Biblical Framework
Charles Clough
Lesson 52
We’re going to review the Mt. Sinai event,
and as a little memory journal keep in mind that all of these events that we
study are pictures of great truths of Scripture, you’ll be ahead of 90% of
believers just to know these events, and to be able to think through what God
did in each of these events, which is basically what the theology is, what
those doctrines are, they’re just great truths that God wants us to know about
Himself, His works and His promises.
These events are where He showed Himself. The key thing to keep in mind is that this is not private
religious opinion, this is public global revelation. Paganism has as its agenda always, everywhere, to suppress
this. We’re living in a very dark and
bleak world, which has an aim behind it; things aren’t neutral out there. We’re living in enemy territory and we’re
naïve and stupid if we don’t become aware of that. We’re in a war, and this
stuff is flying all around us, and the center of action is to make these events
disappear from human memory, to suppress them, to distort them. There are
different techniques that we’ve studied, the creation, the fall and the flood,
the covenant; the pagan basis wants to completely block that history out.
The call of Abraham, the Exodus and Mt. Sinai
represent another kind of threat to the pagan mind because these events stress
God’s interference in history. The fact
that God has to interfere means that history is abnormal because it’s fallen,
therefore history is not normative and you can’t do statistical studies and
Gallop poles, getting a meaning of the distribution of the statistical sample
that you’ve done and call that being normal. That mean is nothing but a normal of
the abnormal. So we have to think that
through, and that has implications, it has all kinds of implications.
We’re going to go through this event again,
we looked at pictures, surveyed the terrain, skimmed the text, and on page 63 I
showed you the parallels between the Mosaic Law Code is formatted over against
the treaties that were made in the Ancient Near East. These treaties were documents that defined a relationship between
kings, so the idea was that you had a great king, who had subdued a lesser king
or entered into some sort of a relationship with him, and this king defined the
relationship and the relationship was in this covenant, or what we call a
treaty, a treaty-covenant. The covenant
is a yardstick of behavior; it outlines and is a standard of how both parties
of that covenant ought to behave. Why
do we mention this? Because from this
point forward we want to stress that the way the Bible speaks of law is not the
way society speaks of law, and the pagan mind and the Christian mind are at
odds over what law is all about. We
want to think this through because the New Testament is basically rules and
regulations also, and society is filled with laws too. So you never get away from law.
We went through each of these six, we showed
you there are functions to each one of these six parts, and then we conclude on
the top of page 64 that the Sinai legislation in defining this relationship
parallels the treaty covenants, because Yahweh, God, has a relationship with
the tribes. That’s the analogy. And the point is that there’s a personal
relationship that exists here.
Therefore, the content of the law has personal address in it. Do this.
Most law codes aren’t that at all. If you look at most law codes, in
fact, part of the Mosaic Law Code, you see if this-then this, if so and so does
this, then this is what happens, if so and so does that, then this is what
happens, etc. It’s all if-then,
if-then, if-then, that’s the format. But woven into that in the Scriptures
Jehovah says I tell you I want you to circumcise your hearts. I say to you that you will come before Me
and worship Me. You will bring your
sacrifices before Me. There’s a personal conversation going on mixed in with
the “if-then’s.” So why do we stress
this? Because the law is defined in terms of a personal relationship and that
isn’t so in just a bare naked law code.
We’re going to run with this a little tonight because there’s a certain
implication that falls out of this whole point, there’s a fundamental assumption. You want to asterisk that paragraph where it
says “it is more of treaty that defines a relationship between Jehovah or
Yahweh and His Son,” remember the nation is referred to as “my son,” Exodus 4,
“Out of Egypt have I called my son,” now we know that the greater fulfillment
is in Christ. What’s happening is that
Jehovah reigns and it’s the nature of a personal relationship, and the nature
of the personal relationship has another feature to it.
Let’s analyze this just a little so we get
background for this law code, because it’s coming and we want to make sure we
understand what law is. Jehovah is
God. Here we have Jehovah and man, the
Creator/creature. Jehovah has certain
attributes, He is sovereign, He is holy, He is omniscient, He is loving, He’s
omnipresent, He’s omnipotent, He’s immutable, He’s eternal. God has those attributes. Those are absolute characteristics. Man is made in God’s image as a theomorph,
and he has analogs to those attributes.
We complete the box because in man’s case he’s finite; in God’s case we
leave the box open to indicate He’s infinite and can’t be bounded by human
discourse. What’s the analogy in man’s
life to sovereignty? What faculty do we have that corresponds to God’s
sovereignty? Choice or will. What faculty corresponds to God’s holy
character, what is it that’s sort of a receiver that’s tuned to that in every
man’s heart? Conscience, so man has a
conscience. What corresponds in man’s
heart to God’s omniscience? Our desire to know and think, the human knowledge
base. Love corresponds to God’s
love. This is the spiritual nature and
the personal nature of man.
Here’s the problem. If God reveals the law, it’s coming out of this character and
it’s talking to that character. That’s
the law in Scripture. God is the
law-giver at Mt. Sinai. If God is the
law-giver, then the law expresses His holiness, expresses His knowledge of all
things, and is also given with the attribute of love. Law isn’t given out of hatred.
The law was given out of genuine love, because it’s the constitution of
the kingdom of God. What happens if man
tries to mimic this relationship? If
man tries to rule over man, and create some sort of quote “law,” what is the
difference between this product and this product? That’s the heart of the issue here. If God is the One who is giving the law, the law comes out of
omniscience, absolute holiness, sovereignty, power, love and immutability as
the Creator, if man tries to make law what are his capacities? They’re
finite. In particular let’s look at
knowledge. How can man design
legislation that is wise? What is the weakness that all men have when it comes
to try to design a piece of legislation?
Limited knowledge.
Let me give you an example. Congress and the state legislatures in this
country have been under pressure from Audubon Society, Green Peace, Sierra Club
and everybody else, to enact environmental regulations. Some of that’s good, we have neglected the
environment. But like everything else
it becomes a sacred crusade, it becomes extremist, and one of the great
examples of this is that we’re seeing the Congress legislate something called
the Clean Air Act, which says that every community will meet a certain level of
the ozone content, etc. and the various products that come out of that, and if
you as a community don’t meet those Clean Air Act standards, we are going to
penalize. And here’s how we’re going to
penalize the whole community? We’re
going to restrict the commuting miles and time that you have in your cars. This is one penal thing that can happen, we
will say that we have to reduce commuting man hours by 20% because we’re going
to reduce the noxious pollutants, noxious gases, etc. and that’s what we’ve
decided to do because automobiles are the biggest thing of that, etc.
What was obviously missing from this
brilliant piece of legislation was the fact that you can’t prove if you have
ozone in Baltimore that it came from Baltimore. But the penalties are applied to a municipality. Nobody thought of the fact that there’s
something called wind that blows from point A to point B. So how do you prove that ozone in Baltimore
came from Baltimore? You can’t. And we were involved in some studies, some
of the power companies got together, put a lot of money in a big bucket, did a
lot of research, I was involved in it for two years, and what we found out was
that every night in the summertime when certain things are right, there’s a
wind that starts about 100 meters above the ground, it’s about 20-30 miles an
hour, and what it’s doing, it’s just scouring out all the pollution from
Washington, Virginia, sweeping along the seaboard all the way up to
Massachusetts. Excuse me, tell me which
community is to blame for it? It’s the
whole region. That’s my favorite example
of a group of lawyers who write this stuff before they know what it is they’re
writing. This goes on and on and on.
Once we have man generating law, we’re in a
dangerous position because he is stupid.
And in the Bible, God and God alone generates law. Think about this, from the day we were in 5th
or 6th grade we learned there were three functions of government,
the executive, the judiciary and the legislative. In Israel, who was the executive, later on who was the one person
who really led the country? The king,
before him the elders, remember the elders of Israel, that’s the executive
branch. You read passage after passage
in the Old Testament, it talks about how to hold courts, laws of evidence,
penalties for crimes, what’s that addressed to? The courts, that’s the judiciary. Question—where’s the legislative? Why, in this nation of Israel, do you have one-third of it
missing? Why is one-third of the
function of Israel’s government missing in the Bible? I don’t read anything about a Senate, the House of
Representatives, I don’t read anything about a Parliament, I don’t read
anything like that. Why is it
missing? The serious reader of
Scripture, if you’re going to read Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers and Deuteronomy,
and you think while you’re reading, you should say wait a minute, what’s the
analog to this function? Certainly they
functioned as a nation, where did the law come from? We know where it came from, it came from Mt. Sinai, there’s no
question about what the legislation was.
So it’s interesting, right off the bat, and it gets back to this way of
thinking about Scripture that I want to stress.
When you look at these events, take the
center of that event and squeeze it, just like an orange, to get all the juice
out of it. Think about this Mt. Sinai
event. Why did God choose to intervene
most prominently at the legislative level, and back off and let man do the
executive and judicial? There’s a
reason for that, and this is not to say that, obviously, Gentile nations
shouldn’t have bodies of legislation, but what is it to say? It is to say that when man makes his laws,
it would be kind of smart if he mimicked God’s laws. That’s the whole point that we’re making.
On page 64 I have three nouns there, values, ethics and law. I tie those three together. A lot of people say oh, wait a minute, those
are three different nouns and they mean three different things. That’s correct.
Values are things that people hold to, personal values, ethics, the study of
standards in society or what standards should be, and then law defines what has
been enacted. You could have beliefs,
couldn’t you, like this. In our society
here’s the problem. We have laws here,
and we have different people with different values, say this is one set of
values over here, values one, values two, values three, etc. these are values
of different groups that are all mixing together into the legislative branch of
government and we’re cranking out legislation trying to blend all that stuff
together. That’s the chaos in the law code,
and it’s going to happen as long as you have sinners who come from different
perspectives. That’s the doom of
autonomous man, man has chosen not to live in the kingdom of God, and therefore
we don’t enjoy… God didn’t make a constitution for the United States; we do not
enjoy a legislative branch direct from God.
We don’t have that; this is the problem that we have with our laws.
But what we want to see tonight is that the
values here are separate from the laws here, but in the Bible, the laws, the
values and the ethics all come together in the book of Exodus, Leviticus,
Numbers and Deuteronomy. Those four
books, after Genesis, link these three nouns together. It’s able to link those three nouns together
because God, who is the author of all three of them, knows what He’s
doing. And when He talks about law, and
now what we want to look at is this word, we’re going to concentrate primarily
on law tonight, the nature of law, because it is different if you look at it
from the Bible point of view vs. the pagan point of view. Just like we talked about biology, we talked
about geology, we talked about astronomy, and now we’re in the field of
law. I told you when we started this
that when we get done there isn’t one area that we haven’t deeply and
profoundly offended, because we’re going against everything that is taught in
each one of these fields. I’m sorry, I
didn’t write the Bible, I just read it.
We come now to the Biblical view of law.
We’ve already given the background, why God speaks and man listens. On page 63, “The Pagan View,” let me
summarize that, follow with me. “On a
Biblical basis, then, ethics, values, and law come from above the ‘provincial
and transient.’” Who said that, remember the words “the provincial and the
transient,” they came from a U.S. Supreme Court Justice who went to temporary
duty to Nuremberg Germany in 1945 to be one of the jurists at the Nuremberg
trials. What did he conclude when he
had to face the attorneys that were defending the Nazi’s? Here you had the line of the S.S. Corps,
Goebbels, for example, sitting there in the court room, and the attorneys that
defended the Nazi’s argued that you cannot prosecute Nazi’s because the Nazi’s
were simply following official policies. Weren’t they? Of course they were,
they made the policies, they were enforcing the policies. Did you kill Jews for the sake of Mother
Germany? Of course you did. You’ve got
to get rid of and genocidally remove all the scumbags from society, thought the
Germans.
So you get rid of Gypsies, handicapped
children, and Jews. That way you can
purge the nation and have a eugenics type purification of the country. Were they or were they not wrong by German
law? The answer is no, they could not
be convicted on the basis of German law.
So how do you convict them? To what standard do you hold them
responsible to if it’s not German law?
This is a tough question, this was a profound question and in 1945 the
only way the world could bring conviction to the S.S. people was to say above
Germany’s law there stands a higher law, and we will convict those men in terms
of that higher law. But that law wasn’t
written down, that law wasn’t the United States Constitution, that wasn’t the
laws of the British Parliament, that wasn’t Spanish or French law, or Italian
law.
What was this law? Where’s this law? Because
remember what Justice Jackson said was that if you convict on the basis of
these laws, these laws are all provincial and transient. Let’s think of those words. What did he mean when he said they’re
provincial? He used that adjective to
qualify German law as he would American law, English law, Spanish law, Italian
law, it’s all “provincial.” What does
he mean by provincial? Limited in
space, limited to a country. The
legislation by definition applies only to the country for which it was
reckoned, therefore it is provincial.
Then Justice Jackson qualified law by saying it is also
“transient.” What does he mean by
that? What did he mean that human
legislation is transient? What happens
to human legislation if you live more than ten years? It changes, we’ve got to do something to keep the whole legal
community in business, so you change the laws, and everybody has to reinterpret
everything. Human law is
transient. So it’s provincial and
transient. If it’s provincial and
transient, once you admit these, you defend the Nazi’s, don’t you, because
after 1933 Hitler changed the law, transient, sorry, that’s just the Tuesday’s
law, and I killed somebody on Tuesday, it’s okay; Wednesday we changed the law
and it’s wrong, but you can’t convict me if I murdered somebody on Tuesday and
that was the law on Tuesday and then I go out and I don’t kill someone on
Wednesday because Wednesday we’ve got a new law now. That’s stupid, we all smile at this, but this is the dilemma of
the non-Christian.
If we don’t have the Bible, see we’re all
used to, as Christians, say we’ve got to defend our faith and we’re the poor
people and these other guys got all the answers, their system seems so strong
and we’re just kind of plodding along by faith, we’re the weak ones. No-no! Get away from that, you’re the strong
ones. It’s the unbelieving people
trapped in darkness that are the real fools.
This is really foolish, because on a human basis all you can ever generate
is something that is provincial and transient.
And when you come to something like 1945 and the Nazi [can’t understand
word] you grope around trying to find something, so here all the great judges
of the world said gee, what are we going to do to convict these guys. We’ve got to grab at some transcendental
imaginary law; we all come out feeling in our hearts that it was wrong to kill
Jews, Gypsies and handicapped kids. We
feel that way, so by golly, put them in jail forever. You didn’t do that on the basis of law, you do that on the basis
of how you felt, but from the Christian point of view, what did we say was true
of man, every man, including the jurists that lined that trial, including all
the witnesses to the trial, what was in all of them we know Biblically that
corresponds to God’s holiness? Every
one of those people in that courtroom had a conscience. They all knew that it was wrong to do that,
and really so did the Nazi’s. And by convicting the Nazi’s of those atrocities,
they were affirming that all men have a conscience, and that all men deep down
in their heart know very well what is right and what is wrong.
Now we come to the pagan view of law. Let’s look at that for a moment. Read through this with me and then we’ll get
to where this leads us. We’ll discover something interesting out of this, and
we’re going to go to the New Testament for explanation. “The pagan mind of flesh began when Adam ate
of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, when he tried to become,” and
notice this, you might mark this, “when Adam ate of the tree of the knowledge
of good and evil,” he became, or attempted “to become his own moral
authority. Yet once the pagan mind has
suppressed consciousness of its derivative, created nature and the inherent authority
of God,” now here’s the key, “it is left in complete vanity when it tires to
build values, ethics, and law.”
That’s the dilemma of the non-Christian,
where does he get these. We know where
he gets them because of his conscience.
But in his view he’s only a pile of atoms and molecules, burped up from
a gas one day. Out of this come values,
ethics and law? I had to go to college
to get two advanced degrees to really learn that, and pay $50,000 in
tuition. So he is “left in complete
vanity when he tries to build values, ethics, and law. Man just cannot build absolute values on the
basis of his limited experience and reason. Even in innocence” now look at
this, “Even in innocence Adam needed God’s Word to interpret his environment
properly and know which trees to eat and which not to.” Didn’t God tell him there were certain trees
not to eat? If God told him that do you
suppose, and the doesn’t tell us, this is an exercise in imagination, what do
you think, do you think if God hadn’t told Adam and Eve not to eat that tree
over there that it would have been intuitive obvious whether or not to eat of
the tree over there? They’re in
innocence, no sin around.
Isn’t this remarkable, in a sinless
environment it is essential that God define things. Now if that’s true in a sinless environment, how much more is it
needful in a sinful environment, for God to define things, because now with my
eyes open as a sinless person, as an Adam before the fall, I can see pretty
well out there but even though I think I can see pretty well, there are things
I can’t see and He tells me what I can’t see.
Now I’m fallen and I’m walking around blind, I sure need some guidance
now. So it’s a tremendous argument that
even the sinless innocent man needs legislation. He needs external compasses, he needs an external dictation of
what the will of God is, at least at some points, it’s not all intuitive to a
sinless person.
Then what happens, now here’s something neat
that. What we’re learning is how pagans
think and it’s how our flesh thinks, really we’re learning about our own
depraved hearts. But we want to notice
something. At this point there’s a fork in the road, and paganism has to do one
of two things and it always does one of these two things, and it bounces back
and forth between these two things like a yo-yo and you can see tendencies is
your own heart. The first tendency,
page 65, “Paganism, therefore, runs in one of two directions. One way is to deny ‘traditional’ values and
redefine good and evil and to call evil good, publicly approving unethical
behaviors.”
Open your Bibles to Rom. 1:32. If there was a legal society in the ancient
world, it was Rome, so it’s ironic therefore that Paul addresses the precise
group in the ancient world known for their laws, the Romans, with these
words. He says these people,
unbelievers, “although they know the ordinance of God, that those who practice
such things are worthy of death, they not only do the same, but also give hearty
approval to those who practice them.” Look
at that last clause? What does that
mean legislatively? If you really think
verse 32 is correct, and you really think way, how would that influence your
legislation, if you were the law makers? What would you do if you thought that
way? Let’s read it again, “not only do they do these things, but they give
hearty approval to those who practice them.”
Would you, therefore, start massaging the law to say evil is good and
good is evil? This is perversity, and
perversity in law comes naturally to paganism.
It has to design perverted law because the heart from which it comes is
perverted. So this is why today there’s
no… you know, if Hawaii wants to declare homosexual marriages, or the next
thing may be killing people, that’s getting to be the thing because after all,
it seems right in our own eyes, and we’ll call good evil and evil good.
The one thing that paganism tries to do,
follow in the paragraph, “This tactic” and this is the psychology behind it,
we’ve got to understand why do we sinners think this way, there’s a dynamic, a
spiritual dynamic in our hearts that causes this, and we still fight it as
Christians. “This tactic appears to
relieve the pressure of the conscience,” by saying to my conscience this is
right, this is right, this is right,
and I get 550 people saying this is right, what am I trying to do to my
conscience? I’m trying to override my
conscience. Law becomes a tool, peer
pressure becomes a tool, a tool to override my conscience and wreck it. It’s called hardening the heart, putting a
callous on the conscience; the New Testament has a lot of names for it. We are
going to label this option, this direction of the pagan mind, to
licentiousness. This is the licentious
option. Licentiousness perverts
standards, twists them. “Typically, it
is the choice of those who defy reason and tend toward depression. The result,
however, is nearly always chaos and social breakdown.” But there are certain types of people that
gravitate to this, and at certain times in our age. In fact, if you think about your own flesh you’ll see there are
areas in your life where you tend to do this; we have zones in our horizon
where we tend to be licentious. The
opposite reaction starts setting in the next chapter, the next verse is the
opposite one, and that’s legalism. So
paganism goes back and forth, back and forth between these two things and
neither one of them is right.
In Rom. 2:1 Paul says, now he’s getting to
the legalistic counterpoint to this.
“Therefore you are without excuse, every man of you who passes
judgment,” notice, “passes judgment,” see the word judgment or judge, that
answers to verse 32 of “approve.” See
the two verbs correspond. In verse 32
the licentious option approves evil; in 2:1 it judges evil. So in verse 1 it looks like it’s pretty good
because legalism at least recognizes there are rights and there are wrongs, and
it doesn’t matter. We have this
tendency to be legalistic. But here’s
the problem, and by the way, think about the results of this. The licentious option always leads to what,
eventually? Social breakdown,
chaos. Since the licentious option
always leads to chaos, then what is it that becomes the threat? Here the man of the flesh is, he wants to go
out and raise hell, but he finds out after 3 or 4 weeks that there’s wreckage
all over the place. There’s
consequences to this stuff. Now what’s
the threat? What does that do in the psychology of the flesh? I’m threatened by the debris, by the chaos
I’ve created. Why does that threaten
me? What is true of the flesh man, deep
in his heart, deep in the heart of every man who knows not Christ? Does he have security?
Does man, apart from God, have security? No.
Why doesn’t he have security? Because at the most deep level we know
that we’re offensive to God. This is a
very insecure position to be, if I walk around the universe knowing that the
grand Creator of this universe is at odds with me, I’ve got a big problem, and
I want to forget my big problem. Most
of all I want security. So what did
Adam and Eve do three seconds after they fell?
They were naked and they started building clothes for themselves, it was
a form of security, a cover-up going on, literally. And what happened in pagan religion? You have the same kind of thing; you have all these demonic
practices that go on. Why, because they
like the demonic practices? No, it’s
because they fear, they FEAR, and they want
somehow to placate whatever this force is out there. So there’s a cry for security.
So there’s a cycle here, you go to licentiousness,
chaos breeds frustration, chaos says okay, now I want the opposite of chaos, I
want order. But how do I get
order? I go into legalism. “This failure leads to a second pagan
attempt in the opposite direction.
Since paganism has no ultimate security, it cannot long tolerate
chaos.” The next line should be “To
attain security for itself, it reverts to imposing law upon surrounding society
to keep some semblance of order.” That’s Rom. 2. “This tactic offers another attempt to relieve the pressure of
conscience and is the legalistic approach.
Typically, it is the choice of those who elevate reason,” oh, I have
this great vision of this orderly society, reasoning it out. Do you know who the big guy in western
civilization was that did this? He wrote a big book that affected political
thought for 2,400 years? He was the guy that used to be read in English classes
before we started reading Ernest Hemingway.
Plato wrote a book called The
Republic. He was a failed Greek politician, so he retreated into his
little monastery and he started thinking, what was the ideal society; he
called the ideal society the republic, wrote the book about it, and he became
the great political philosopher.
The legalistic approach tends to be favored
by “those who elevate reason and tend toward optimism. The result, however, is usually embarrassing
failure and declining hope.” And the
problem over here is what? What are the limitations of man? When we started out
tonight we said when man tries to do his thing, he doesn’t have these
attributes, he has these, so when man, who has these attributes, tries to do
something that only the Creator can do, which is what he’s trying to do here in
legalism, what eventually is going to happen?
What eventually is going to happen is personal failure. What is Paul’s critique of the legalistic
person in Rom. 2:1-4? He says “you are
without excuse,” also because you what you judge in another, you condemn yourself
for you who judge, you do the same things.
Can anyone phrase what Paul’s critique is of the pagan tendency toward
legalism. It produces a body of law, it
produces values, but what’s its weakness, according to Paul? I’m doing all this, I’m saying you guys do
this, you guys do that, you guys do this.
What’s the weakness? I’m not doing it.
Later in Romans he goes on to say why he can’t do, remember the cry in
Rom. 7, oh Lord, it’s not in me to do it.
You see now this is a serious dilemma of the
flesh, and when we’re out of it, we oscillate back and forth, back and forth,
back and forth between on the one hand the tendency to say the heck with it,
and go into kind of a chaotic depression, always grrrr about everything, and
then we wallow around in that for a while and don’t like it, then we come out,
well I’m going to have order, umph! And we do this for a while, and then that
doesn’t work, so then we come back over here. Apart from the grace of God, a
person who is a non-Christian has no home, he only has these tendencies, back
and forth, back and forth, no wonder the guy is frustrated and worn out.
Let’s come back to 1 Sam. 16:7. We want to stress an interesting thing that
happens between Samuel and one king. I
take you to this passage because in context, perfect passage in context, this
is picking out a political leader, and Samuel has been sent by God, so you can
conceive of Samuel, if you want to visualize this as God Himself, the Lord
Jesus Christ. Samuel stands as
representative of the Lord, and he approaches looking for the next king of
Israel, and he makes this significant point.
“But the LORD said to Samuel,” because
the Lord’s coaching Samuel on the choice, “Do not look at his appearance or at
the height of his stature, because I have rejected him;” he looked at this guy
and he failed the qualification. Now here’s the key, “for God sees not as man
sees, for man looks at the outward appearance, but the LORD looks at the
heart.” When God gave the law at Mt.
Sinai, and it was done His way, what was it addressed to and by whom? It was
addressed all the way down to the depths of our hearts by one who could see to
the depths of our hearts, therefore the law at Mt. Sinai is values, ethics and
legislation all wrapped up in one package because the perfect lawgiver is
speaking His character through people that are like glass to Him. That’s why He says to obey Me and follow Me
you must circumcise your hearts.
The law of the Old Testament is addressed to
the heart, and we see this now, if we come to Matthew, because Jesus had the
problem in the Beatitudes. He had the
problem that people were misinterpreting the law. Turn to this famous passage, the Sermon on the Mount, and it was
addressed in to a day, or to a people, who had been taken over by Pharisees,
Pharisaism. The thing that the
Pharisees did, we can do, in fact we’re seeing it done all the time. And what they had done was they had
bureaucratized this great sacred law of the Old Testament. The law was addressed to the heart by the
King of Kings. They had taken it, as
amateur lawyers, into regulations. Let
me read some of them. I read from a
book called the Mishnah. This is a compilation of what the Pharisees
taught in Jesus day. [blank spot]
…
modern day bureaucracy is just neo-Pharisaism all over again. Listen to how stupid this is, I mean, these
were the thought police, walking around a society enforcing all this junk. “An egg may not be put beside a kettle on
the sabbath so that it shall get cooked. Nor may it be cracked with hot
wrappings,” see somebody was real sneaky about how to do eggs, you put it just
near the kettle or you can take a hot wrapping and wrap the egg so you’re not
doing any work. So they had to legislate against the hot egg gimmick. But another rabbi, Rabbi [can’t understand
name] permits this. “Nor may it be buried
in hot sand or the dust of the road so it gets roasted.” So we had four ways that people were cooking
their eggs on the sabbath day without doing any work. I mean, these people were geniuses, and the Pharisees had to go
around, every time a new guy was on the block, he’d figure out a new way to do
an egg on the sabbath day, so they’d pass another law. They have all these laws. This whole section is devoted on how to cook
eggs. And we could go on and on. Sometime when you want a laugh, you ought to
go to the library and pull out the Mishnah,
it’s great background reading for the New Testament, it really is.
I want to take you to a passage in the New
Testament where it led to a confrontation.
I’m going to skip the Sermon on the Mount because a lot of us who have
been Christians for a while are used to that so I think it’s clearer if I turn
to Mark 2:23. Now let’s see if we can
visualize this. Watch this one. “And it came about that He was passing
through the grainfields on the Sabbath, and His disciples began to make their
way along while picking the heads of grain.”
What they’re doing is just grabbing a head of grain, flicking it to get
the grain out and eat it. Snacking!
[24] “And the Pharisees were saying to Him,” and the verb here is they kept
saying to Him, they didn’t say this once, they kept saying it over and over,
oh, look at that, oh, look at that, oh, look at this guy, etc. They probably had box lunches for themselves
while this was going on. “And the
Pharisees kept saying to Him, See here, why are they doing what is not lawful
on the Sabbath?” Now by not “lawful on the sabbath,” they meant this; this is
the law that they were thinking about.
It wasn’t lawful. Somewhere in
there you could find the grain passage, they had some rule and regulation,
108.5, paragraph 3, that said you couldn’t flick grain in the field on the
sabbath day. Imagine the scene. These
guys are the lawyers, they’ve been studying that thing ever since they were 17,
they know this… you think you know your Bible, they’d quote this sucker.
They’re following Jesus around, they keep
doing this, keep doing it, keep doing it, you’re busting this law, you’re
busting this regulation, etc. etc. etc.
Excuse me, may I ask a question? Who are you accusing of breaking the
regulations? Think of it. Who’s being accused of breaking the
regulations? The guy that gave it on
Mt. Sinai. So you kind of think that
there’s something wrong the way these guys are reading their Bibles; something
is wrong about how they’re interpreting law, isn’t there? If you’re so screwed up that you can take
the guy that gave you the law and tell Him that He’s busting it, He doesn’t
know what He’s doing, but you really know, you’re such an expert in the law,
you tell Him what He meant. That’s what’s
going on, that’s the irony of this scene in Mark 2. So he’s going through the grain fields, the Pharisees keep saying
oh, you didn’t do this, why are they doing that which is not lawful?
In verse 25 Jesus gives them a little hint
about how they ought to be interpreting Scripture, “And He said to them, Have
you never read what David did when he was in need and became hungry, he and his
companions.” He says, since you guys read, did you ever check out what David
did when he was in need and became hungry?
That was slick, because who was David? He was the king, and they all
worshiped David, the Pharisees, oh boy, David, that was the last time of he
golden age of Israel. Why don’t you
read his life, when you’re over there in the Old Testament, try putting on
David for a few chapters, now follow him; what did he do when he was hungry, he
went in and he ate, he entered the house of God. Now you think it’s bad to flip grain, what did David do, he
ripped off the showbread, because he wanted something to eat, how’s that one
for you, how does that sit, does that violate regulation 108.6, you’d better
believe it does.
Verse 26, “How he entered into the house of
God on the time of Abiathar the high priest, and ate the consecrated bread,
which is not lawful for anyone to eat except the priests, and he gave it also
to those who were with him?” What is
Jesus getting at? Let’s think through
lest we drift into a licentious mode.
He’s not saying that the law is bad, but what has happened here, there’s
been a disconnect going on with the way these people look at the law. They are thinking of the law as a product of
human people, they wouldn’t say this, but what happens is when you get into
this mode of thinking, law becomes a mechanical thing, just like programming a
computer or something. I’m going to
stick this program in a computer and I don’t have to make any decisions, I can
go on auto pilot the rest of my Christian life, bing-bong, will of God for
this, will of God for that. That’s
legislation. What have I done when I’ve
done that? What have I done to my
relationship with the Lord? What’s
happened here, when this concept of law happens, I have made my knowledge
separate from my conscience. The flesh
wants to cover this up, and put a big barrier around it so it doesn’t get
bothered by it, and once that happens, now I rely on knowledge. But the knowledge has been severed away from
the conscience and the conscience is what makes me aware of my accountability
to God.
The conclusion, verse 27, “And He was saying
to them, ‘The Sabbath was made for man, and not man for the Sabbath. [28]
Consequently, the Son of Man is Lord even of the Sabbath.” We could get into a lot here but the idea
here is that once you get into paganism you wind up with a see-saw, going back
and forth between licentiousness and legalism, licentiousness and legalism,
and both are wrong, because both of them is my attempt to live apart from a
real personal relationship with the Lord.
That’s why the Code of Hammurabi doesn’t look like the Code of Moses;
the Code of Hammurabi is made by Hammurabi.
The Law of Moses was not made by Moses; it was made by the God of Moses
who spoke that law, all the way down to the depths of our hearts.
Out of this comes, on page 66, the thing that
law always leads to is what Jesus pointed out here when He said “I am the Lord
of the Sabbath,” is that if you have law in a Biblical sense, it’s given by
someone and that someone is Lord.
Lordship is always the presupposition of law, because in law I’m responsible. Law is supposed to define right and wrong,
I’m supposed to be responsible for right and wrong. Responsible to whom? See the dilemma. In a pagan fleshly attitude, what is the answer to the question,
“to whom am I responsible?” When
there’s a county building code, or the State of Maryland’s codes, or the
Federal Law codes, when you’re faced with those, to whom are you
responsible? You’re responsible to
society through its lawmaking agencies.
But that’s not Scriptural; you are responsible for that but only because
God tells us to be responsible to that.
We are ultimately responsible to Him and Him alone. That’s real law, and that’s what’s lacking. So the nature of Lordship is that Lordship
is the presupposition of law, you can’t have Biblical law without a Lord behind
that law, with whom you have a personal relationship.
This is a good illustration, on page 66,
“What mattered in their [the Pharisees] view, was whether a murderer got
caught.” Remember the Beatitudes, Jesus
said “You have heard it said, do not kill lest you be in danger of the
court.” You have heard it said from
whom? From the Pharisees. So what was the motive not to kill
somebody? What might happen to
you? Go to jail! In divorce, what was the issue in divorce? You can divorce but you have to have the
right paper work. So now we’re talking
about murder but you don’t murder because you’re worried that you might go to
jail; when you divorce your wife/husband, don’t sweat it as long as the paper
work is in order. Do you see what has
happened here? Total disconnect between
the spirit of the law in the first place.
That’s the point that always happens.
In other words, the Lordship has gone away.
In conclusion, I want to deal briefly with
this issue that’s cropped up recent years in Christian circles between, the two
parties you hear about are “Free Grace,” and “Lordship Salvation.” If we can’t argue about something we’ll find
something to argue about so we can waste our energies that we should be
devoting to evangelism, and we’ll sit and have a fight inside the Christian
camp. Free grace vs. Lordship
salvation. Both sides, I believe, are
talking by one another, I think there are good people on both sides and I think
there’s some true propositions in both sides of the equation, I don’t think
it’s an either/or situation. I happen
to have friends in both camps. What has
happened here is the free grace people argue that when the gospel of salvation
is drink of the waters of life freely, there’s no conditions on there, it
doesn’t say dedicate your life, vow to God you’re going to do great things, it
just says “Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ, none of these conditions in
there. And to say anything else is to
demand of an unbeliever that he has to do something before he’s worthy of
salvation. That’s the free grace
people. They’re emphasizing the grace part of salvation. The Lordship people are saying wait a
minute, you guys are saying that a person can just receive Christ like eating
an apple and go on the way unchanged, add Jesus to the rest of your gods. The
Lordship people are saying there’s got to be something a little bit more than
that.
Let’s go back and see if we can get a hint on
the solution, and we’ll talk about it more next week. If you look at those two
events, Exodus and Sinai, think about it.
Which event has something to do with salvation, and which event has to
do with a revelation of Lordship? Which comes first? Sinai, God didn’t come to the Jews in Egypt and say do, do, do,
do, and if you don’t do this I’m not going to save you. There’s none of that, you don’t see
that. What do you see when God
approaches the Jews, while they are in Egypt, not on Mt. Sinai, while they’re in
Egypt? He says I’ve heard your crying,
I see what a mess you’re in, follow Me, trust Me, and I will deliver you. All I’m asking for you to do is trust me,
there’s no laws against homosexuality, there’s no laws against stealing,
there’s no laws against any of that, none of that’s in the invitation in the
Exodus. That’s not the law that’s coming to them in Egypt? It’s “I have heard your sufferings, and I
invite you to come with Me, but you’re going to have to trust in Me,” it’s
going to be scary, but you’re going to have to trust Me. Now when God gets them out in that desert,
now He says this is what I want you to do, I did one for you, now you owe Me,
so here it is, boom, boom, boom, boom, and if you don’t do it, bam, bam. That’s Lordship.
My idea in pointing this out is how handy it
is to know these events, because the events themselves balance your theology,
they keep you from drifting into weirdo things. Just think through, which comes first, Sinai or Exodus? We can’t argue that God’s just an add-on in
Exodus, by the way, because they had to trust, and then when we get out in the
desert, it’s not an issue that they’re going to hold on to their salvation,
because even in the cursings section of the law, ultimately I will bring the
nation of Israel back together again.
Israel is never lost because of disobedience. God works sin their heart
through many trials and tribulations, but the nation will never ever be
destroyed; once saved always saved!
Through tribulation, oh yes, some pretty nasty stuff, oh yes, but is
Israel saved in the end? Of course she is.
So there’s salvation and then there’s this issue of my relationship once
saved with the Lord.
----------------------------------------
Someone handed me an article, it’s kind of
interesting, it goes back to what we were talking about right after Noah, the
civilization that occurred right after the flood, and in Ohio discovering these
strange formations in the ground, some great symbols of serpents and apparently
even the base of a pyramid in the Ohio valley.
You see this stuff all the time, and for 50 years you walk into a
classroom and they teach North American history like they know everything, oh,
we’ve got this stuff aced out to the third decimal place. So you kind of grow up in that kind of an environment
where you feel, gee, sounds like they really got a good case, and then
something likes this happens. Come on,
what’s going on here, why couldn’t you guys have been honest up front and tell
us that hey, this is the best hypothesis we got, but it’s not locked in
concrete, we don’t have all the facts.
Nobody wants to be humble about their knowledge. So they’re always revising things.
Another person sent this which is kind of
interesting. These are two missionaries
in Indonesia with New Tribes Mission and I have always thought that New Tribes
Mission probably of all the missions has the most advanced concept of this
framework, because these people really have this framework down. When they
preach the gospel they don’t just walk in there and translate the gospel of
Mark and give them Jesus stories. They
start with Genesis 1 and lead them on through creation and then go through the
Scriptures with them, not every Scripture but they walk through the flow until
then they get to the gospel.
Here are two people narrating this problem they had. They had gone into this area of Indonesia,
and there were these people who were very righteous, very moral, very
upright. “How can we teach these
people, whose social control was so effective there had not been one theft, one
divorce, one wife beating or one adultery episode in the village as long as we
had known them. They were proud of
their superiority over the corrupt and scandalous lives of civilized people,
and yet their lives were not as idyllic as it appeared. Feuding and fear permeated their lives,
feuding among the clans, fear of unexpected repercussions for the slightest
offense against unpredictable spirits.
As we learned their language and studied their culture, we often
wondered, what name shall we use for God.
We prayed that God would show us.
My husband, Bob, recorded several legends on tape and after gaining
fluency began writing down the stories they reported.”
What did we say was true of all
civilizations? If you look into their legends, you look for pieces of that
Noahic story that may be hidden down into the bowels of those myths and those
legends. This is what this missionary
couple did. Anyway, “the story of the
snake and the man yielded an astounding answer to our prayer. ‘The one who formed our fingers’” that’s
their name for this God that was lost in their memory, “had made a beautiful
place, and when he made man and woman he told them they were to live in the
beautiful place. So they lived there and their fire never went out and their
water flask never went dry. ‘The one
who formed our fingers’ said he was going away, that they must not eat of the
fruit of one tree while he was gone.
And then he left, and while he was gone the snake came. Now the man and the snake were
brothers. The snake told the man that
the fruit was so good that he should try some, and the man ate of the
fruit. Then he was afraid of ‘the one
who formed our fingers.’ When ‘the one
who formed our fingers’ returned he knew right away what had happened, he
chased the man away from the beautiful place and said from now on the water
won’t come by itself, the fire won’t come by itself and the food won’t come by
itself, the sweat will drip off your jaw and your fingernails won’t get long
because you will have to work to get food.
The people knew nothing else about ‘the one who formed our fingers’
except he wanted somebody to die. There was no amount of ritual that could stop
death. He is above all, he is very far
away.”
And then he found another story about the
flood, and it turned out that they assumed that God was a noble, that he
exists, as clearly as anybody who has ever seen God. “At this point we introduced the Bible, and we told them the
Creator had made Himself known, He had spoken to a select few people, the
people wrote down the things God the Creator had done in their lives and what
He had said to them. It is a record of
real people and real experiences. The
Bible is a chronological historical account, and to teach it we began at the
beginning. First we told them in the
beginning God made light,” so it’s a story of this missionary couple working
their way through the framework. That’s all they did. “We taught the story of the Garden of Eden,
we told the story of the temptation, we told them about the snake and linked it
with their own snake in their story, so that they realized that this wasn’t
white man’s story, but what the white man people, the couple, was telling them
was about things that they had hidden away in their own native corpus of
legends.
Then they led up to the gospel, etc. and
sin. “It took several weeks to teach
just the first three chapters of Genesis.”
Several weeks, it wasn’t a five minute gospel presentation. “These stories struck a cord in the people’s
hearts, it was all so true, they were separated from God, their life was so
hard, it was all Adam’s fault. If only
Adam hadn’t done what he did, people blamed Adam. They were confident if they’d been there things would have turned
out differently. So we continued
through the stories, we told them stories of Cain, of Abel, of Enoch and Noah,
Abraham, Isaac and Jacob. We stressed God’s holiness,” etc. Then they go into
the book of Exodus, “then we talked about the Ten Commandments. We gave the people an overview of the
history of the Jewish nation. We explained
God’s provisions, sacrificial lamb. We showed them places where God kept
reminding Jews, there’s someone coming who delivers people. Finally, after
months of teaching, then we taught them about Jesus.” See what I’m saying, they didn’t talk about Jesus stories up
front. I often wonder whether that’s
wrong, whether we should even do it with children. We take time to explain
history and who God is, then we get to the Jesus stories.
“We showed the ways in which the prophecy of
the Old Testament were fulfilled,” etc.
The people of [not sure of word, sounds like: Sympang] heard the message
of the Bible in a comprehensive chronological way. It took months of teaching before they would even admit that they
were far from God. Teaching the Bible from the beginning was the only to build
a sure foundation for their faith. They needed to know about God’s love and
power shown creation and His holy standards shown in the law. Only then did they understand their need.” And it tells about what happened in that village. But there’s a neat story there, because I
think that’s proper methodology, and all that couple was doing is doing what
we’ve been doing, no big hairy thing, wasn’t PhD consultants figuring out how
to do this to the strange culture. They
just connected. I think that’s an
excellent illustration.
We’ll meet next week.