with the Scriptures.”

 

Why is the distinction between both revelations so important? Because much damage has been done by well-intentioned Bible-believing Christians in misinterpreting certain passages of Scripture. A good example is found in Acts 17 when Paul is in Athens preaching to the crowds in the Areopagus.

Acts 17:30 says:

The times of ignorance God overlooked, but now He commands all people everywhere to repent.

Some have twisted this passage to mean that since the Gentiles had not been exposed to the Gospel, then God was just going to overlook their sin because they did so in ignorance. The problem with this interpretation is that it would call into question God’s justice.

What had God overlooked? He was not overlooking sins, for that would make Him an abomination to Himself.[3] On the contrary, He was overlooking them — the Gentiles.[4] He was giving them over to their own depravity.[5] It was rare for God to send prophets to other nations in those days because Israel was supposed to behave like a magnet in drawing the nations inward. Now, since the birth of the Church, He is sending the Church to the world.




[1] Rom. 1:20; ESV, 939
[2] Acts 4:12; ESV, 912
[3] Prov. 17:15; ESV, 540
[4] Acts 14:16; ESV, 923
[5] Rom. 1:24-28; ESV, 939

Saturday, June 17, 2017

Outline of the Book of Genesis


1.      Starting with Adam (1-11)

a.      God’s Blessed Creation

                                                              i.      God’s Act of Creation (1:1-2:4)

                                                           ii.      God’s Show of Creation (2:5-25)

b.      God’s Cursed Creation (3:1-11:32)

                                                              i.      Death through Sin (3:1-6:8)

1.      The Entrance of Sin (3)

2.      The Exposure of Death (4:1-5:32)

3.      The Epitome of Corruption (6:1-8)

                                                           ii.      Deliverance through Destruction (6:9-29)

1.      The Execution of God’s Plan (6:9-7:10)

2.      The Endurance of God’s People (7:11-8:19)

3.      The Exaltation of God’s Preservation (8:20-9:29)

                                                         iii.      Population through Dispersion (10:1-11:32)

1.      Descendants of Noah (10)

2.      Dispersion of Nations (11:1-9)

3.      Designation of Nomination (11:10-32)

2.      Restarting with Abraham (12-50)

a.      The Life of Abraham (12:1-25:11)

                                                              i.      God’s Call and Abraham’s Response (12-14)

                                                           ii.      God’s Covenant and Abraham’s Faith (15-22)

                                                         iii.      God’s Commitment and Abraham’s Assurance (23-25:11)

b.      The Line of Ishmael (25:12-18)

c.       The Lot of Jacob (25:19-35:29)

                                                              i.      Life at Home (25:19-27:46)

                                                           ii.      Life in Hiding (28-32)

                                                         iii.      Life on Hold (33-34)

                                                         iv.      Life and Death (35)

d.     The Lineage of Esau (36)

e.      The Lifestyle of Joseph (37:1-50:26)

                                                              i.      Faithfulness through Patient Endurance (37-41)

                                                           ii.      Forgiveness from Longstanding Sin (42-47)

                                                         iii.      Fruitfulness in Covenant Blessing (48-49)

                                                         iv.      Finality on every Encumbrance (50)

Tuesday, June 13, 2017

Who Made God?


In the beginning, God created the heavens and the earth.
Genesis 1:1
Notice that God does not begin His Word trying to prove His own existence. In fact, no author of Scripture ever attempts to advocate on behalf of such an argument because the reality of there being a Creator God is clear.[1] When I purchased my computer a few weeks prior to attending Bible School, I found that inside the box was an instruction manual on how to use it properly. The only thing I did not find was a brochure trying to prove to me that the computer I paid for actually existed. We do not normally expect to find such a brochure because it is obvious that the computer before us does indeed exist. Why? I believe the reason is because the company who fashioned the very computer on which I happen to be writing this blog, expects me to understand that there is in fact a computer and, not only that, but a programmer who created the computer as well.

Ultimately we know that nobody made God because God has always been. Although we will never be able to fully grasp this concept of God’s eternality, we must always remember that a lack of understanding on our part does not remove the possibility or make something to be untrue. It just causes us to realize that we do not know everything. For example: I want you to find an individual born blind and explain to them the color blue. No matter what you say, that person will never truly be capable of understanding the concept of color let alone a specific shade. That being said, their lack of understanding does not make the existence of the color blue any less true. All it means is that they lack comprehension.

Ryan Sharp summarized this thought well when he wrote:

God is the ultimate Cause that sets all other causes and effects into motion. He is supernatural, meaning He exists outside the natural universe and isn’t governed by natural laws. Hence, God doesn’t need a cause for His existence. Asking the question, “Who made God?” is similar to asking the question, “What does an invisible man look like?” By definition, a man who is invisible cannot be seen. If I ask what he looks like, I’m asking a question that changes his nature of invisibility. Once I change his nature, he is no longer the thing I’m asking about. In other words, if an invisible man looked like anything, he would no longer be invisible. By definition, God is uncaused. If I ask, “Who made God?”, then I have changed God’s nature and am no longer asking about God—the Uncaused Cause.[2]




[1] Rom. 1:20; ESV, 939
[2] An Article taken from HCSB the Apologetics Study Bible for Students, p. 1287

Monday, June 12, 2017

One-Thing Study in Leviticus 2:10


"But the rest of the grain offering shall be for Aaron and his sons; it is a most holy part of the LORD's food offerings."

- Leviticus 2:10

It is easy for us to view God as selfish or even sick when we read through all the sacrifices required under Old Testament Law. However, from the very beginning God established the sacrificial system in order to meet the needs of His people. The LORD would have His portion (Lev. 2:9), but verse 10 says He set apart the best portion of food for the priests who worked in the temple. God is others-centered.

Abraham referred to Him as the "LORD will provide" in Genesis 22:14 and Matthew 6:8 tells us that He knows what we need before we even ask Him. It is through the sacrificial system by which He fulfilled the physical needs of His people and ultimately, through Christ, He has met mankind's greatest need of all, and that is salvation from sin and death.

Tuesday, June 6, 2017

The iThink Bible Study Method


What is happening in many Bible studies today is having a dangerous yet unintentional effect on the next generation and their view on Scripture.  Words and phrases like “I think…” are thrown around and, as a result, quite a bit of misinterpretation and wrong application is flooding the Church.

There are at least three reasons why people say these two words:


1.      They misspeak and/or speak from habit.                        We MUST use CAUTION!

Honestly, it does not matter what you and I think. What does God’s Word say? A pastor of mine would meet with people who wanted to learn more about where the church stood on specific hot-button issues. Often they would ask him, “What do you think about...?” To that he would respond with, “Well, it doesn’t matter what I think. My opinion means nothing. Let's see what God’s Word says about....”

In Judges 12:6 we learn of an account where 42,000 people died simply because they misspoke or couldn’t break from their normal tongue. God’s Word is a serious matter and we should be mindful of our words when we speak. If we know what God's Word says about a topic then we should say, "God's Word says..." not, "I think God's Word says...."

2.      They do not want to offend.                                               We MUST have COURAGE!

While it is good to choose our words wisely, we must not shy away from confrontation and risk the misinterpretation and thus the misapplication of God’s Word. I am not at all condoning public shame or humiliation. Great care must be taken in how we respond to a comment, especially in a public setting. Remember, God's Word is far more important and lasting than our mere opinion.


3.      They do not know.                                                               We MUST be COGNITIVE!

Grant Osbourne said it well when he wrote:

“The big problem with Bible study today is that we think it should be easier than other things we do. We study recipes for quality meals, how-to books for all kinds of things—carpentry, plumbing, automobile maintenance and so on—and read vociferously for our hobbies. Why do we think the Bible is the only subject we should not have to study?! Let me challenge you—make the Bible your hobby. At one level I do not like the analogy; the Bible must be so much more than a hobby! But at another level, what if we spent as much time and money on Bible study as we do on our hobbies? What if we took the same amount we spend on golf clubs and courses or on skiing equipment and skiing trips, and put it into Bible study? Yes, encyclopedias, commentaries and other reference materials are expensive. But so is everything we do.”[1]

A common statement is made that the Bible is difficult to understand. Thus, some do not know how to study God's Word. Charles Spurgeon once wrote:

“The Word of God apart from the Spirit of God will be of no use to you. If you cannot understand a book, do you know the best way to reach its meaning? Write the author and ask him what he meant. If you have a book to read and you have the author always accessible, you need not complain that you do not understand it. The Holy Spirit has come to abide with us forever. Search the Scriptures, but cry for the Spirit’s light and live under His influence.”[2]

I think that pretty much sums it up. There is no greater endeavor we can have than to know the Lord and His Word.  May we apply ourselves to such a task!



[1] SCRIPTURE AND AUTHORITY IN AN AGE OF SKEPTICISM; Platt, 85
[2] SCRIPTURE AND AUTHORITY IN AN AGE OF SKEPTICISM; Platt, 87

Thursday, June 1, 2017

Cross-Reference Sheet: David's Psalms

This is a guide to help the reader know what David was pulling from as he lived his life and wrote many of the Psalms. In the graphic below I show:
  1. David's lifespan.
  2. David's reign as king.
  3. God's revealed Word during his time (as far as I am aware).
  4. Psalms he wrote.


Why a New Reformation is Needed


            Since the beginning of Church history God has worked through the lives of thousands of individuals, some well-known and others forgotten in the pages of time, to reignite a pure passion for His Word. While major movements within the Church are remembered in their bold and decisive moments, the true origins of such zeal find their beginnings in the quiet background of ordinary men and women who honestly seek and hunger to know the Lord. The last Great Reformation was begun by such a man. Martin Luther, a German monk of the Catholic Church, was moved by the Spirit of God to nail his Ninety-Five Theses on the doors of the Catholic Church on October 31, 1517. His challenge of the teachings of the Catholic Church sparked much debate and culminated in what is now considered the Protestant Reformation.

The Catholic Church as a whole had become more focused upon their own traditions and the influence they held through politics and fear that they had forgotten, whether intentionally or not, the salvation truths recorded in the Bible. The leaders of the Church falsely taught that they had the power to sell salvation to those willing to pay the penance. Rather than shepherding and caring for their flock, they were paralleling the example set by the Pharisees by placing heavy requirements and restrictions upon those under their care. Rather than exhorting people to work out of their salvation, they taught their members a works-based salvation which directly opposed Ephesians 2:8-9 where God  stated that "…by grace you have been saved through faith. And this not of your own doing; it is the gift of God, not a result of works, so that no one may boast."[1]

Much like the Jewish people during the time of Christ, the Church in Luther’s day was blinded to the Scriptures because of their own pride, greed and pursuit of greater control and influence over the people. Their actions were dishonoring the Lord because they were oppressing the people. One of the greatest travesties was that they thought they were doing the will of God. They read from the same Bible as all believers do, yet they were deceived in their hearts and their way of thinking was futile because they forgot the Lord. Martin Luther spoke of this when he wrote:

“Nobody who has not the Spirit of God sees a jot of what is in the Scriptures. All men have their hearts darkened, so that, even when they can discuss and quote all that is in Scripture, they do not understand or really know any of it … The Spirit is needed for the understanding of all Scripture and every part of Scripture.”[2]

When Martin Luther nailed his Ninety-Five Theses to the front doors of the Catholic Church, it was a public and direct assault on their false teachings which had corrupted the message of the Gospel. The leaders of the Church had forsaken the very teachings of Christ in place of their own tradition. Yet, against all odds and pressures from the establishment, Martin Luther rose to become one of the many heroes of the Great Reformation who stood up against the heretical teachings of those with authority over him, in order to magnify the free gift of salvation to all who believe (Romans 6:23). Later in his life, God provided for Luther to translate the Bible from Latin into German so that his fellow countrymen would have ready access to God's Word and be able to study it for themselves.[3] Because of Luther’s willingness to take a step of boldness, the Lord tore down the unholy cathedrals established on the sand of man’s tradition and lust for power in order to rebuild His Church upon the solid and enduring rock of His triumphant Word.

Martin Luther not only broke away from the false teachings of his day, but he first died to himself. His whole life he had been taught that the Church was the authority of all spiritual matters. Yet, he had to forsake the security he had found in that teaching by realizing the Bible did not receive its authority from the Church but that the Church received its authority from God’s Word. The Church as a whole desperately needed a spiritual reformation. However, true spiritual transformation within the Church did not happen immediately. On the contrary, true spiritual revival began on an individual level when a spiritual hunger and passion for God’s Word was the driving force in the Church and this happened when His Word took precedence in the lives of believers. Because Martin Luther was willing to risk his life and reputation, God’s Word brought freedom to generations of Christians.

As man looks throughout history, God’s sovereign hand is evident at all points in time. Believers can be sure that no great mission movement or reformation was ever begun by man, but by the Spirit of God. The God who works all things out according to the good of those who love Him is the same God who is writing this great epic. It is interesting to note that, for approximately the last two thousand years, God has benchmarked every five hundred years as both great reformation and transformation in His Church as it hinges on the backdrop of the Roman Empire and its influences. Around 4 B.C. the long-awaited Christ made His appearance on the scene of human history. In 476 A.D. the last of the Roman Empire fell. In 1054 A.D. the Great Schism occurred then, finally, in 1517 A.D. Martin Luther ignited the Great Reformation. What is known for certain is that history often repeats itself because it is a demonstration of God’s faithfulness. 2 Timothy 2:13[4] teaches that even when man is faithless, God is faithful.

The first of these four periods was the entrance of the incarnated Jesus into the timeline of history. Jesus came to set free men and women who had been placed in bondage for so long both by sin and the unrighteous teachings of the religious leaders. These Jewish leaders had turned God’s Word and the temple practices into a means by which to make great profit and to maintain political control. They also hoarded the truth of God for themselves and made it even more difficult for Gentiles to come and worship Jehovah. Both the religious leaders and the people were in desperate need for a spiritual reformation. Yet for this to happen, what they needed most was the Spirit of God to transform their lives through the sacrifice of Jesus. Every instance in human history of revival and restoration of God’s people is brought about by the power and initiative of God the Father.

When persecution began to arise from the Jewish people and the Roman government towards the Christians, God scattered His people to all corners of the known world. For a long time, Christians endured horrible treatment. Yet, the time came in the early 300’s A.D. when the power of the Gospel reached through to the heart of the Roman Emperor Constantine who established Christianity as the religion of the State. The pendulum then swung as the outcome of conversion to Christianity went from persecution, loss of wealth and even the loss of life to an abundance of social, political and economic advantages. This act of Constantine, though possibly well intentioned, enticed people to convert even if they did not believe in Christ so that they could receive the worldly benefits of being a Christian.[5]

It is easy to see why so many unregenerate individuals would claim Christianity simply because of the elevated status the title would bring. These false converts were then placed in positions of authority throughout not just the government but the Church as well. This caused true believers of God to be led astray into both theological errors and sinful practices which began plaguing the Church. Yet, God was still faithful. When Rome eventually fell in 476 A.D due to barbarian invasions, God used this second period of time to establish and strengthen His Church through suffering. Christianity was no longer politically and economically pleasing in the eyes of the world thus the true heart of the Gospel could be taught undefiled and uncorrupted. Not only that, but with the incoming clusters of people groups due to the fall of Rome, history shows God’s sovereign hand in using such uncertain times to reach them with the Gospel of Christ.

The third great mark occurred in 1054 A.D. and is known as the Great Schism. This tumultuous event was a major separation which concluded with the division of the Church into two parts: the west and the east. This division was brought about through theological disputes, cultural preferences and political idealism. However, much of this separation was hinged upon regular Church practices, control over sacraments and the authority of the Pope. With the refusal from the east to accept the full sovereignty of the Pope and Rome over the entire Church body, the Great Schism actually prepared the groundwork for the Roman Catholic Church to experience the fourth period which is known as the Great Reformation.[6]

In the early 1500’s, a monk named Martin Luther submitted his life to Christ and began studying the Scriptures. As he grew in his understanding of God’s Word he became increasingly convinced that the Catholic Church had lost its way. The Spirit of God was giving this man and others the ability to see the love and truth of God, both theologically and practically. Just as God listened to the cries of His people when they were enslaved in Egypt and sent to them a deliverer to free them from their bondage, He once again saw the spiritual captivity of His people enslaved by the hopeless traditions of the Roman Catholic Church and was moved to action. Each one of the great eras previously mentioned was due to the faithfulness of God in the lives of His people in bringing them out of great apostasy. This is why this last period is referred to as the Great Reformation — because only the Great Jehovah can bring His people out of great and terrible sin and perform a great transformation in their lives. After all, the spiritual reformation of the Church is not brought about by human initiative, but rather through divine appointment.

Nearly five hundred years later, the Church today is in desperate need for a new Reformation. Today Churches are full of those who do not know their Bibles, people who have forsaken Biblical morality and those who confuse the definition of love. Five hundred years ago, there was a break in the Church because the leadership felt they could interpret the Bible the way they felt it should read. As in the days of Martin Luther, the Word of God once again is being twisted and distorted not by skeptics, but by those who claim the way of life. This corruption is not coming from outside, but from within. This internal degradation occurred in the time of Christ, just before the fall of Rome, during the Great Schism, throughout the Great Reformation and it is happening today with the authority of the Scriptures challenged by the very ones who claim to hold spiritual authority. Five hundred years after Luther’s Ninety-Five Theses which led to the Great Reformation and a thriving Church, the Church is now found struggling. Three main reasons why there is such a need for a new Reformation is due to Biblical illiteracy, the acceptance of sin in the Church, and the misuse of love.

Believers are now living in a time where the pages of Scripture are thought to be out of date and irrelevant to the current cultural ideas. This great apostasy of the inerrancy of Scripture is now leading to divisions in the Church. Some of these divisions have resulted from heretical teaching which has steadily been creeping into the pulpits while others have divided simply over opinions and preferences and a lot of this is credited to the fact that many people in the Church simply do not know their Bibles. Many are easily swept away when cultic followers come knocking on the door. Many others are not actively seeking to examine the Scriptures daily to know for sure whether or not the church they attend is teaching truth.

A cause for this rise in skepticism of the Scriptures is one of the same issues as Martin Luther’s time: Biblical illiteracy. In Martin Luther’s day, man could make the excuse that the Bible was not available to them and, if it was, they were illiterate thus the only way to learn the Scriptures were from the mouth of a priest. Today’s Church suffers from a different problem. Whereas believers five hundred years ago were illiterate, society today is speedily becoming alliterate — meaning that they can read, but they just choose not to. A common excuse that is given is that the Bible is not understandable. With thousands upon thousands of resources available to believers, the Church by and large has faltered in their handling of the Holy Scriptures in not seeking to understand. The Word of God is not treasured, not treated as a guide, not treated as holy. Charles Spurgeon once said:

“The Word of God apart from the Spirit of God will be of no use to you. If you cannot understand a book, do you know the best way to reach its meaning? Write the author and ask him what he meant. If you have a book to read and you have the author always accessible, you need not complain that you do not understand it. The Holy Spirit has come to abide with us forever. Search the Scriptures, but cry for the Spirit’s light and live under His influence.”[7]

In the American culture today, many in the Church are bored with God’s Word. There is no desire to know Christ. There is no longing for the deep things of God. The excuse often made is that the preacher is dry or dull. Even if that is true, most of the people who make this excuse perform little to no effort in the use of a plethora of resources available to them to find a man of God whom they can learn from more effectively. Others may use the excuse that people today, specifically millennials, have short attention spans thus they lack the ability to study God’s Word. They will say that it is a hassle to sit forty-five minutes to an hour on a Sunday morning listening to the Word of God yet these same individuals will not hesitate to spend two hours watching a movie, or four hours playing a video game or six hours scrolling through Facebook. Grant Osbourne said it well when he wrote:

“The big problem with Bible study today is that we think it should be easier than other things we do. We study recipes for quality meals, how-to books for all kinds of things—carpentry, plumbing, automobile maintenance and so on—and read vociferously for our hobbies. Why do we think the Bible is the only subject we should not have to study?! Let me challenge you—make the Bible your hobby. At one level I do not like the analogy; the Bible must be so much more than a hobby! But at another level, what if we spent as much time and money on Bible study as we do on our hobbies? What if we took the same amount we spend on golf clubs and courses or on skiing equipment and skiing trips, and put it into Bible study? Yes, encyclopedias, commentaries and other reference materials are expensive. But so is everything we do.”[8]

Some may give the excuse that the lives of modern believers are just too busy to study the Word or to pray. However, to give a real life example, many will force themselves out of bed in the wee hours of one or two in the morning every Black Friday to shop for material possessions, yet very few in the Church, rarely if ever get up at an hour early in the morning to pray and spend time in God’s Word. Jesus said, “For where your treasure is, there will your heart be also.”[9] Knowing the Lord and by spending time in His Word and in prayer will require sacrifice because modern lives are very busy with so many things vying for attention and causing distraction. Yet, the things in life that are of the most worth are those that come at a cost. What is valued in this life will show itself in actions, regardless of what is verbally claimed.

The Berean believers in Acts 17:11[10] were commended for two things: they received the Word with great eagerness and they diligently studied the Scriptures every day to make sure what they were hearing was true. It is tragic that both of these characteristics are lacking in the modern mainstream Church. The rebuke to the Church today is that they carry too little excitement for the absolute things of God. This is why a new Reformation is so desperately needed.

Because Biblical illiteracy is at an all-time high the practice of godly living is disappearing rapidly.  With God’s people neglecting His Word, they are not renewing their minds and thus paralleling the people the apostle Paul wrote of in 2 Timothy when he was referring to men in the last days as, “…lovers of self, lovers of money, proud, arrogant, abusive, disobedient to their parents, ungrateful, unholy, heartless, unappeasable, slanderous, without self-control, brutal, not loving good, treacherous, reckless, swollen with conceit, lovers of pleasure rather than lovers of God, having the appearance of godliness, but denying its power.”[11] Homosexuality is embraced by many in the Church, abortion is approved by many in the Church, and according to at least one statistic, just sixty percent of the pastors in the United States believe that the Bible is necessary for spiritual growth while the other forty percent believe you do not need it to grow spiritually.[12]

As well as Biblical illiteracy and a lack of morality, the Church is teaching falsely. The Church today is full of doctrinal errors and rampant in sin. Not only is it very likely that God is about to do a Great work in the lives of His people, but it is absolutely fascinating that these five hundred year increments of time all begin with the incarnation of Christ. Jesus came at a time when the leadership of Israel had turned from Him. They burdened the people by demanding they work harder and pay more much like how the Catholic Church was acting during the time of Martin Luther.

To summarize what was cited earlier, the apostle Paul wrote in 2 Timothy that in the last days men and women will love anything and everything except for God. If the Church were to be honest, they would realize that they do not have to look far to find examples of pre-marital sex occurring even among Christians, broken families, disobedient children, just to name a few. The Church today is filled with gamblers and swindlers, self-focused pleasure-seeking fornicators, ungrateful and unholy sons and daughters, abusive parents, gossip groups, drug addicts and every other sin mentioned in the Bible. Just as Paul wrote in 2 Timothy 3:5[13], all of these people claim to be Christians, yet they deny the very power of God in their lives and refuse to allow the Spirit to change them.

Lest those in the Church become puffed up, the truth is that this list reflects every believer. Fingers can be pointed all day long but three fingers will be pointing back condemning themselves. James 2:13 says, “For judgment is without mercy to one who has shown no mercy.”[14] Unchecked sin within the lives of believers is distancing the Church as a whole from God and His Word. Many churches across this country have forsaken Biblical values and have begun accepting and even giving approval for sin. Others pray to see God and for Him to show His glory, but it is the very sin in their own lives that is what separates them from His very presence. It should be pondered how many believers are characterized the same way Israel was during the time of the Judges: rebellion, retribution, repentance, restoration, rebellion, retribution, repentance, restoration, rebellion, and the cycle goes on. It will take time and effort, but believers must learn to walk in the victory that Christ has won on their behalf. They must learn to appropriate and exercise all that is given to them in Christ Jesus.

In addition to Biblical illiteracy and a lack for Biblical morals, the third area that shows that the Church has a need for a new Reformation is the misuse of love. The believers of the Great Reformation in 1517 A.D. came out of an entirely works-based society. The leaders of the Catholic Church was constantly placing heavy demands upon their people and requiring the impossible from them. The constant preaching that lacked grace and love put a toll on these people and left them hopeless. True love and thus grace for the souls of their congregations had fled from the Catholic Church long before and all that was left was a cold regiment of rules.

Today the Church now finds themselves on the other side of the pendulum. Believers have become so focused on loving the individual that many pastors and church leaders today refuse to preach about sin and eternal judgment. Several have begun to believe the lies perpetuated by culture which teach it is wrong to offend, least of all, to confront an individual. When someone sins, it has been taught that offering grace is the more biblical route by refusing to discipline them or even to discuss the issue. When believers find themselves in support groups or one-on-ones and another person opens up about a consistent sin pattern in their lives, many will wrongfully brush it off by stating that everyone struggles and then change the subject because societal norms have made it uncomfortable to discuss faults.

Yet this is neither grace nor love. The Church has surrendered grace and forsaken love and in its place has taken on complacency and apathy. It is unbiblical to excuse habitual sin simply because everyone has sin in their own life. If a doctor performs tests on a patient and finds cancer but refuses to inform them simply because he does not want to offend them and make them uncomfortable, then he will be convicted of malpractice. This would not be a good or loving doctor. Likewise, it is not loving to share only half of the Gospel of Christ because that would mean the other’s belief system is wrong. The people of this world are aware that something is wrong. They know this because built into everyone is a knowledge that sickness and death should not be a reality. The only problem is that most people in this world do not know why there is so much suffering or the remedy. The only remedy is the Gospel in its entirety but the only way the lost world will hear it is if the Church begins to again speak the truth in conjunction with love.

The Church should love those around them and seek to serve their communities in God-honoring ways. That being said, when the Church refuses to share any of the key points of the Gospel when the opportunity arises then they are, at that moment, refusing to love that person. The culture would tell believers the exact opposite. They would say that to offend someone is unloving. On the contrary, the most loving thing the Church can do for a person is share the Gospel with them. Carrying it a step further, when believer live and act as a reflection of the Lord Jesus Christ in their life they shine as the purest beacon of love. The Lord Jesus was the epitome of love both in His ministry and in His death yet He did not hesitate to speak the truth. He did not speak brazenly with a whip in his hands to all just as He did not speak softly to all – He adapted His message for the audience and context but never took away from the content or watered down the truth. If a believer was aware that someone they knew was about to be murdered and did nothing to try and prevent it, then they would be held liable to the court of law as an accomplice. The Church has the Gospel message and many of the people that they see on a daily basis are likely going to spend an eternity separated from Christ. The most loving action would be to tell them the truth of the Gospel even if it is uncomfortable.

Many pray for another Great Awakening to occur. It has been over a hundred and fifty years since the last Great Awakening and there is no doubt that the country and world is in desperate need of another Great Awakening. However, looking at the spiritual state of mainstream churches, there is a desperate need of a new Reformation within the Church. After all, if a Great Awakening occurred, what would the world be awakened to? Would the Church be any different than the world? It must be realized that revival will begin when the Church gets right with God.

Scores of seminaries within this country’s borders are training up men and women to view many of the Scriptural accounts merely as poetic stories only written to reveal a moral code. They are teaching future pastors and Bible expositors that the Bible is not wholly relevant or reliable in what it says. Post-modernism is taking precedence in the thinking of Christian leaders and leading the Church to doubt the inerrancy and accuracy of the Biblical record. Historical accounts such as Adam and Eve, Jonah and the great fish, and countless others are now being deemed as just fables. The very Word of God is being reduced to just a piece of literature equal to Homer’s Iliad. If there was an immense passion that began to stir in the hearts of unbelievers to know God’s Word and churches all across the nation became flooded with individuals, what spiritual truths or the lack of would they be taught? Would that hunger for truth continue or would they become further convinced in their own mind that the Bible is neither needed nor believable? Reformation is not a movement for non-believers. Reformation is for the Church. Reformation is needed in churches and in the private lives of believers as the two are inevitably linked.

Jesus Christ is not just the one-time Savior and Deliverer from sins, but He is the ever-present God who sees and hears the afflictions of His people and is daily conforming His Church more into the image of God through the working of His Spirit for their sanctification. Every book of the Bible expresses the suffering of the people of God, and what is seen through every one of those instances and every circumstance in the lives of individuals is that God is exalted in His sovereign control in both leading the Church through the fires of life and also purifying the Church’s character.

If there is to be a new Reformation today, then there must be intentionality on the part of all believers. No one will just awaken one day overly zealous for God. No, each believer must train their hearts and their minds in such a way as Paul says in 2 Corinthians 10:5[15] by taking every thought captive to the obedience of Christ and in Luke 9:23[16] where Jesus says to daily take up the cross. It is exciting to think that the Church may be on the verge of seeing another Great Reformation or even the glorious return of Jesus Christ thus believers should examine their own hearts and lives and seek to know the Lord and His Word with all their might.

In conclusion, the lack of Biblical understanding and longing to know God, sin in each believer’s lives and the rampant false ideas about love reveal three major areas where the Church as a whole needs a new Reformation. Only the Spirit of God who is at work in the lives of His people can rescue the Church and bring about this new Reformation. Yet, Reformation is not something man alone can achieve no matter how hard they work at it as it is the working of the Spirit within each believer. What is needed most of all is for the Spirit of God to do a great work in His Church. The Church desperately needs God to raise up godly men such as Luther who will have the courage to stake their lives on the truth of God’s Word and stand for truth and thus against the establishment and culture. The prayer of the Church should be that God would stir in believers a zeal and a holy passion to study His Word. For it is from God’s Word that truth and life is found and true biblically morality will be reestablished and the true practice of love will be reapplied. Ultimately, through prayer and action, a great Reformation may once again sweep across the Church as Christ continues to sanctify His bride for the coming wedding feast.

Bibliography

THE GREAT SCHISM, S I L O U a N. N.p., n.d. Web. 07 May 2017.

THE HOLY BIBLE, ENGLISH STANDARD VERSION. Crossway, Wheaton, IL, 2001

MARTIN LUTHER, Biography.com. A&E Networks Television, 28 Apr. 2017. Web. 07 May     2017.

Matthews, J.F., and Donald MacGillivray Nicol. CONSTANTINE I, Encyclopedia Britannica.    Encyclopedia Britannica, Inc., n.d. Web. 07 May 2017.

Platt, David, SCRIPTURE AND AUTHORITY IN AN AGE OF SKEPTICISM, Radical,          Birmingham, AL, 2017


[1] ESV, 976
[2] Platt, 87
[3] Martin
[4] ESV, 995
[5] Matthews
[6] The Great Schism
[7] Platt, 87
[8] Platt, 85
[9] ESV, 811
[10] ESV, 926
[11] ESV, 996
[12] Platt, 9
[13] ESV, 996
[14] ESV, 1012
[15] ESV, 969
[16] ESV, 867