Wednesday, March 28, 2018

Male and Female, He Created Them

Here is a link to the Sunday school class I taught last Sunday on Genesis 1:27-31 on the topic of God's good design of creating the human race as male and female. Below is the outline (sorry it isn't formated nicely, there is a cleaner downloadable version at the link with the audio):

I.                   God’s Very Good Design – Man & Woman Gen 1:26-27, 31
A.     Men and women equally made in God’s image

B.      Men and women distinct as male and female.

C.      This is the design – God’s blueprint.

Matt. 19:4-5 “Have you not read that he who created them from the beginning made them male and femaleand said, ‘Therefore a man shall leave his father and his mother and hold fast to his wife, and the two shall become one flesh’?

D.     This is “very good.” (Gen. 1:31).



II.                 Current confusion in our culture
A.     The confusion of the day
                                                             1.      Some terms
a.       Sex – biological and physical make-up
b.      Gender – our attitudes and feelings and behaviors that fit with our sex.
c.       Transgender is when someone identifies or expresses a gender identity that does not match their physical / genetic sex.
                                                             2.      Cultural examples of transgender issues.

                                                             3.      Example of Family Policy Institute of Washington institute questioning students[1],[2]


B.      How we got here
                                                             1.      Fall into sin and consequences of curse.
                                                             2.      Worldview Issues
a.       Either Creator and Creature (Gen 1:1 & Ps. 24:1-2)
a.       God is the authority
b.      Source of all true knowledge (even about ourselves)
c.       And Is trustworthy to do and call us to what is truly best for us.

b.      Or, we are
a.       the authority
b.      and source of knowledge
c.       and trustworthy guides who to what is best for us.

                                                             3.      Cultural climate  (Adapted from Andrew Walker, God and The Transgender Debate, pg. 21-26)
a.      Relativism Meaning and truth are relative

b.      Radical Individualism Downstream from relativism. It says “everyone gets to write their own script.”

c.       Sexual revolution
a.       If it feels good do it…our bodies are our own and for us to enjoy in whatever way we want.
b.      Assumption that sexual freedom is the highest of all freedoms and the only path to true fulfillment.

d.      Gnosticism  Idea that material world is bad (or unreliable) and what really is important is the spiritual

                                                             4.      The 2 unforgivable sins in our culture then are
a.       First to judge someone else (say they are wrong).
b.      Second to fail to fulfill your desires.



III.              How Should We Respond to the Confusion?
A.     Speak the truth, and live the truth
                                                             1.      The truth is God has called our sex and the corresponding maleness or femaleness as “very good” in Genesis 1:31.
a.       “Our identity as man or woman is not the result of a biological accident. The doctor at our birth does not impose it on us. It is not foisted upon us by our society’s social expectations, moral habits, and cultural meanings. Our identity as a man or woman is who we are .” (Mohler, We cannot be Silent, pg. 79)
                                                             2.      Is it loving to affirm every self-perception someone has as accurate and true even if it is clearly not?
a.       What about someone who is anorexic because they believe they are overweight (when they really are thin and starving themselves)?
b.      They need compassion and help which requires the truth.


B.      Love others – “Blessed are the merciful for they shall receive mercy


C.      Avoid stereotypes of manhood and womanhood; instead, emphasize the biblical picture


D.     The Gospel



[1] “Do college kids know the difference between men and women?”   https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-4S0gHlKiho
[2] “Do college kids know the difference between men and women?”   https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xfO1veFs6Ho

Guidelines in Determining If and How a Biblical Command Applies Today

Last week, at Bible study, we discussed commands in the Bible and how to determine if a command still applies to today, and, if so, how to sort out the culture-specific aspects from the timeless principles. Here are a few guidelines adapted from  Dr. Robert Plummer's book 40 Questions about Interpreting the Bible, pg. 172 (Dr. Plummer was my Greek professor in Seminary and I am so thankful for his ministry to me).


  1. Rephrase the biblical command in more abstract, theological terms. Is the injunction a culturally specific application of an underlying theological principle? Or are the command and cultural application inseparable? (example, "Greet each other with a holy kiss" seems to have an underlying principle of welcoming and loving fellow believers as fellow members of God's household. It does seem the principle is unchanging, but the cultural application [a holy kiss] seems to be able to be separated and replaced with a culturally specific application). 
  2. Would a modern-day literal application of the command accomplish the intended objective of the biblical author's original statement? 
  3. Are there details in the text that would cause one to conclude that the instructions are only for a specific place or time? (ex. 2 Tim. 4:13 Paul tells Timothy "when you come, bring the cloak that I left with Carpus..." Since Paul directs it to Timothy and it only would apply as long as Paul was living, this command does not apply to us). 
  4. Are there details in the text that would cause one to conclude that the ... command applies unchanged in different cultures? (Is it based on God's character, his unchanging promises, or his design for all creation? Example "love one another, for love is from God." This is not a cultural issue, and the fact that it is rooted in love coming from God means it doesn't change).  
  5. Do your conclusions cohere with the author's other statements and the broader canonical (whole-Bible) context? 
  6. For Old Testament commands, how has the coming, life, death, and resurrection of Jesus, the promised Savior, changed things? (Ex. commands to sacrifice on the Day of Atonement are fulfilled by Jesus who "died once for sin" and is "seated at the right hand of God." This is not due to God changing. Rather, it is because God's plan has not changed. His plan has always been to give a "yes" and "amen" to all his promises in the coming of Jesus.) 
  7. Beware of the deceitful human heart that would use interpretive principles to rationalize disobedience to Scripture. 

Wednesday, March 21, 2018

Hospitality and Evangelism

You might not think that these two ideas, hospitality and evangelism, go together, but they are like peanut butter and jelly (or maybe peanut butter and bananas...don't judge if you haven't tried it). Hospitality is the love we show towards strangers. It is a welcoming love that is willing to put ourselves out there in ways that cost us time, energy, and money in order to lovingly welcome and seek to do good to a fellow human that we do not know very well (ie. they are not our best friend already).

Our culture is increasingly polarized and full of anger. How refreshing Christian hospitality is in such a vitriolic setting. Since Christian hospitality is motivated by the Gospel, it is a means to evangelism too. God welcomed us into his house, even into his family, while we were strangers to his promises, even hostile towards him. This hospitality ought to extend to fellow Christians that are different than us or that we don't know (Romans 15:7 says, "Therefore welcome one another as Christ has welcomed you, for the glory of God."). But it also must be extended to those we are inviting to "leave father and mother and sister and brother" to follow Jesus (see Ananias and Barnabas showing hospitality to Saul / Paul in Acts chapter 9).

Matt Chandler has a helpful article entitled "Everyone you meet will live forever: Evangelism in an age of unbelief" at Desiring God that address this and gives a few practical ideas. You don't have to have a home or cook like Betty Crocker to show hospitality. Start by simply greeting people, by asking questions to get to know them, and by caring about them. Love for them also compels you to want to share the best gift with them - Jesus Christ as Lord and Savior. Christian hospitality is not contingent upon everyone agreeing with the truth of who Christ is, but it doesn't pretend as if Jesus is simply a nice add-on to life either. Christian hospitality is rooted in our acceptance by God in Christ and, therefore, displays that reality in our words and deeds.

Who might you show hospitality to today?

Tuesday, March 6, 2018

Genesis and Science

 We are living in a time when evolution is the great intellectual rival to the Christian faith in Western culture. It is important that we have given thought to these issues. I have been co-teaching the Sunday school class on Genesis 1-4. Several of the classes have dealt with preliminary issues about origins and science. Here is a link to the whole series on Genesis 1-4. I hope you find it helpful, and if you are not attending a Sunday school class, consider joining us for this study.