LABOR
DAY BIBLE CONFERENCE
North
Stonington Bible Church, North Stonington, CT USA
September
3–5, 2016
PRESENTER, CHARLES CLOUGH
TOPIC:
KEEPING FAITHFUL TO OUR LORD IN A GROWING HOSTILE CULTURE
Central theme
of Scripture: Romans 12:1-2 (KJV), ŅI beseech you therefore, brethren, by the
mercies of God, that ye present your bodies a living sacrifice, holy,
acceptable unto God, which is your reasonable service. And be not conformed to
this world: but be ye transformed by the renewing of your mind, that ye may prove
what is that good, and acceptable, and perfect will of God.Ó
SESSION
4: NOAH AND BABEL VS. PAGAN GOVERNMENT AND PROGRESSIVISM
Charles Clough (0:00-1:09:45)
Thank you Larry, itÕs always a pleasure to be
here. As I say weÕve been coming here for a number of years and weÕve actually
attended this church longer than any other church that weÕve ever gone to, so
it just seems like homecoming to both Carol and me.
As we approach the Word of God letÕs pause for a
few moments just to pray, just to think about the Lord who authored this
wonderful library of information to us: ŅFather, we thank You that You have
once again allowed us the freedom to gather together when many brothers and
sisters at this hour are fleeing for their lives or meeting in underground churches
because they do not have the liberty that we have.
We give thanks for that. We think, for example,
of the many, many centuries of time and the number of martyrs; the fact that
more Christians have been murdered in the 20th century that the
entire 19 centuries before; and we know that YouÕre coming, the second coming
of Your Son grows close. We know that each day of our lives is one day closer
to the grand culmination of history.
We thank You, therefore, that we have an
identity that doesnÕt depend on our feelings; it doesnÕt depend on things we
crank out of our soul, but it depends upon Your revelation, for You made each
one of us personally and individually. We know we have Psalm 139 that tells us
the fact that while we were in our motherÕs womb, You wove us together with a foreview
of the life that we would then live, and we so thank You for giving us that
information and telling us about our true identity.
We ask now that Your Holy Spirit will illuminate
our hearts, that we might be careful and not be deceived by the powers of the
world, but that we would be submissive to Scripture and faithful to what YouÕve
told us, for we ask this our SaviorÕs name, Amen.Ó
Well this is Session 4 and in this session weÕre
going to advance further in the progress of revelation. WeÕve dealt with Creation;
weÕve dealt with the Fall; weÕve dealt with the Flood; and in this session weÕre
going to deal with the contract that God made with the human race and with all
air-breathing animals, and the implications this has for theories of government.
Of course, that is involved and we are in an election
year, our minds are involved with politics. You canÕt help but open the media,
every time you turn on the media thereÕs something about politics. But we as
Christians need to pay attention to what the Word of God says about politics
and government: how it was set up and how it was supposed to function versus
how our culture thinks of it today.
Once again, our theme verse: Romans 12:1–2,
ŅBe not conformed to this age,Ó aion,
and on the other hand, it says, Ņbe transformed by the renewing of your minds.Ó
We want to turn now, your handout has got four
slides there, and for those who will be seeing the whole framework on the
websites, I want to go to the slides 30 and 31 because I want to again show that
the mold that Paul talks about, Ņbeing conformed toÓ. In that Romans passage,
the word suschematizo there is a word
that is dealing with how to compress, how to put things into a mold. We want to
be careful that we are not unintentionally allowing our minds to be molded by
how the world wants us to think.
On these two slides here, slides 30 and 31, IÕve
depicted the mold as we have studied it so far. In the conflict over creation,
so again, this is Chapters 1 and 2 of Genesis, and the event of Creation, itÕs
not just a story, itÕs an event, and an event has implications.
But the problem is that in order not to feel
under conviction for our sin, not to feel under conviction because of how the
Lord has worked out history; that we are going to be ultimately responsible. Because
of all that, men and women both create a fantasy world like Adam and Eve did. What
we wind up with is this kind of thing, where we have used something called deep
time, which means millions and millions of years. We need that deep time to try
to explain natural history by normal slow processes.
But you donÕt need that deep time if they were rapid
processes, and so thatÕs why say, in this thing weÕre using low-power events to
explain the current state geophysically of the planet. But power is work divided
by time, so a high-power event is able to do the same amount of work faster. So
we pointed out that now only recently weÕve got two examples of high-power
events that had never been observed before and in such detail.
One was Mount St. Helens, when it exploded and
the debris came down from that mountain at 90 miles an hour and amazingly laid
down perfectly laminar flow. That had never been photographed before. That is a
new observation and mathematicians are working right now to try to figure out
what are the fluid dynamics involved in a slurry mix, and thatÕs what happened.
So here is a rapid situation; if you go back a
year or two later to Mount St. Helens youÕd swear by that laminar flow, that
that mustÕve taken millions of years to lay down by the slow erosion processes
that we know.
Then we have the tsunami in Japan, and that
tsunami took the entire archipelago of Japan É Remember, Japan is not just one
island, itÕs a series of islands; that entire archipelago was moved 8 inches
east in a matter of minutes. If you think of the power that mustÕve been
involved on the tectonic plate in the western Pacific Ocean to move Japan 8
inches, itÕs an enormous power, a tremendous power. Those are the kinds of
things that are surprises, because when you project back, you donÕt need deep
time in your mathematics if this is a high-power event.
Then we have the impersonal cosmos. One of the
things that philosophers have struggled with is that if we are the only
creatures in this vast universe, itÕs like itÕs a lonely place. This is why there
is a search: on one hand, we want to explore outer space, because itÕs part of
GodÕs creation; on the other hand, thereÕs a tendency to be almost religious
about seeking other life forms in the universe. And part of that, I believe, is
a spiritual vacuum in our hearts; that if we think of reality as just an
impersonal, physical material thing, we are lonely creatures in this vast, vast
universe. But on the other hand, if God, who is an infinite Person, created it,
who we can have fellowship with, then weÕre not cosmically lonely. We have a Creator.
Then we go to the Darwinian thing, and we covered
that. Then we dealt with man as a product of nature. Then we have, additionally,
a reaction not just against Creation, but against the Fall and the Flood. We
discovered the fact that now [there is] good and evil in nature, this is not
just humans, but good and evil in nature; the storms; the earthquakes; the tornadoes;
that is considered to be normal.
We consider it, as Christians, not to be normal.
It was not the way God originally
created the external nature of the natural world. This is a cursed natural
world, and it was cursed, not because we were careless about the environment—it
was cursed because we are sinners, and the human race sinned against God and
God judged it. So we live in an abnormal world—not as it was originally
from the hand of God.
Then we dealt with the issue of ŅThe Bible is
bad for nature.Ó I gave you quotes; the entire depth of the modern ecological
movement is very hostile to the Judeo-Christian faith. ItÕs hostile because the
Christian faith argues that man is unique in nature; and man has higher value
than anyone else; any animal is lower than man. That is not true [according to]
NewkirkÕs thing, ŅA rat is a pig is a dog is a boy,Ó and so on. Her idea is
that all creation, well she doesnÕt
think itÕs creation, but all animal
life is equal in value.
ThatÕs why, for example, we have the endangered
species list. I worked with endangered species for years at Aberdeen Proving
Ground with the bald eagle. So I know a little bit about endangered species.
But endangered species are considered to be so valuable that we can accord them
higher value than we can accord human life. ThatÕs an inversion of the Bible.
So thereÕs great tension, and we as Christians
need to be conscious of the fact that when we say we are Bible-believing
believers. Just understand that in saying that, we put a person who is very
thoughtful in the green movement in a position of antagonism. The Bible is bad
for nature [in their minds].
Finally, in the issue of personal identity: the
identity crisis that separates meaningfulness from trying to generate your own
meaning; your own identity. Now itÕs got into the fact that gender is not
necessarily related to your anatomy, and so on. So the identity issues come not
from us trying to create our own identity out of our own resources, sort of
operation bootstrap. ThatÕs not how you create your identity. Your identity and
my identity are what God tells us in Creation. So we dealt with the identity
issue.
Well, the theme of this conference is that every
time we allow the mold to mold our thinking, it compromises us and does damage
to us spiritually. It attenuates the strength of our perception of GodÕs
attributes. When we pray, do we really pray conscious of GodÕs omnipotence;
that He is able to do exceedingly abundantly above all that we ask or think; do
we really believe that?
ItÕs hard to believe that, if you believe that
nature is self-transforming and all-powerful. You canÕt have two things that are
all-powerful; either God is all-powerful or nature is all-powerful. So we tried
to show how these attributes get compromised. WeÕve gone over that, and you
have to go to those particular four slides in your handout. So slides 30–33
in the PowerPoint file are these four slides that I put in the handout.
WeÕve dealt with some of the effects of
rejection. But what I want to do now is I want to go to after the Flood. There
was a revelation that came from God, very important. ItÕs one of the key
passages that in political thinking—the political doctrines of the
Scriptures you have to go back to.
So letÕs go back to Genesis 8. WeÕre going to look
now at the Noahic Covenant, and as we go back there, I want to recall a word
here. We use the word ŅcovenantÓ a lot, and we use it so frequently that it
becomes so familiar to us and we arenÕt conscious of the core meaning of it.
The word ŅcovenantÓ in the Bible is the Hebrew
word, bÕrit, and bÕrit was used in cases where, for example, a shepherd, like
Abraham, who shepherded sheep flocks, they needed water for all these animals
that they were raising. But the problem was that water was scarce. They didnÕt
have wells every mile to get water. So there were people who owned property
with a well on it.
We have a story in AbrahamÕs day where he made a
covenant with the guy that owned the well so that he could get water for his
business, for his flock, and that was called a covenant.
So what does that tell us about the meaning of
that noun? ThatÕs a noun, and it has meaning. It is a synonym to [the word in] our
language, Ņcontract.Ó Now, if you will substitute mentally, the word ŅcontractÓ
every time you see the word Ņcovenant,Ó it might help you think through the
fact that contracts have a lot of implications.
When we think about contracts, why do we make
contracts in the first place? We make contracts in the first place to control a
personal relationship—a relationship thatÕs business; a relationship thatÕs
with government; whatever. ItÕs to monitor the performance of the relationship.
IsnÕt that why we have contracts?
When you make a contract with the bank to borrow money for a car,
thatÕs a contract that requires you to do certain things and it requires the bank
to do certain things. ItÕs stated in a document, and that document needs to be
literally interpreted. You donÕt interpret contracts allegorically. WouldnÕt
that be delightful, to interpret your automobile contract, or your mortgage
allegorically? I donÕt think the bank think would like that. So, automatically,
by talking about covenants as contracts, we settle the whole hermeneutic issue.
ItÕs all settled. Contracts have to be interpreted literally.
The other thing about contracts, and itÕs
important when we come to this one in the way of contracts because this is the
first explicit mention of contract in the Bible. When you have a contract, what
else is true besides interpreting it literally? LetÕs say, think about your
mortgage, maybe you have a 20- or a 30-year mortgage on your house. During
those 20 or 30 years, what is the function of the contract? ItÕs to define
obligated behavior.
So, for example, if a contract is violated, you
have contract breaking. YouÕve got a problem with one or two parties to that
contract. Divorce is a good example. Here we have the contract implying not
only literal interpretation, that settles the whole hermeneutic issue right
there, but you also have the fact that after the years go by on your mortgage,
if you are faithful to pay those monthly payments every month, what happens to
your credit rating? It goes up. Why does your credit rating go up after youÕve paid,
over the last 15 years, your mortgage payment on time? Your credit rating goes
up because you are now considered to be trustworthy of a loan. So a credit
rating is basically a measure of trust; a measure of character.
Well, how does this apply to the Bible? LetÕs
just think about this É When God makes a contract, what are the implications of
that with regard to His behavior? If God makes a contract and He specifies that
He will do X, Y, and Z within a certain amount of time, or just eventually, we
have a historical record to check on whether He Ņmade His paymentsÓ; whether
the prophecy was fulfilled.
What does that do now to what corresponds to a
credit rating with God? It increases it. This is why, folks, two-thirds of this
book is the Old Testament—two-thirds of the library that we hold has to
do with the Old Testament. Why is two-thirds of the Bible devoted to the Old
Testament? ItÕs because thatÕs the period of history where GodÕs performance
has been monitored.
Now we have a record objectively in history that
God did this for the tribe of Jacob; He did this for the tribe of Ephraim; He
did this for the tribe of Judah; He did this for the king of Judah; He did this
for the Messiah. So we have all the prophecies of Jesus fulfilled. So what does
this do? That is an objective, not a subjective feeling thing.
We can dismiss all this romanticism. Our faith
is not built on romanticism. ItÕs not built on how we feel about God. ItÕs
built on GodÕs character as demonstrated historically.
Now hereÕs why this is so important. This is not
a minor point: there is no other religion in history that has that record of
God—the BuddhistÕs donÕt have it; the Hindus donÕt have it; Islam doesnÕt
in the sense that they say, ŅWell we donÕt have a real Old Testament.Ó All
these religions donÕt have a historical record of the trustworthiness of God
that they purport us to believe in. We have a record that is objective and
therefore a demonstration of the faithfulness of our Lord.
LetÕs look at Genesis 8:21. This is the
background for the first explicit contract in history: ŅAnd the Lord smelled
the soothing aroma.Ó This is just another side comment here on aroma and smell.
The power of smell is very interesting. Unlike the power of sight and the power
of touch, the power of smell has scientifically shown that you can detect a
personÕs emotions through the olfactory sensation.
This has been shown by various experiments where
they take people and put them in a video situation where they have to respond
to fear, or they have to respond to some happy situation, and they take their
perspiration and then they put it on a card and they let an observer smell that,
and they donÕt know how this works, but somehow the sense of what that crisis
is, itÕs not clear in all cases, but it can be done.
So thereÕs a strange characteristic to smell. ItÕs
no accident that in the Bible the prayers that come up to God are viewed as an
aroma. In the Bible, what did they burn in the temple? Incense. So thereÕs the
idea of incense. Incense for who? ItÕs a picture of God smelling; and He is
smelling something that is telling Him about the heart of His people.
Back in Genesis 8:21–22: ŅGod smelled a
sweet savour; and then the Lord said in His heart, I will never again curse the
ground for manÕs sake; although the imagination of a manÕs heart is evil from
his youth; nor will I again destroy every living thing as I have done. While
the earth remains, seedtime and harvest, and cold and heat, and summer and
winter, and day and night shall not cease.Ó
What is this verse teaching us about the
geophysical environment? Is it constrained or is it not? ThereÕs a certain
stability geophysically, and itÕs not just the geophysical stability of planet
Earth. God could not fulfill this promise if He didnÕt also stabilize the sun,
and stabilize the solar system, and stabilize our galaxy, because there are
extraterrestrial effects.
There are other planets out there. The problem
with the planets that you hear about is their stars are not stable like our sun
is. Some of these stars just suddenly emit radiation. If we were on those
planets weÕd drop dead. We are particularly blessed in our solar system for a stable
star called our sun.
So here we have God geophysically creating
stability. You see, this is how you have to have to read the Bible. You canÕt
read the Bible as just a storybook. The Bible has to be read as though itÕs
true truth and the implications span the whole universe.
Genesis 9, now here we get into the details of
the contract: ŅGod so blessed Noah and his sons, and said to them, be fruitful
and multiply, and fill the earth.Ó Once again we have the command to have
babies; to fill the earth.
I was just talking to an airline pilot here and
he was saying when you fly over America from coast-to-coast and you look down
on the land, thereÕs no overpopulation. Where you have overpopulation and why
itÕs a crisis is because you have corruption.
One of the most overpopulated, population-dense
places on earth is Hong Kong. The people are doing fine in Hong Kong because
they have a reasonably functioning government, a functioning economy, and theyÕre
okay.
There are some areas on earth, like Syria right
now, that are a real problem. Why? ItÕs not because theyÕve got too many people.
ItÕs because theyÕve bombed the place, destroyed it, and their economy is shot
and people are dying.
The point is that God says, Ņbe fruitful and
multiplyÓ, which implies that we ought to be able to grow. Population density
per family has to be 2.1 in order for a society to continue. Any society that
has a birth rate less than 2.1 is destined for destruction and erasure from
history. There are several places on earth right now that are in a crisis.
I have a Japanese daughter-in-law. Japan is in a
mess. The young people are so discouraged they donÕt even want to bother with
marriage or family, so theyÕre not having babies. Now what happens is youÕve
got a progressively older population. Who pays for the older people now that you
donÕt have any young people to pay?
You have a destruction of the economy when you
donÕt have population growth of 2.1 or more. Europe, apart from the Muslim
population, is going down with less than 2.1. In our nation, the red states, the
conservative states, theyÕre greater than 2.1. On the East Coast and the West
Coast where you have liberalism, the blue states, theyÕre population is
dropping below 2.1. So guess what that has by way of voting implications for
the next 30 years.
YouÕre not worried in this congregation because
youÕre having babies all over the place. But the point is that God commands
this, and we donÕt have to worry about population bomb or anything like that.
ŅAnd the fear of you and the dread of you shall be upon every beast of the
earth, on every bird of the air, on all that move in the earth, on all fish of
the seaÓ (Genesis 9:2, paraphrased).
What does that say about manÕs dominion? It says
the animals react differently in this civilization than they did apparently
before: they are given, ŅInto your hand, every moving thing that lives shall be
food for you; I have given you all things, even as green herbs, and you shall
not eat flesh with its life; that is its blood. Surely, for your life blood I
will demand the reckoning from the hand of every beast I will require it; from
the hand of man; from the hand of every manÕs brother I will require the life
of man. Whoever sheds manÕs blood, by man his blood shall be shedÓ (Genesis 9:2–6,
paraphrased).
There are some things about this passage that I
want to explore by way of implication, but before I do that, thereÕs a slide I
want to show you. This is slide number 34, and unfortunately I did not put this
one on the handout. This is the latest research, just published within the last
couple of months, from the Creationist Geneticist working with the Institute
for Creation Research (www.icr.org).
What they did is they went back into this
enormous DNA base of the worldÕs population, and they wanted to ask the question
that if we trace the accumulated changes in the DNA from different people
groups and we go back in time, what do we find by way of commonness?
For example, we have two lines that converge in
the sense that as we go back in time there is a certain place where they have
all in common and that tells us descent. The interesting thing is when they did
a computer analysis of the database, they found, lo and behold, three nodes:
one there; one there; and one there. All the people groups on the planet have
three convergence points.
How many sons did Noah have? Three É now the
boys, NoahÕs sons, all have their dadÕs DNA and their momÕs DNA, so what caused
this? The wives of the sons ... So hereÕs the latest stuff on DNA and what does
it show? Just what the Bible has been saying all along: the whole human race
came from three families—Japheth, Shem, and Ham.
That has implications, as I say, thereÕs no such
thing as racism in the Bible. WeÕre not different races—we are different tribes.
So all this jazz about racism, and this is the buzzword on campuses, if you donÕt
like somebody you call them a racist—just name-calling. We learned in
fourth grade not to name-call, but we still do it on the college campus. So we
have the idea of racism, and itÕs baloney; thereÕs only one race, and itÕs the
human race because we all have the genes of Adam and Eve.
What we have though are tribes that are
different. Shem, Ham, and Japheth had a certain tribal influence on human
history. If you want to explore this, thereÕs a book, NoahÕs Three Sons:
Human History in Three Dimension, written years ago by a Canadian whoÕs
dead now, [Arthur C.] Custance. ItÕs an interesting book because he points out
that every major invention in history, every major basic invention comes from
the sons of Ham.
He also points out that monotheistic religion
only comes from the sons of Shem: Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. Why is that?
Because somehow this tribe, this great Shemitic tribe, has Arabic and Hebrew;
language which is very conservative with times. So God designed that whole Shemite
tribe to have a very conservative language so that when He revealed Himself in
that tribe, they would be custodians of His revelation.
Then Japheth. Most of us come out of an Indo-European
background. We have, probably most of us here have, the genes that came out of
Japheth, and Japheth is interesting because the Bible says that Japheth will, Ņdwell
in the tents of Shem,Ó (Genesis 9:27). ItÕs interesting that Western
civilization, a Japhetic product, is rooted on biblical ideas. ThatÕs why itÕs
so hated on the college campus today. ItÕs not that Western civilization, white
Western civilization that theyÕre against—theyÕre against the Christian
influence in white Western civilization.
So no racism is allowed in the Scripture. We all
got off of the same boat. The difference is that we have these tribes. But whatÕs
fascinating is this biblical story of Noah, his three sons, and his three
daughters-in-law. HereÕs what an objective computer analysis shows of human DNA.
So itÕs once again, if we would just trust the Word of God and go about our
scientific research, we will discover these kinds of things. ThatÕs an example
of a recent thing that supports the Scripture.
One of the things that we notice in here at the
end of this section that we just got through reading is the diet of man changes
from a vegetarian to an omnivore diet—the killing of animals. But look
carefully at what He says. Look where He says, ŅBut you shall not eat the flesh
with its life, that is the blood.Ó The Jewish Orthodox people still do this to this
day and that is when you kill an animal for food, thereÕs almost like a
ceremonial procedure of draining that animalÕs blood.
I believe that God put that in there so that in
our civilization from Noah on, we would be conscious that when we kill an
animal for food, a life has been shed that we may live. God doesnÕt want us to
treat the animals that we kill for food casually. They have life, and the
Hebrew says they have nephesh. We are taking life in order that we may
eat.
I had an encounter with someone that was a
former Muslim. He was in Lebanon, and he was telling me one time that after he
became a Christian he couldnÕt get hold of the sacrificial death of Jesus on
the Cross. He believed it, that but it didnÕt strike him as to what was going
on. Why is Christianity so centered on the Cross of the Lord Jesus Christ? And
then one day he was eating a hamburger at McDonaldÕs in Beirut, Lebanon, and it
dawned on him. Of course, this was the first time I had ever heard of theology
over a hamburger, but the point that he made was that an animal died that he could
eat; an animal died that he can live.
Ever since I had that conversation with him I
wondered if one of the reasons, besides health reasons, one of the reasons for
this ceremony in here: ŅYou shall not eat the flesh with its life,Ó is just a
little point reminder that when we eat, and of course we donÕt kill animals, theyÕre
killed for us by butchers, and so we donÕt get involved in the killing, we just
eat the meat. But when we do eat the meat, we ought to think about the fact
that an animal has died that we may survive—that we may live—that we
get the protein.
So the other thing to notice in this passage by
way of implication is: ŅBy every hand of every manÕs brother I will require the
life of manÓ (Genesis 9:5). ThereÕs the value of human life. Capital punishment
is mentioned here: Ņwhoever sheds manÕs blood, by man his blood shall be shed.Ó
That is recognition of the value of human life. It is ironic that we have today,
all through Europe—you canÕt be in NATO if you believe in capital
punishment.
You have to get rid of capital punishment; that
is why Turkey is having a problem, because they wanted to bring back capital
punishment after the coup happened last month or two months ago. So the issue
now is there is an argument against capital punishment thatÕs valid. And that
is our judicial system is so screwed up we donÕt know whether a person is guilty
or not. We have cases where people have been in prison for life and all of a
sudden a DNA test comes out [and shows that] they werenÕt the guy; somebody
else killed the person.
So in the Bible, interestingly, though capital
punishment was authorized, it was probably very infrequently administered, and
hereÕs why: the rules of evidence in the Mosaic Law code. Before somebody can
be convicted of murder you had to have two eyewitnesses to the crime—two
or three witnesses. Why? To avoid violation of the Ninth Commandment of perjury.
You had to have coherent witnesses.
The problem is that in our country capital
punishment was authorized in cases where circumstantial evidence was used. That
would never have happened in Israel. You had to have eyewitnesses, and, of
course, thatÕs infrequent. The point is that God says capital punishment is
what I would like, but you guys arenÕt always able to do it right so I have
strict rules of evidence to control it.
The idea here is that capital punishment is not
destruction of human life. It is precisely the opposite. Capital punishment is given to commemorate the value of
the victim that nobodyÕs worried about. A thing like [the recent events in] Baltimore
in the Old Testament; any city that would allow the murder, like Chicago and
Baltimore. Do you know what God says about cities like that? He says that the
blood cries out from the streets at Me for the death of the people that you are
killing on your streets. When you read the Old Testament, thatÕs what God says.
ThatÕs His heart, and He goes back to these kinds of passages.
ThereÕs one thing more I want to say about
eating animals thatÕs kind of interesting: You saw in Genesis 9 this
restriction that you canÕt eat the meat unless you first have allowed the blood
drain out of it. ThereÕs only one case in the Bible where you have to eat the
meat with the blood: John 6:55–56 when Jesus says [paraphrased], ŅMy
flesh is food indeed, My blood is drink indeed; he who eats My flesh and drinks
My blood dwells in Me.Ó
There HeÕs taking the metaphor of the Old
Testament and He modifies it because now itÕs both His flesh and His blood commemorated in communion, not
literally, but commemorated, and this is our salvation. So, this whole idea,
and see how interwoven the Scriptures are, here we go back 2,000 years or more,
and God is having this restriction about donÕt eat an animal until first you
drain the blood so that you will be conscious of what an animal has given for
you.
Now we come to the New Testament, and Jesus
speaks of His life given for you and for me, and He says, ŅYou have it all. I
have given all My life to you.Ó ThereÕs no hesitancy. Alright, so thatÕs the
background of this—of the covenant—the contract.
LetÕs go to one other event in this time. LetÕs
turn to Genesis 11. In Genesis 9 we have the establishment, in theory, of the
government and civil power. Think of the symbol that is used for civil power in
the Bible—Old Testament and New Testament—whatÕs the symbol? You
see it over and over. In Romans, whatÕs the symbol that Paul writes about when he
wants to designate civil authority? The sword. The sword is a lethal weapon. The
sword was what the angels used to stop people from going into the sacred space
of Eden.
So the sword is the power, and whatÕs amusing is
that during a debate done years ago by Gordon Clark and a pacifist, a Mennonite
pacifist, the Mennonite pacifist was trying to interpret Romans 13 so that the
sword was allegorical. So Gordon Clark, a very witty man, when it was his turn
to respond to that said, ŅWell, IÕm so glad to know that the sword in Romans 13
is metaphorical. That must mean that the taxes in Romans 13 are also metaphorical.Ó
The
point is that civil government, and this is another fundamental debate weÕre
having in our society, marriage and civil government are considered in the
Bible to be divine institutions. They are not
social constructs. The whole argument over same-sex marriage presupposes that
marriage is not a divine institution. It presupposes that a court can redefine
marriage any way the court sees fit to define marriage. Wrong. That would be
like saying the court has just decreed that 2+2 is now 5 because we want to
soften it for people who have a D– grade in arithmetic.
We change the definitions, but weÕre changing
definitions we have no business changing the definition of, because marriage is
structured on how we are designed. Civil power in the Bible is execution. ThatÕs
why the sword is the symbol of civil power—that was given to the human
race, reluctantly, to preserve it.
So we have an issue here: what is the function
of civil power in the Bible? This is a fundamental question. Every political
issue funnels from whatever answer you give to this question. What is the
function of civil power and the power to take life? The function in the
Scriptures is that civil power is there to preserve society against its self-destruction.
Civil power is to judge some forms of behavior.
Civil power canÕt judge your heart. ThereÕs no
judge on Earth can judge your heart. All a judge and a jury can do is deal with
overt behavior patterns, and only certain overt behavior patterns. So the power
of civil government is constricted to restraining certain behaviors so that we
have consequences for evil decisions. ThatÕs the limit.
Now we come to Genesis 11. This happened after
civil government was established. Watch what happens, and itÕs still going on
today. Genesis 11:1–7: ŅNow the whole earth had one language, and one
speech. And it came to pass, as they journeyed from the east, they found a plain
in the land of Shinar; and dwelt there.Ó
Notice the first verse: they were all one
language. This is very profound because with all due credit to the post-modernist
today, they at least recognize that language forms a social group.
Rosaria Butterfield says, as an English
professor, ŅWe use words, but words use us.Ó When we employ words in our
vocabulary, we are importing into that conversation all kinds of backgrounds
and nuances from those words.Ó
ThatÕs why we were talking about the missionary
situation in Laos: what noun do they use for ŅGodÓ? Wycliffe Bible translators
had big argument over what to do when they translate the Bible into Arabic. What
is the noun for God? If we use the word ŅAllahÓ, which is the common Arabic
word for God, now weÕve got confusion in the people reading the Bible in Arabic,
ŅOh, well thatÕs the same [God] as Islam.Ó No it isnÕt. ThereÕs a triune God
here.
See the struggle of a translator? Language is so
important and translators struggle with this, trying to figure out how to
translate the message of the Word of God over into another heart language. ItÕs
not an easy thing to do. Language is that important. ŅThen,Ó these people said,
they said together, Ņcome let us make bricks.Ó Watch what theyÕre saying here,
watch what theyÕre saying. This is a society, a social group, whether
represented by the leadership or not. This is a consensus of what a society
should do. What is the society deciding they want to do?
Read carefully the next few verses: ŅThey said
to one another;Ó so thereÕs the social conversation. ŅCome let us make bricks
and bake them thoroughly. They had brick for stone; they had asphalt or mortar;
and they said come let us build ourselves a city and a tower whose top is in
the heavens. Let us make a name for ourselves lest;Ó purpose clause. Purpose clause: Ņlest we be scattered abroad
over the face of the whole earth.Ó
What did God say in Genesis 9 to do? Fill the
earth. What does this society say theyÕre not
going to do? Fill the earth. They might have had reasons—the earth and climate
mightÕve been vicious as they were restored from the Flood. They mightÕve been
scared. We donÕt know what the circumstances were, but they decided they were
not going to do GodÕs will. They were not going to spread across the earth.
ThereÕs a time problem here, and itÕs interesting.
ItÕs just like the two animals coming into the ark. We realize now it was DNA
selection going on. Now we realize that there was an ice age right after the Flood,
when you had all the water on the planet. And a lot of the water on the planet
turned into the ice on the land and what happened to the ocean levels? They
dropped probably by 200 or 300 feet. What do dropping ocean levels do to [the
ability to] migrate from Asia to America? It creates a land bridge.
The point here is that God told them to expand;
do it now while youÕve got the sea level low so you can fulfill My mandate. ŅWell,
we donÕt want to do it now.Ó ŅWell if you donÕt do it now, the North American and
South American continents arenÕt going to be populated, so I want you to do it
now.Ó But they donÕt want to do it now. Interestingly they also say, come let
us build a tower, build a project. TheyÕve got a building project.
Notice too that this is high technology, and this
is another thing we want to understand about trends in history. Just because a
society has advanced technology does not mean that they are morally advanced.
You can have technological innovation and moral degradation simultaneously. You
can have primitive societies that are quite ethical and quite moral too. They
are not correlated.
But then embedded in this, after you see the
clause: a tower whose top is in the heavens, whatÕs the next clause? Besides
making a city and a tower, what next? TheyÕre going to make a what? ŅA name for
ourselves.Ó Gee, doesnÕt that sound like identity problem?
We are going to define our identity and you know
why thatÕs so important? This is Genesis 11. What happens in Genesis 12? When
God speaks to Abraham, He blesses Abraham and He says, ŅI will make your what great? I will make your name great.Ó So right in the next
chapter, God intervenes and He says, ŅAbraham I am going to give you an
identity. I am the sovereign. I define existence. I define your identity.Ó
Well here the human race wants, ŅWe will make an
identity for ourselves.Ó See whatÕs going on here? Babel is an extremely
important thing, and I regret that when I did the original Framework series I
did not devote enough time to Genesis 11. It is a profound moment.
Now the next sentence: ŅBut the Lord came down
to see the city and the tower which the sons of men built;Ó and thereÕs a
sarcasm here, did you detect it? ŅWeÕre
going to build all the way to heaven,Ó and God has to come down to see it. See thereÕs a humor in this text: the LORD came
down to see the city and the tower which the sons of men built.
This is the picture, people, of our own
arrogance, when we think weÕre so great. We have all this arrogant attitude and
God says, ŅOh yeah? Let Me get down there real low so I can see what youÕve done for Me.Ó And the Lord said,
ŅIndeed, the people are one; they have one language and so on, and so let Us
come down and we will confuse their language.Ó Now He linguistically enforces
tribes. So you have the tribal division, which is genetic, and then to make
sure the tribes get out, He confuses the language, so that forces them to go
out.
Now we come to the theories of government. There
are two questions here. What is civil government? Civil government is a divine
institution that God established. It is not a social construct that man
established—fundamental difference. That means things like in England,
the Divine Right of Kings; kings of England thought they were so great that
they could control the religious beliefs of England.
And we had the fight that went on from the Scots,
who were all Presbyterians, and that made a covenant: ŅWe defy the English. We
defy the king telling us that we have to be Anglicans. We are not Anglicans. WeÕre
Presbyterians.Ó That battle between the Presbyterians of Scotland and the
Anglicans of England set in motion the literature that was used by our Founding
Fathers.
One of the pieces of literature I brought here
years ago: Lex Rex. I got it out of Harvard University. I had them copy
it for me. Lex Rex was written to justify the Presbyterian defiance of
the kings of England. They defied the king because they said, ŅYou do not have unlimited rights as king. You
are limited.Ó They use Deuteronomy 17, by the way, as their proof text.
There are other cases. There are the pharaohs of
Egypt. Remember in past times that IÕve been here and I showed you the Egyptian
pillars and their art, and thereÕs PharaohÕs name right down the pillar? And
associated with that are the scepters between Earth, at the bottom of the
pillar, and Heaven, the artist put up at the top. And then in between thereÕs
PharaohÕs name. What does that tell you about the theology of ancient Egypt?
That ŅI am the Pharaoh. I am the mediator between Heaven and Earth.Ó
ThatÕs the picture of civil government after Babel.
Babel confused the whole theory of civil government. Civil government, given
the power of death, in the hands of corruptible people, is a very dangerous
combination. ThatÕs why people who know the Word of God have always believed in
limited government. Why? Because weÕre so great? No, because we believe in the corruptibility
of people because we live in a depraved, abnormal world and we are not going to
invest the power of life and death to an arbitrary group of people. That is
asking for trouble and thatÕs why unlimited versus limited government is
grounded on the Scripture, both scripturally and historically.
We come now to a biblical text where the Jews
had to deal with this. LetÕs turn to the other political text which is 1 Samuel
8. In 1 Samuel 8, youÕve been through this, IÕm sure that Larry and Steve have
taught it, but I just want to go through this quickly. 1 Samuel 8:1–3: ŅAnd
it came to pass, when Samuel was old, that he made his sons judges over Israel.
Now the name of his firstborn ÉÓ They go into the family names. ŅÉ and his sons
walked not in his ways, but turned aside.Ó
Then 1 Samuel 8:4: ŅAll the elders of Israel
gathered together, and came to Samuel at Ramah, and said unto him, ŌLook youÕre
old, your sons do not walk in your waysÕ Ó. What do they propose? Let us have a
king like all the other nations. Now they just had a social collapse in their
society. ThatÕs the whole story of the book of Judges: every man did what was
right in his own eyes—the societyÕs a mess, their economy is a mess, their
families are a mess, the kids arenÕt following their parents, the men havenÕt
taken responsible leadership, so they have to have Deborah and the women take
over leadership.
The women are the ones that kill the bad guys,
and women are the ones leading the military thing. So you have a complete
inversion of responsibility. Men are just sitting around letting the women do
everything. Then we have the economy destroyed and so the whole thing is in a
mess.
Now weÕve made a bad decision socially, and weÕre
experiencing the bad consequences. So now in a brilliant move weÕre going to make
another stupid decision so we can increase the bad consequences, by having a
king like all the other nations. He just told you what the pharaohs were like. You
want another king like that?
Who was the king? Well letÕs look at the text: ŅThe thing
displeased Samuel, so Samuel prayedÓ; thank God Samuel prayed! I saw a sign one
time: ASAPÉ as soon as possible. Well a Christian had modified ASAPÉ Always Stop
And Pray. I think thatÕs a neat slogan.
Samuel prayed to the Lord. He didnÕt panic. He
decided, ŅThis thing smells; this is another bad decision on top of a previous
bad decision, and I want to talk to the Lord about it.Ó So the Lord said to
Samuel, and hereÕs the poignant theology of what went wrong; here is GodÕs
analysis of why a society destroyed itself. Why did this society that had so
much potential wind up prostrate?
Conquered militarily. Destroyed economically. Families
going to pot. The whole educational establishment lost their history. What went
wrong with this? HereÕs the answer: ŅThe Lord said to Samuel, ŌGo ahead, heed
the voice of the people and all they say to you, for they have not rejected you
Samuel, they have rejected Me.Õ Ó See? ItÕs the same problem. They rejected
what God told them.
God was their King. They said that [He] should
not reign over them. They had a king. Can you name another nation on earth,
ever in all of human history that had God as king? This is the only nation that
had God as king and look how they screwed up. Do you know what this is telling
us? You canÕt get millennial conditions unless you have an incorruptible civil
government.
How are you going to get an
incorruptible civil government? Only when you have resurrected people running
it. ThatÕs why the Millennium cannot come on Earth until Jesus returns in His
resurrection body with the Church and the resurrected believers become the
administration of the Millennial Kingdom. Now
we can have millennial conditions because weÕve got an incorruptible É itÕs not
necessarily more brilliant, itÕs not an intellectual problem, itÕs an ethical
problem of corruption.
So in 1 Samuel 8:11–17 thereÕs a famous
passage about whatÕs going to happen, and quickly summarizing it: it is one big
bureaucratic mess, and the kingÕs going to do this. HeÕs going to take captains
over thousands. HeÕs going to plow his ground. Notice all the personal pronouns
here on all these nouns—his
ground, his harvest, his weapons, for his chariots. HeÕs going to take your daughters. HeÕll take the
best of your fields, the best of your vineyards, your olive groves—the
confiscation of private property, as every tyrannical government does. He will
take one tenth of your grain. Boy, wouldnÕt it be nice if we only had [to give]
one tenth?
He will take your male servants, female servants,
and you [conclusion] will be his slaves. ThatÕs the story of unlimited
government when you combine two lethal things: the power of capital punishment
and lethal force, and you combine that with corruptible people, you will always
get tyranny. Thank God, the Founding Fathers in the Constitution put checks and
balances. Of course, nobody pays attention to the Constitution anymore, but the
point is it was put in there.
Well letÕs move on, and we see whatÕs happened.
Babelesque thinking existed and still does today. So now we want to specialize
in one area, and that is the idea of Ņprogressivism.Ó ThatÕs the buzzword in
the 20th century. ŅOh, weÕre progressive;Ó yeah, notice what weÕre doing. To
show you, however, that the elite—remember I started this whole lesson by
quoting Edenhofer—remember what he said about climate change? This is not
about climate change; this is about global redistribution of wealth. This is
about globalism—not about climate change.
Now interestingly, if we turn to slide 35. HereÕs
a painting in 1563, of the Tower of Babel—itÕs a very famous painting. When
the European elite wanted to create the first preliminary world parliament, they
went back to this painting in 1563 and designed the parliament of the European
Union. Those architects knew exactly what they were saying; they went back,
they researched the painting, and they asked themselves, how can we construct
the parliament of Europe so it depicts the Tower of Babel? [Slide 36]
And you say why on earth would they pick the
Tower of Babel as the architectural model for the European parliament building?
Simple: ŅWe are going to do what Babel stopped doing. We are going to complete
this vision.Ó This is why Isaiah 2:4 is on the UN building in New York City—the
guys who put it on there were borrowing from the Scriptures.
So just to make sure that we know what they were
doing, look at the next slide—slide 37. Outside one of the European
buildings (this is not the same building), hereÕs a statue, a modernist statue;
and itÕs hard to see from this angle, I couldnÕt get a good picture, but
obviously thereÕs a horse here—a modern version of a horse? On the horse
is a naked woman, and sheÕs riding the horse. Now does anybody know the Bible in
the book of Revelation? You know what theyÕre imitating? The harlot of
Revelation; these artists spent millions of dollars doing this. TheyÕre not
fools, theyÕre smart people. What theyÕre arguing for is, ŅWe are defying this!
We will finish what Babel ended. And we will do, and you people that are
worried about being Christians; worried about the harlot. We are the harlot and
we are going to take over the world!Ó
These are well-defined things, and itÕs
interesting that theyÕre using biblical imagery to communicate. TheyÕre not
unintelligent people. These are well-read artists and architects. But it shows
you that the idea of Babel is not dead, people. ItÕs just as alive as it has
ever been.
LetÕs go further: Where did the idea progress? I
already told you about the role of covenants. Outside of the Bible, there is no
such picture of progress in history. All paganism was cycles. But here we have Albright,
the father of American biblical archaeology. What does he say? Only the Hebrews
had the idea of a contractual relationship.
Now we define Jewish history by a series of
contracts. [Slide 38] See why Jews make good business people? Abraham
bargaining with God over Sodom and Gomorrah, ŅOh, just a little bit less, a
little bit less.Ó ItÕs very humorous when you think about that passage.
Combine what Albright says with what Kaufmann
says [slide 39]—heÕs looking at the effects of the contract over time.
Remember what we said? WhatÕs true of a contract? ItÕs a monitor of subsequent
behavior. Are we conforming to the contract, or are we not conforming to the
contract?
Kaufmann says, ŅWhat makes the history of
Israelite prophecy sui generis is the
succession of apostles of God that come to the people through the ages.Ó Such a
line of apostle-prophets is what in paganism? ItÕs unknown. That 66-book
library, which you are holding in your lap this morning, is the only book, the
only history, of a divine contract ever in the history of humanity. ŅThe pagan
prophet incorporated a unique, self-contained divine power; and there its ŌmissionÕ
ended with him.Ó
The idea of progress was stolen from the Bible. It
did not come from paganism. What happened in the beginning of the 20th
century is that you had a number of thinkers who said, remember the Depression
at the end of 1900, with Bertrand Russell talking about bad things. They had to
feel good, so they had to have this idea of progress, and of course of current
20 th century is a great progress.
More Christians were killed in the 20th
century than in the 19 centuries before. We have 30 million people murdered by
atheist communism. Remember that one by the way, when somebody tells you that
religion is the cause of all the problems. Tell that to the Russians who died
under an atheist regime. We have these deaths—massive numbers—the
20th century is a mess.
So we have all of this and we now go to one of
the thinkers. Here is how progressivism got started politically in our country.
[Slide 40] HereÕs Walter Rauschenbusch; he was one of the social gospel guys. Notice
the book: A Theology for, what? A Theology for the Social Gospel.
This is the first thing where we are going to discard—the gospel—and
weÕre going to talk about human welfare and social development—progressivism.
He says, ŅWe need a restoration of the millennial hope which the Catholic
Church dropped out of eschatology. It was crude in its form but wholly right in
its substance É We hope for such an order for humanity as we hope for heaven for
ourselves.Ó
ThatÕs the thinking that the artists and the
architects of the UN building [had about] why you put Isaiah 2:4 on the UN
building. HeÕs borrowing the idea of progress and the ultimate kingdom, because
our hearts cry out for that. You can understand this. We want a society without
war. We want a society at peace. We want a society thatÕs prosperous—thereÕs
nothing wrong with wanting this.
The problem is how you get there. You canÕt get
there if you have a corruptible society. He wanted to get the idea of the Millennial Kingdom, but he
wanted to subtract the gospel and subtract the way we get there by getting there
through resurrection [i.e., a resurrected global administration that would
therefore be incorruptible].
This has had implications for today, and the
next slide, slide 41, we have the University of Buffalo secular sociologist,
[Ernest] Sternberg. What Sternberg is arguing here is that thereÕs something
going on globally. We all feel that. But I think this man at the University of Buffalo
puts it well: ŅWe are in the midst of the worldwide rise of a non-religious
chiliastic movement.Ó
For those of you might not know what ŅchiliasticÓ
is, heÕs talking about the Millennium—one thousand years. HereÕs this
millennial idea. Where did it come from? Pagans? No, it came from the Bible. ŅWe
are in the midst of the worldwide rise of a non-religious chiliastic movement,
announcing global human renewal and predicting planetary catastrophe as its
woeful alternative É [This myth says] that it is possible now, amid present
corruption and degradation to build a glorious New Rome.Ó ThatÕs what those
architects that built those buildings did.
So I hope IÕve shown from Sternberg and others,
that the idea of Babel that we just read in Genesis 11, combined with 1 Samuel
8, tells you what is going on and gives you insight as Christians. Your non-Christian
neighbor will not have this insight because he doesnÕt hold the 66-book library
you do. But you understand this now. You understand the motive going on of
trying to create a global millennial world government to bring peace and
economic prosperity on earth. It came from the Bible. It comes from our hearts.
We want that, but itÕs na•ve because it denies what GodÕs Word says. This canÕt
come. It cannot come to a corrupt society.
So we conclude by just a review again. Every
time we get into these things we are suppressing GodÕs attributes. We are doing
spiritual damage to our hearts. The mold suppresses. When we deny that nature
is abnormal, that humans are not fallen—do you realize that one of the
founders of modern public education in the United States, Horace Mann, believed
in the perfectibility of children.
Of course, every mom here knows about the
perfectibility of children, but he believed in the perfectibility of children
and that these little monsters donÕt have sin natures. I donÕt know whether he
ever had children of his own. I donÕt know Horace MannÕs personal life, but
whatever it was, somehow he lost out and he believed in the perfectibility of
man.
This is alive and well today—that humans
are perfectible. ŅWe the elite will tell you how to be perfect.Ó We go on and
youÕve seen these slides [#42–44] before—manÕs redemption and so
on.
Years ago an artist made this for me [slide 45].
I think this so symbolizes our problem: here is the fact that I do not want GodÕs
Word affecting how I think. I am going to do it myself—just like Babel: ŅI
will create a name and identity for myself, independent of God.Ó
Folks, thatÕs the issue: are we going to submit
to the Word of God or are we going to do it ourselves? You can see the social
damage that is happening all around us now from a society that is bound and
determined that it is going to do this independently of God. ItÕs an idea thatÕs
not new, itÕs an idea that goes back to Eden.
But itÕs taking a certain form in our day, and a
very dangerous form in the sense that it is centered on the millennial vision
of the Bible but jerked away from, ripped away from, the biblical context—very
dangerous indeed.
What does John the Apostle say, ŅWho is greater
than the world? He that is in us.Ó The Holy Spirit is greater, and our God is
the One that calls the shots.
If you feel depressed as you think about this, please
donÕt feel depressed. Remember that your Savior, the Lord Jesus Christ, rose
from the dead and then He did something else, didnÕt He? What did He do forty
days after He rose from the dead? He ascended into Heaven, and where is He in Heaven?
The Bible in Ephesians and other passages says He rose far above all
principality and power that is named in this age or any age to come. Our Lord
and Savior sits at the FatherÕs right hand, and you and I have access to Him 24/7.
This is better than any cell phone. You never
get out of range. You donÕt pay a monthly fee. You can pray to Him at the spur
of the moment. And the other thing is you can pray about conditions that are
located anywhere on earth. You can pray for a missionary 8,000 miles away
instantly. You may not have good cell phone connections and Skype may not work,
but youÕve got prayer.
ŅFather, we thank You so much for the access
that we do have. Thank You for being greater than he that is in the world. Thank
You for being our Savior, and thank You for giving us the riches of grace in
Jesus Christ, in whose name we pray, Amen.Ó