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Saturday, February 27, 2016
Sunday, February 21, 2016
Saturday, February 20, 2016
The Little Jesus who Would
My latest Touchstone article has been posted online, so I refer you to it here.
That contrasts quite sharply with the Book of Common Prayer tradition, in which everything is intended to conform wholly to Scripture, and the standard for prayer is the one that Jesus taught, which includes the Church's petition to the Father, "Thy will be done." The new liturgical phrase, "disordering our boundaries and releasing our desires," sounds much more like the slogan of an early twentieth-century pagan cult,The Law of Thelema,created by a magician named Aleister Crowley. To each member of the cult it is taught, "Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the law."
Read more: Click on the image of the magazine cover
That contrasts quite sharply with the Book of Common Prayer tradition, in which everything is intended to conform wholly to Scripture, and the standard for prayer is the one that Jesus taught, which includes the Church's petition to the Father, "Thy will be done." The new liturgical phrase, "disordering our boundaries and releasing our desires," sounds much more like the slogan of an early twentieth-century pagan cult,The Law of Thelema,created by a magician named Aleister Crowley. To each member of the cult it is taught, "Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the law."
Read more: Click on the image of the magazine cover
Second Sunday in Lent
(I Kings 8: 37-43) * I
Thess. 4:1-8 * Matt.15: 21-28
Sadly, in this period of history, some of the clergy have
preached a false gospel about another Jesus (II Cor. 11), not the Christ of the
Scriptures. They have abused the text from St. Matthew and taught that Jesus
was enlightened by this experience, that He overcame his Jewish prejudices, and
that he learned to accept others for who they were. Can they really imagine
that this Man, who years earlier at the age of twelve knew the truth of His
unique relationship with His Father (Luke 2:49), suffered the same foolishness
that is common to fallen and sinful men? They drag the Lord Jesus down to our
level, as if He was from below, as if he was of this world (John 8:23).
Jesus acted and spoke deliberately to
this woman, with perfect wisdom and genuine compassion-as always. He knew what
he was doing, and had no need of enlightenment. He is the Light. In Him was no
darkness then, and in Him is no darkness now. He saw clearly then, and He sees
clearly now. It is He Who teaches, and it is we who learn from Him. His words
and actions that day were perfect, and we have no reason to presume otherwise.
Something strange to us
Nonetheless, in
today’s Gospel we do see something strange to our way of thinking, as modern
Westerners long accustomed to thinking of Christianity as universal, perhaps
even as democratic in the classic sense, maybe as egalitarian to some degree,
or, at the very least, as polite. We see Jesus appear unwilling to help this Gentile
woman until she humbly acknowledges that she, not being Jewish, is like a dog
asking for scraps that fall from the Israelite table.
It seems even more strange
after the Morning Prayer lesson from I Kings in which Solomon asks God to grant
the prayers of the stranger who comes and prays in the Temple, having heard of
God’s great Name, that all the world may know that there is only one God. It
seems strange when we remember that Jesus had angered the people of His
hometown by saying that they would reject Him, but that as Elijah was sent to a
Gentile widow, and as Elisha had cured the leper Naaman, from Syria , His own
ministry would benefit even the Gentiles who would trust Him.
The story of Naaman is very
dramatic, and a lot like this story. The Syrian General, who had been Israel ’s enemy,
came to be healed by the prophet Elisha. By the grace of God, he was healed,
but not before humbling himself and accepting the one demand that the prophet
made; that he wash himself in the Jordan river
(and what do we learn from this? Naaman’s mikvah, his cleansing, in the River
Jordan signifies that some day the Gentiles would be able to enter into the
covenant by baptism). The prophet did not even bother to come meet this very
important man, but simply sent a messenger. At first Naaman was angry and
started to leave in a huff, but his friends reasoned with him. Like this woman
we read of today, he had to humble himself in order to receive a gift
from God.
Of course, Jesus did
grant her request, and before He was finished, He commended her for her faith.
But why did He put her through it? What point was He making?
The point has
everything to do with the Covenant, specifically the Covenant that God made
with Abraham. Abraham is the father of the people of Israel ,
which means, as St. Paul
would write, that he was the father of all who have faith in the true and
Living God, the true God Who is known only by the revelation of Himself. Out of
that Covenant came the other Covenants, the Covenant of Sinai, when the Law was
given to the people who were freed from slavery in Egypt , and the Covenant of the
Kingdom made with David. These grew out of the Covenant that God made with
Abram, when he was yet uncircumcised, that is when he was still a Gentile named
Abram, and had not yet become Abraham, before he was circumcised, before he was
the father of Isaac and thereby the father of a multitude.
The last Covenant to
grow out of the Covenant of promise to Abraham was the Covenant that Jesus
Christ would make, the New Covenant, the B’rit Hadashah, prophesied
of by Jeremiah:
"Behold, the days come, saith the LORD, that I will make a
New Covenant with the house of Israel, and with the house of Judah: Not
according to the covenant that I made with their fathers in the day that I took
them by the hand to bring them out of the land of Egypt; which My covenant they
brake, though I was an husband unto them, saith the LORD: But this shall be the
covenant that I will make with the house of Israel; After those days, saith the
LORD, I will put my Law in their inward parts, and write it in their hearts;
and will be their God, and they shall be My people. And they shall teach no
more every man his neighbor, and every man his brother, saying Know the LORD:
For they shall all know Me, from the least of them to the greatest of them,
saith the LORD: For I will forgive their iniquity, and I will remember their
sin no more (Jer. 31: 31-34)."
In a few minutes we
will hear the words of Jesus: "This is My Blood of the New Testament, shed
for you and for many for the forgiveness of sin." The disciples at the
Last Supper knew what He was referring to, for they knew these words of the
prophet Jeremiah about the New Covenant.
But, before proceeding
with what we can say about that, we need to see that the Gentile woman who came
to Jesus was not included in the Covenants of God made with Israel . She
was, to use the words of Isaiah, from the 57th chapter of his book, one who was
"afar off." St. Paul described the
situation of the entire Gentile world in these words: "Wherefore remember
that ye being in time past Gentiles...at that time ye were without Christ,
being aliens from the commonwealth
of Israel , and strangers
from the covenants of promise, having no hope, and without God in the
world..." He concludes, "But now, in Christ Jesus, ye who sometimes
were afar off are made nigh by the blood of Christ (Eph. 2: 11-13)."
Our Lord helped the
woman, and granted her prayer, as she was the stranger coming to the One Who
was greater than the temple, and was making her prayer of the One true God, the
only God in all the earth (I Kings 8:41-43). But, first He made clear the
truth, and it was for her to accept it in humility. She was an outsider, and
was not requesting something to which she was entitled; she was not one of the
children. Understand, that her faith changed this, as faith did for the
centurion whose servant was healed. Foretold in that ancient story of Naaman is
the truth of what happens when one who is “afar off” has faith. When Jesus
commended this woman’s faith, He was not simply granting her request, but
acknowledging her as a daughter of Abraham, a Gentile no longer.
This is lost on many people who
cannot understand the words of this woman, when she spoke with humility.
Against the warning of St. Paul
they "boast against the root" that bears them, that is against the
Jewish heritage of the Church by which all Christians are made children of
Abraham through faith in Jesus Christ. They presume, they boast, and think that
God is a modern egalitarian Who accepts everyone and everything as six of one
and half a dozen of the other. We are very comfortable hearing about the New
Covenant, and the forgiveness of sins, but what does it all entail? What do we
need to be asking and learning?
Is the New Covenant
made with all mankind? We know that there is only one God, and that Jesus would
send His disciples on the mission, the true mission of Israel , to be
the light of the world, a light to the nations. "Go and make disciples of
all nations," He would tell them, after His resurrection, "baptizing
them in the Name of the Father, and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost, teaching
them to observe all things whatsoever I have commanded you." (Matt. 28:
19,20) So, it seems that the Covenant is with all mankind equally- right?
Wrong.
Look again at the
words that Jeremiah spoke, to which Jesus clearly alluded, by speaking of the
New Covenant. Jeremiah said that the New Covenant is with the house of Israel ; it is
not made with the nations. It is part of the Covenant of Promise made with
Abraham. The only people with whom God made the New Covenant are the
Israelites, not the Gentiles. If you understand that, you must then begin to
understand why the Great Commission is given with these provisions and
conditions: The disciples from all nations must be baptized in the Name of God,
the Trinitarian Name; and they must be taught to live by all of Christ’s
commandments.
The New Covenant
brings with it the Law written on the human heart, the forgiveness of sins, and
the knowledge of God. The people who enter into it by baptism, and who have
faith in Jesus Christ, are not Gentiles; Christians are not called Gentiles;
rather St. Paul
says "ye were Gentiles in time past." He writes
to the Roman Christians that they have been grafted into the tree of Abraham.
He tells the Ephesians and the Corinthians that they were Gentiles (past tense), and
that when they used to be Gentiles they were led astray by dumb idols. But,
now, in Christ, they have been brought near by the Blood of the Messiah, the
Blood of the New Covenant and the forgiveness of sins.
The Law is written on
our hearts, which is the work of the Holy Spirit. We read it and learn it; but
more than simply that, it is within us on a deep level of conscience that is
unknown to unbelievers. For we know not only the Law of Christ- about which
more needs to be said- we know the One Who gives it. We know and love the
Lawgiver; we are personally affected by His great act of love when we think of
the cross of His Passion. We know what it means that we are bought with a
price, that is, His blood. His Spirit is within us, and we have a conscience
quick to feel, which we could not have otherwise. This is the meaning of the
Epistle reading for this day, St. Paul ’s
first Epistle to the Thessalonians: "This is the will of God, even your
sanctification."
In Lent we are
reminded of this portion of the New Covenant in a special way, not to be
forgotten the rest of the year; that the Holy Spirit writes the Law on our
hearts, and that we know God in a manner that makes our consciences grieve when
we sin against Him; and that convicts our consciences to live in a way that
pleases Him. For, having entered into the New Covenant, and having been made a
part of Israel
by faith, we are given that Law as our guide, we are given the forgiveness of
sin, and we know the Lord. The words of Isaiah are true for us: "The Lord
is our Judge, the Lord is our Lawgiver, the Lord is our king, He is our
Salvation." (Isaiah 33:22)
The message of the
Church to God’s ancient people of Israel is, "the temple is
here, the sacrifice is here, the Messiah Whom we know will come again; this is
your heritage as children of Abraham, born to live under the New
Covenant." Our message to the whole world, and its many nations is,
"there is no God in all the earth but in Israel ; We know Him through Jesus
Christ."
And now unto God the Father, God the Son and God the Holy Ghost be ascribed,
as is most justly due, all might, majesty, dominion, power and glory henceforth
world without end. Amen.
Sunday, February 14, 2016
Saturday, February 13, 2016
First Sunday in Lent
Here are two posts for the First Sunday in Lent. The first is a sermon on the Gospel reading, and the second an essay on the Epistle (I.e. part of the appointed Epistle for this day).
Thursday, February 11, 2016
Tuesday, February 09, 2016
Sunday, February 07, 2016
Friday, February 05, 2016
Quinquagesima
Confusion
about the word “Love”
I
Corinthians 13 * Luke 18:31-43
At
the present time the Church and all of society are in a crisis due to the
attempt to rob the word “marriage” of any true definition, adding more
confusion to what has been imposed in the past by a rampant divorce culture.
The secular proponents of what they call this “evolution” justify it by using
the word “equality” without definition and in place of a substantive argument.
The religious proponents of it try to justify it by the word “love.” After all,
“Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself.” The
problem is that we use the word “love” in English to mean several things,
making it unlike many words in our language that are precise. You may say “I
love a juicy steak.” But you cannot have charity for a juicy steak.
The King James version of today’s
Epistle reading, I Corinthians 13, uses the word “charity.” In most other
places where the same word, agape (ἀγάπην),
appears in the original Greek, the King James Version has it translated
as “love.” Here it is translated, however, with the word “charity” perhaps to
be very specific, coming as it does from the Latin caritas, into which agape
was translated by St. Jerome. Good Biblical exegesis and study places agape on a higher level than the other
words also translated “love.” Indeed, it is not too much to say that this word
speaks of the love of God, and that this love is a virtue that can be grown in
our lives only by the Holy Spirit (Romans 5:5, Galatians 5:22). The character
of this love is described very powerfully in today’s Epistle reading, and in
the character of this love we see the character of God, in fact, we see Jesus.
The
character of this love is completely giving and selfless, and this love was the
love that kept Jesus Christ from coming down off the cross. This love, not the
nails, held Him there. As I have said before, take that love personally, as did
St. Paul : “…the Son of God who loved me, and gave
Himself for me (Galatians 2:20).” In no way is this love ever selfish,
self-seeking, indifferent, or apathetic. It overcomes anger, and wants the best
for everyone in a sincere, indeed active, manner. It produces spontaneous fruit
of good works and it forgives instantly. We also see that “Charity…rejoiceth
not in iniquity, but rejoiceth in the truth.” And, to that point we will
return.
Another
word that is used in the original Greek New Testament, and that is translated
“love,” is philea (φιλία), which means brotherly love and
also friendship. From this we have the words Philadelphia ,
that is, City of Brotherly Love ,
and philosophy, that is, love of wisdom, philanthropy, that is, love of
mankind, etc. It is a very good and positive word when speaking about human
relations, love of friends and family. It is consistent with agape, though not itself as high and
spiritual in nature. Surely, philia
is present where agape is present;
however, I cannot make the same guarantee in reverse. One’s sincere and heartfelt
love might fall just short of Divine love, choosing in some crisis the comfort
of being loved in return over that of complete selfless giving, or maybe
failing in courage.
Another
Greek word is storge, (στοργή), which is the affection of parents to their
children. It is a word that was not used much in ancient literature, but it has
survived.
The fourth Greek word for love is
never used in the New Testament, though it appears in the Greek Apocrypha. That
word is eros (ἔρως), and from it we have the English word “erotic.”
It is the love of sexual passion. When the word has a good meaning it is only
between a man and his wife. It can be present side by side with both philea and even agape. But, again, only between a man and woman who are married to
each other is this kind of love a good thing. Eros can be present, however, with practices forbidden by God’s
commandments in such sins as adultery or fornication.
Here we must deal with another Greek
word that appears quite a bit in the New Testament, a word that is never
translated “love,” and never should be so translated. In the Gospel accounts of
things that Jesus said when warning against carnal sins, in the Greek
manuscripts quoting Him, He used this word; that word is pornea (πορνεία). From it come the words pornography
and fornication. Obviously, pornea
has no redeeming value. It is always sin. The weakness of translating the word pornea as “fornication” is that modern
people assume that fornication is limited in definition to premarital sex. But,
in fact, pornea means any and every
kind of sexual immorality, from adultery to incest, from premarital sex to
same-sex acts, etc.
The following things, therefore, can be
present in combination:
1. Eros
and pornea
2.
Eros
and
philia
3.
Philea
and
pornea.
4.
Philea
and agape
5. Perhaps
even eros and agape, but only in marriage.
(In the above, bear in mind that pornea is never translated as love.)
But
what can never be present in combination is pornea
and agape, for, as we heard read in
today’s Epistle, “Charity … rejoiceth not in iniquity, but rejoiceth in the
truth.” We also heard, “Charity … seeketh not her own.”
To
equate love of neighbor, which is agape,
with eros is a problem. Such love
should be exclusive of a man for his wife, and a woman for her husband. And
since pornea is not love at all, but
lust, even if it is combined with eros,
it is certainly not the love God commands us to have for our neighbor, and is
far from the new commandment of Christ, “That ye love one another as I have
loved You (agape).”
Indeed,
when it comes to the subject of sin, if seeing that one’s neighbor is in the
grip of sin and needs to repent and be forgiven by Christ, charity, agape, cannot rejoice. Charity moves us
to pray and hope for the person’s repentance and salvation. It cannot move us
to participate or enable sin. Such is not the love of God.
Some
indeed protest that their acts and relationship of pornea are a kind of love, a kind the Church needs to affirm. So
they tell us that the Church ought to bless same-sex “marriages.” But, I ask
you, cannot two people in an adulterous affair also claim that their acts and
relationship are a kind of love? Indeed, inasmuch as eros may be filled with emotion, people do say it and mean it. If
we can bless a sinful union then why not have the Church some up with rites to
bless an adulterous affair? After all, they are in love, and love is always
good – right? But the true love of God, charity, agape, cannot rejoice in iniquity. It will move one to repent, and
to want the other party to repent also.
Let
us look at the context of that specific commandment that Jesus quoted as the
second great commandment of the Law:
“Thou shalt not hate thy brother in thine
heart: thou shalt in any wise rebuke thy neighbour, and not suffer sin upon
him. Thou shalt not avenge, nor bear any grudge against the children of thy
people, but thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself: I am the LORD (Leviticus
19:17, 18).”
Does the love of God actually
rebuke? In this case, does it actually move one to urge repentance of his
neighbor? Yes. You see agape doesn’t
seek its own gratification, and is willing to be unloved and rejected, just as
Christ was willing to go to the cross and endure the hostility of sinners
against Himself.
So
throwing around the word “love,” as these proponents and apologists of sin do
all the time, turns the word into a sound no more meaningful than a dog’s bark.
The Son of God came into the world to save the world, not to make the world
safe for immorality. Jesus showed the love of God by dying for our sins and
offering forgiveness and a new life to all who come to Him with sincere
repentance and true faith.
Labels:
Homosexuality,
Moral Theology,
Sermons
Tuesday, February 02, 2016
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