Foundation
for Life Lesson 4 August 14, 2005
NKJ
Ephesians
2:8 For by
grace you have been saved through faith, and that not of yourselves; it is the
gift of God, 9 not of works, lest anyone should boast.
We
are in our fourth installment of a series on the basics of Christianity that I
am entitling “The Foundation for Life”.
“The Foundation for Life” is a sort of play on words because the basis
for life in the Scripture is truth. The
Hebrew word for truth is based on an interesting word group. It is based on a
word group part of which is the word emet that means firmness,
faithfulness, or stability. It is
frequently translated truth because truth is that which has the idea of
stability, certainty, and that which provides a foundation. .
The
idea of foundation as I pointed out last time is seen the way a form of this
word is used in II Kings 18:16.
NKJ
2
Kings 18:16
At that time Hezekiah stripped the gold from the doors of the temple of
the LORD, and from the pillars which Hezekiah king of Judah had
overlaid, and gave it to the king of Assyria.
It
is translated doorposts. It is the form
of the noun It has the same basic root
as emet. It has to do with
describing that foundation, pillar or post on which those enormous doors of the
Solomonic temple were hung. Just as
these pillars supported the doors, so truth is a support for life.
I
got an interesting question the other day that may occur to some of you. Someone picked up on the fact that there is
a distinction in the NIV that in a number of the verses I used last time
related to the truth of God. They
translated the word emet with the word faithfulness. What is interesting in Hebrew is that in the
mind of the Jews there is a close intimate connection in the ideas of truth
(that means which is a foundation, that which gives stability to life, that
which provides dependability) and faithfulness. So it was easy transition to develop from the idea of truth and
that which is dependable and certain the idea of dependability or
faithfulness. So faithfulness is often
reflected in the Hebrew form of this word amona. It is also related to a verb in the Hebrew aman
that is the word for belief. It is the
basis for our word amen. When we pray
and close, we end with amen. It comes
from the Hebrew word meaning I believe it.
Belief is seen to be intimately connected with truth and
dependability. In the mind of the Jews,
these concepts were so deeply related and so integrally related to one another
that they were all represented by this basic word group.
When
you get into doing exegesis and translation from the Hebrew Old Testament, you
have to make a number of decisions about how you are going to translate these
things. The question was raised why is
it that the NAS and the NKJ versions seem to consistently translate this word
with truth but the NIV translates it faithfulness in about half of the verses
that I used last time. The answer to
that is because the translators of the NIV used a theory that I totally reject
as do most firm conservatives evangelicals reject. It is true that many of the translators on the NIV were
professors at Dallas Theological Seminary.
Some of them were professors that I had in seminary. One of the reasons the NIV is so popular is
that they have a masterful PR campaign. They devised the NIV back in the mid
70’s to be a complete package. When
they came out with the NIV they produced a concordance that went with the
NIV. At the time if you were around the
NAS was gaining momentum. There was no
concordance published for the NAS until after the NIV had published a
concordance. Or, they came out about
the same time. So the NIV editorial
staff worked out this deal where commentaries, concordances, and the NIV itself
came out at the same time. So it was a mass-market campaign. That is why so many people like the
NIV. Most people don’t get exposed to
translation theory or why there are differences so they don’t know why there
are these differences.
I
had an Old Testament professor who had his doctorate in Hebrew from Dallas and
also from Cambridge. Dr. Ross served on
one of the translation committees. The
way they translated the NIV was to divide up the verses among various groups of
scholars. These scholars would sit
down and would make their case for their translation. They would come back and their committee would look at it and
debate among themselves what the best translation would be. Then they voted on it. After they voted on the best translation, it
would go to the next higher committee and they would vote on it. Dr. Ross used to say that there were many
times in the book of Genesis that he wanted to put a footnote in the margin
that this is the Word of God by a vote of 5 to 4.
The
other aspect was that they operated on a translation theory known as dynamic
equivalence. Dynamic equivalence is a
much more fluid translation, almost a paraphrase. It is not a direct word for word translation. Whenever you move from one language to
another, you know that there is a certain dynamic that goes into any translation. You don’t translate literally word for word
because it comes out too stilted and wooden so you have to bring it into the
language. The view of translation that
believers you have a more rigorous and literal translation is called formal
equivalence. The more you move away
form that you get into dynamic equivalence.
Then if you push passed dynamic equivalence you get into the realm of
paraphrase. Paraphrase is not based on the original Greek. It is like the Living Bible that was done by
a Dallas Seminary grad by the name of Ken Taylor. He wrote that for his children.
He said that back in the 50’s he couldn’t read the King James Version to
his children so that they could understand it so he paraphrased it. He put it
into modern language. He paraphrased
the KJV that is a poor translation.
That is why there were certain weaknesses with the Living Bible.
Paraphrases should never be used for study.
I discourage people from using the NIV because there are numerous places
in the NIV where they are so interpretive in their translation of the Greek
that they lose sight of the Greek text altogether.
I
Cor 3 is a classic illustration. There
are many examples like that. You have
the word sarkinos that is translated fleshly from the root word sarxz
meaning flesh. It is translated worldly
in the NIV. But worldly, the concept
on that which is from the world is based on the Greek word kosmos. So how they got worldly out of sarkinos
is their theology. So they are
interpreting the text.
My
friend Wayne House who was a general editor for the Thomas Nelson Study Bible
and has been the academic dean at several major theological seminaries and was
a professor at Dallas Theological Seminary for a while and founded of the
Oregon Theological Seminary likes to call the NIV a commentary. So those are the ideas that we have to be
aware of when we come to translations.
They often reflect a translator’s theology. As Dr. Bob Thomas at the Master’s Seminary says, “When there is a
level of ambiguity in the Greek or in the Hebrew that ambiguity needs to be
preserved in a literal translation so that you can leave it up to the pastor to
interpret the text. It is not the
translators job to interpret the text when he translates but to translate from
the original language.”
The
NIV is a good study Bible. The notes
are great. It is well put together.
Whoever the general editors were they were great mechanics. The problem that
you get in seminary is that you get some of these men who are great grammarians
and they are great mechanics but they are lousy theologians. It is not their area of specialty. They do a
great job with grammar but they don’t put the whole text together. They are great mechanics but you don’t want
to put them behind the wheel. That is a
problem with some of these guys.
So the NIV has definite
weaknesses as has been pointed out by a number of people over the years. Because of those problems and the fluidity
there you will run into this. That is
why the question was raised about the word being translated faithfulness in the
NIV and translated truth in the NAS.
The NAS and the NKJ have a more precise translation theory behind lying
behind their methodology. That is why
I recommend both of those translations.
We
saw last time from the vantage point of truth, Jesus had an encounter with
Pontius Pilate just before He went to the cross. It was His final trial.
NKJ
John
18:37
Pilate therefore said to Him, "Are You a king then?" Jesus answered,
"You say rightly that I am a king. For this cause I was born, and
for this cause I have come into the world, that I should bear witness to the
truth. Everyone who is of the truth hears My voice."
Pilate
replied skeptically.
NKJ
John
18:38
Pilate said to Him, "What is truth?" And when he had said this, he
went out again to the Jews, and said to them, "I find no fault in Him at
all.
This
is a well-known interchange between Jesus and Pilate. But it raises an issue that is so contemporary. People today question whether or not there
is truth. It is different from a
generation ago when the influence of modernism led people to question if this
was the truth. But today we live in a
time when many people question whether there is such a thing as universal
truth. This is what causes the Bible
to be such a point of friction in our culture today because the Bible takes a
stand that there is one and only one truth.
God is the source of all revelation and God is the source of all
creation. He is the one who defines
truth. So we are looking at the essence
of God from this vantage point of truth.
NKJ
Psalm
86:15 But
You, O Lord, are a God full of compassion, and gracious, Longsuffering
and abundant in mercy and truth.
That relates to His attribute of love that we
studied last time.
Anger
is related to His justice.
So
truth is one of the core attributes in the essence of God.
We
divide the essence of God into two types of attributes.
Personal
Attributes Infinite
Attributes
Sovereignty Eternal
Life
Righteous Omnipotent
Justice Omniscience
Truth Omnipresent
Life Immutable
The
God of the Bible is a personal God. He
is not some force. He is not something
mechanistic out there in the universe.
He is a person. As a person we
can have a relationship with Him. God created man in His image and likeness so
that man can have a relationship with God.
We can know God. We can
communicate with Him. God can communicate
with man. He designed man in His image
so that man can receive and understand divine communication. The only reason man thinks it is fuzzy or
that it is not understandable is because man clouds it either because of sin or
because in negative volition he suppresses the truth in unrighteousness.
God
is a personal God. We looked at the
personal attributes of God as the sovereign creator. He is the one who created the universe. As the creator He is the one who defines the nature of
reality. We may not like it and we may
want question why it is a certain way.
This is why you have the illustrations in the Scripture that talk about
the pot saying to the one shaping the pot, “Why do you make me this way.” God has made reality the way it is. He is the one who sets the rules and
establishes the spiritual laws and the physical laws.
I
want to look at some of the verses we looked at last time.
NKJ
Psalm
146:6 Who
made heaven and earth, The sea, and all that is in them; Who keeps truth
forever,
That
means that He preserves His word. He is
not going be changing things. What we
see is that all of these attributes of God are interconnected. They are all related to each other. If we were to diagram it in a visual way we
would have a bunch of interlocking three-dimensional circles that all relate to
one another and are consistent with one another. In His sovereignty He is righteous. His sovereignty relates to His omniscience, omnipotence and His
immutability. All of these are all
interconnected. But we break them apart
for the purpose of instruction, coming to understand whom He is, and focusing
on different aspects of His character.
This is true of any person. Many
of us have different qualities and characteristics and talents. God has made us
to be complex. God is infinitely more
complex than we are. Nevertheless we can understand many things about Him. We
can know true things about Him but we can never know Him exhaustibly. That seems to be a contradiction to some
people. What it means is that we can’t
know everything about God. But we can
know with certainty some things about God that He has revealed to us about
Himself. He is righteous. This is the standard of His character. He sets the standard. He is absolutely righteous and perfect. This is from the Hebrew word tsedaqah
that is also related to His justice. Righteousness has to do with the standard
of His character. Justice has to do
with the application of that standard to His creatures.
NKJ
Psalm
119:142
Your righteousness is an everlasting righteousness, And Your law is truth.
What
two attributes are there? His
righteousness is connected to eternality.
His
standard that comes out from his righteousness is perfectly true.
He
is just. This applies to the way He
treats His creatures. It is always in
accordance with His perfect righteousness.
We look around the world and we see things that are very difficult to
fully comprehend. We see evil and we
see people who are seemingly innocent suffer in tremendous ways. We look at things such as the Jewish holocaust
during World War II and we look at babies who are abused by their parents. We wonder how a loving God could allow this
to happen? We raise questions but ultimately we have to go back to the fact
that God is just. Because He is
omniscient and knows all the facts and because He is sovereign He is in
control, that there is an ultimate higher good toward which everything is
moving.
NKJ
Genesis
18:25
"Far be it from You to do such a thing as this, to slay the righteous with
the wicked, so that the righteous should be as the wicked; far be it from You!
Shall not the Judge of all the earth do right?"
How
can we as creatures question His justice?
We know less that a tenth of 1% of all the knowable information. He
knows all the knowable. He is making
decisions in His rule and administration of history that are consistent with
His righteousness and His justice. Who
are we to question Him? That is really what the book of Job is all about. Job is asking why he is suffering.
God
says, “Did you make everything? Who are
you to question Me? Just trust Me.”
That is the real issue for the believer.
NKJ
Psalm
89:14
Righteousness and justice are the foundation of Your throne; Mercy and
truth go before Your face.
We
see the connection of righteousness and justice. We see how righteousness, justice, love and truth are
interconnected in several verses in the Psalms.
The
love of God must not be defined in human terms. It is very difficult to define
the love of God. The best I have been
able to develop is that the love of God means that in accordance with His
righteousness and His justice God seeks the absolute best for His
creatures. Because He is omniscient He
knows what the absolute best is.
Because He is perfectly righteous He can’t seek anything less than their
best. Because of His love He desires to
have a relationship with man and to provide the best for His creatures.
NKJ
Psalm
117:2 For
His merciful kindness is great toward us, And the truth of the LORD endures forever.
Praise the LORD!
NKJ
Psalm
57:10 For
Your mercy reaches unto the heavens, And Your truth unto the clouds.
NKJ
1 John
4:8 He who
does not love does not know God, for God is love.
This
characterizes everything in God.
He
is absolute truth. That truth is the
foundation of all the attributes of His character.
NKJ
Psalm
117:2 For
His merciful kindness is great toward us, And the truth of the LORD endures forever.
Praise the LORD!
NKJ
John
3:33
"He who has received His testimony has certified that God is true.
NKJ
John
8:26
"I have many things to say and to judge concerning you, but He who sent Me
is true; and I speak to the world those things which I heard from Him."
Before
we move on I want to say a couple of other things about the fact that God is
truth. The very nature of His creation
God determines reality. He defines the
nature reality and communicates that to us. God has not left us here in some
sort of cosmic guessing game. Because He is truth, the revelation of Himself is
truth. God’s word of truth therefore is
the foundation on which stability and faithfulness are established. Truth itself is a word that means that there
is a foundation of certainty that we can depend on. Everything in life may change but there is a foundation that is
always true and doesn’t shift from generation to generation or from culture to
culture. It is a universal overarching
truth that gives meaning and definition to everything else in life. This idea
of truth being that upon which we can depend is at the core of the idea of
truth. For the Jews truth is inseparable
from the idea that God is dependable and faithful. And because God is dependable and faithful, He has communicated
the basis for that dependability and faithfulness to us in His Word.
This
idea of truth is then applied to the concept of love. How does truth relate to love?
Love is always dependent upon virtue - that which righteous, that which
is true, and that which is accurate.
Love is devoid of error.
Therefore we have to recognize that divine love is based on something in
His character that is His righteous standard that gives it perfection. It is
based on something stable. It means
that love is not going to shift. It is
not going to turn. It is not fluid. It’s not going to vacillate. It is going to
be consistent. Even though we fail, we know that God never fails. His love is always going to be
consistent. So true love must be based
on truth and not falsehood. Because God is truth His love is dependable and
reliable. Because He is truth His love
is always true. It contains no
deception and no falsity.
Now
we move to the right side where we talk about the infinite attributes of
God. Infinite means without bound,
without limitation. God is not only a
personal God that can relate too us and in a sense almost reduce himself to be
able to talk to an individual. We see
that the infinite God comes and presents Himself to Adam and the woman in the
garden. He walks with them and talks
with them. Not only does He have this
infinite capacity, but He is also personal. This is in contrast to many of the
false gods are just an impersonal force out there. They are not personal. Then in the other systems of mythology,
the gods are intensely personal but they are not infinite. They are just big individuals, like Mr. Man,
men who are blown up into a superman kind of thing but they are not infinite
and cannot control the universe. They
are not absolute in an ultimate sense.
They are just as much a part of nature as anything else. The old nature religions, the fertility
religions of the ancient world, have been taken over by modern science and
baptized under the guise of evolution.
It is easy to see the transition through what has been named the chain
of being that has been promoted from Aristotle down to the present. It makes
God part of the scale of nature. Man is
down here and God is just a little higher up.
But what we see in the Scripture is that God is the creator. He is set apart. He is completely distinct from the creation. That is based on the attributes of infinity.
The
first is eternity. This is infinity
with respect to time. God is not
limited with respect to time. Time does
not apply to God. He knows all of human
history. He knows all the events of
human history intuitively. He perceives
everything all at one time. So He is
eternal. There is no succession of
events in God. There is no past, present or future. Everything is eternally present to Him.
NKJ
Psalm
90:2 Before
the mountains were brought forth, Or ever You had formed the earth and the
world, Even from everlasting to everlasting, You are God.
When
we think about eternality, we relate it to God’s sovereignty and recognize that
He is eternally sovereign. All of the
attributes of God are eternal. They are
equally true of Him throughout all of His eternal existence. As a righteous and just we see He is
eternally righteousness and eternally just.
There was never a time that God was not righteous. There was never a time that God was not
just. So eternality relates to every
dimension of His character.
This
is infinity applied to God’s knowledge.
The omniscience of God is one of the most comforting dimensions of His
character. In His omniscience we know
that He not only knows everything that will happen in history but He also knows
everything that could happen in history.
He knows everything that has happened or will happen. He knows all the possibilities and all of
the permutations. There is no limitation
to God’s knowledge.
Furthermore
we know that He knows the actual events as well as the possible events. As a result from God’s omniscience He is
able to provide the perfect solution for human sin and any problem that comes
up in human history. Because God is
omniscient we know that He is also truth.
Because without omniscience (the knowledge of everything) He could not
provide a universal truth. But because
He knows everything and every permutation and every possibility God is able to
provide that universal umbrella that covers every potential and every
possibility. Therefore His knowledge is
absolute and His knowledge is exhaustive.
Because as we will see God doesn’t change we know that He does not gain
in knowledge. God never learns
anything. There is nothing that is going to happen in history that is a
surprise or shock to God. That means in your life when you sin and fail you do
not surprise God. You may surprise
yourself. You may shock your
friends. It may be pretty astounding,
but it didn’t surprise God. In eternity
past God knew that you were going to do that. Not only that but God because He
knew all those sins was able to devise a plan for salvation that completely and
totally paid the price for all of those sins.
So omniscience is also an answer to the question of the security of our
salvation. If anyone says that they can
lose their salvation what they are saying is that they committed a sin that God
didn’t know about in eternity past.
Therefore He did not provide salvation for it. But the Bible says that
in omniscience He can know all of the sins we would commit so that Christ was
able to pay for all of the sins of human history.
As
I pointed out a minute ago the Scripture teaches that God not only knows the
actual but he also knows the possible.
That can really get your mind all twisted around if you start thinking
about all of the conceivable permutations.
What would have happened if I slept 15 minutes later this morning? What if I had taken this route to church
instead of another? If I had taken
gone to the grocery store and there was a robbery there? We can drive ourselves nuts thinking about
all of the what-ifs. The fact is that
God knows the answer to all of the what-ifs.
Jesus
speaks in Matthew 11:21.
NKJ
Matthew
11:21
"Woe to you, Chorazin! Woe to you, Bethsaida! For if the mighty works
which were done in you had been done in Tyre and Sidon, they would have
repented long ago in sackcloth and ashes.
He
speaks of Capernaum. He recognizes that
Tyre and Sidon were judged because of their idolatry in the past. But He also recognizes that under certain
conditions a different response would have been brought about. That raises a lot of interesting
questions. It demonstrates that God
knows all the various contingencies and possibilities. As the sovereign creator He knows all the
stars. He calls them all by name
according to Ps 147:4. He knows the
number of hairs on your head according to Matt 10:30. He knows all the works of His creation according to Acts
15:18. When we connect that with His
immutability we know that His knowledge never changes. He never learns anything and He never
forgets anything. He never acquires any
knowledge. He knows everything
throughout all of eternity. A practical
application for that is that it gives a foundation of certainty in our
spiritual lives. We know that we are
saved. We know that we will not do
anything that will surprise God or that wasn’t paid for on the cross. We know that when we are living life and
face various crisis in life - death or loss or disappointment or whatever the
situation may be - we know that God knew all about it in eternity past. Therefore He was able to provide the perfect
solution to that problem in eternity past.
He designed everything to be the way that it is so that all the systems
would work in perfect harmony with one another. And He built into the system enough flexibility to be able to
handle the chaos that was introduced by sin.
This is a God that goes far beyond anything we can ever fully understand
or comprehend. God is omniscient. He
knows everything.
NKJ
Psalm
139:1 For
the Chief Musician. A Psalm of David. O LORD, You have searched me and known me.
2 You know my sitting down and my rising up; You understand my
thought afar off. 3 You comprehend my path and my lying down, And
are acquainted with all my ways. 4 For there is not a word on
my tongue, But behold, O LORD, You know it altogether. 5 You
have hedged me behind and before, And laid Your hand upon me. 6 Such
knowledge is too wonderful for me; It is high, I cannot attain it.
This
is the basis scripturally of understanding His omniscience.
He
knows all of them, not some of them.
That
means that He is all-powerful. It is
infinity with respect to His power or ability.
NKJ
Psalm
33:6 By the
word of the LORD the heavens were made, And all the host of them by the breath
of His mouth. 7 He gathers the waters of the sea together as a heap;
He lays up the deep in storehouses. 8 Let all the earth fear the
LORD; Let all the inhabitants of the world stand in awe of Him. 9
For He spoke, and it was done; He commanded, and it stood fast.
He
was able to create everything in the universe so there is nothing that is
impossible for God. We must fear Him in
the sense of respect and admiration and obedience.
When
we connect His omnipotence with His omniscience and immutability we recognize
that God has the power to provide a perfect solution for us. He has the power to provide a perfect
salvation that takes in to account every dimension of human sin and human
failure in our lives so that He can provide that perfect salvation.
Omnipresence
God
is present everywhere. It is infinity
with respect to space. It means that
God is present to every point of His creation at every moment in time. You have to get that right. Omnipresence means that God is equally
present at every moment in time. He is just as fully present to Jim Myers over
in the Kiev, Ukraine as He is to you in Houston, Texas. There isn’t a little
bit here and a little bit there. He is equally fully present to every point in
the universe at the same instant.
Omnipresence must be distinguished from pantheism that teaches that
everything is god. But omnipresence
teaches that God is everywhere. He is
not in everything. He is infinitely
present to His universe. Nothing can
escape His full presence.
Psalm 139 is one of the
great meditations in the Scripture on the attributes of God.
NKJ
Psalm
139:7 Where
can I go from Your Spirit? Or where can I flee from Your presence?
NKJ
Psalm
139:8 If I
ascend into heaven, You are there; If I make my bed in hell, behold, You
are there.
NKJ
Psalm
139:9 If
I take the wings of the morning, And dwell in the uttermost parts of
the sea,
NKJ
Psalm
139:10 Even
there Your hand shall lead me, And Your right hand shall hold me.
So
we have the three omni’s – omniscience (God is all knowledge), omnipotent (He
has the power to do whatever He wills to do), and omnipresent (He is fully
present to every point in space at every point of time).
That
brings us to His last attribute.
Immutability means that God never changes. Jesus Christ we are told in Hebrews is the same yesterday, today
and forever. He never changes. Let’s
make sure that we understand what immutability means. It doesn’t mean that He does not adapt His plan to human
decisions. It means that God in His
character never changes. His character
and His word are perfectly stable. He
can always be counted on. His word
never changes.
NKJ
James
1:17 Every
good gift and every perfect gift is from above, and comes down from the Father
of lights, with whom there is no variation or shadow of turning.
God
is always stable. We can always rely upon Him.
This is why He can always be truth.
Truth, immutability, love, righteousness, and justice give us a view of
an eternally stable God. So that
whenever we go through crisis in life and everything seems in chaos and out of
order and in disarray we have one place to go. He is our rock. He is
our refuge. He is our stability.
NKJ
Hebrews
6:17 Thus
God, determining to show more abundantly to the heirs of promise the immutability
of His counsel, confirmed it by an oath,
His
purpose in human history is unchangeable.
From the Garden of Eden to the future New Heavens and New earth He does
not change. God’s purpose never
changes.
NKJ
Malachi
3:6
"For I am the LORD, I do not change; Therefore you are not
consumed, O sons of Jacob.
Even
when we fail, God never fails. Even
when we are false, He is always true. Even when things change God’s word never
changes. So it is always true no matter
how the centuries change not matter how the civilizations move, more matter how
the cultures change; God never changes.
His truth is the same for Africans, Asians, Russians, ancient
Babylonians, or modern Christians.
Therefore we can always go to His word to find solutions to every situation
in life. When we look at truth as it is related to the character of God, it
gives us a source of stability and certainty that relates to everything in
life. An application of this goes to His sufficiency. This is why God’s grace is sufficient for everything. This is why
the cross of Christ is sufficient to
deal with every sin. This is why we do
not need to look out side the Scripture for solutions to our problems. God’s
word is absolute and eternal truth.