God In The Hands Of Angry Sinners

(This sermon was given by Tom Gordon)

In colonial America during the 1740s, Jonathan Edwards preached the sermon Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God to the congregation in Ensfield Massachusetts.This particular congregation was holding out against the revival that had been sweeping across the colonies during the First Great Awakening. Edwards was unable to finish the sermon and had to join other local pastors in comforting the congregation, such was the response to his message of hell-fire which figuratively melted this congregation where they sat.

It occurred to me in recent years that Edwards’ sermon, this sermon, and every sermon ever preached in the Christian Community these past two-thousand years has only been possible because God allowed himself to first fall into “the hands of angry sinners.” Hence, the title.

Today I’m going to tell you a story--almost 3,000 years in the making; so buckle up. During the years of Homeric Greece, hundreds of years before Socrates, the Greeks sought after “arete,” or “excellence.” These were the semi-mythical days of Achilles, Paris, and Hector, the Trojan War and the endless fratricide of the Greek world. For them, arete mandated lots of violence, unrestrained sexual expression and self-promotion --all aimed at the glorification of self above others. This was “excellence” to the pre-classical Greeks.

They believed their gods were involved in this same sort of activity and that this was the proper marriage between body and spirit (action and will) though, admittedly the primary emphasis was on the body and its desires. They believed this arete was THE recipe for the most awesome of all possible lives. Of course--it was a recipe for disaster.

Hundreds of years later, as the Peloponesian war between Athens and Sparta went very badly for Athens, Socrates went about the city criticizing its leaders for their mindless prosecution of the war and their equally mindless pursuit of vainglory. Socrates had grown “out of step” with arete. He proclaimed that the “unexamined life was not worth living.” Though executed for his criticisms, Athens had been humbled and was ripe for his message. Socrates effectively instituted a new heroic ideal for Greece-- and a new form of arete--the examined life.

As a side-note, by the time of his death, Socrates had gotten into the habit of expressing contempt for the Greek gods, yet also of referring to both Heaven and God in the singular and as if both were sources of “Good.” Athens, afterall, juts out into the middle of Mediterrannean trade routes and was a center of exchange for both goods and ideas. I have no doubt that Socrates was exposed to both Hebrew and Persian conceptions of God.

A now, humbled Athens, and eventually the entire Greek world embraced this new ideal with its new type of hero. This was a life of the mind (read that as “spirit”) which grew increasingly suspicious of the doings of the body. We may think of this “divorce” of body from spirit as a sort of proto, or pre-gnosticism in which the mind became the path to salvation and the body the path to destruction in the same way that their earlier heroic ideal had led Athens to destruction.

God Prepares the Stage for Jesus

This new ideal was spread across the Mediterrannean as well as both the Near and Middle East by Alexander the Great. Alexander loved Greek culture and spread it from Macedonia to India--art, architecture, language and philosophy--all became part and parcel of the world Jesus was born into.

Into this Greek-saturated, Roman-controlled world Jesus came preaching the good news that “the kingdom of the heavens is available” here and now.This is the True marriage of body and spirit that the world desperately needed then and still needs today.

For Socrates, freedom from the body (his own death) meant discovery of all (Truth) which he had wondered about as a philosopher. For Jesus, by contrast, eternity was in session “now;” Truth was available “now”--while in the body (and of course, forevermore) with Jesus himself as headmaster of a never-ending school of discipleship.

“To the Jews who had believed him, Jesus said, “If you hold to my teaching, you are really my disciples. Then you will know the truth, and the truth will set you free.”

Let this passage sink in. Read it again. One more time. Knowledge, Truth and Freedom were of paramount value in the Greek world at that time. Socrates, Plato and Aristotle had made sure of this. Jesus comes out swinging and addresses all three: simply, beautifully, authoritatively.

  • When are we free? When we know the Truth.

  • When do we know the Truth? When we hold to his Teaching.

  • What does it mean to hold to his teaching? Do--the--things--he--said--to--do!

  • How do we “do” things? With our bodies and our spirits.

This is a syllabus for life in the Kingdom. If we fail this course on Knowledge, Freedom and Truth, then we will end up (or remain) ignorant, enslaved, liars. Incidentally...Jesus said all this to “the Jews who had believed him.” They took this last point to mean precisely that they were ignorant, enslaved, liars and decided to kill him--believers did this! We ought not be too quick to think ourselves above violence toward Jesus, toward His message, toward His kingdom. He is after-all the God who gave himself into the hands of angry sinners.

Do you ever take offense at Jesus? He is no respecter of your culture or the empire that created and maintains that culture. Don’t expect it of Him. Don’t impose it on Him.

Reforming the Reformation (Metanoia Might Annoy Ya)

About 500 years ago the Church was subject to a much-needed correction. However, we also lost a deep, rich, tradition of spiritual practice which had been commonplace in both the church and amongst God’s people for centuries prior. Bodily practices in the form of the Spiritual Disciplines, which involved effort (sometimes a great deal of effort) fell largely along the wayside in Protestant practice due to an association with abuses within the Church.

At issue was a single word--Metanoia. The word translates to “repent.” Repentance involves unconditional surrender to God and an exchange of the path one is on, for the path toward God. Unfortunately, the word had been mistranslated over a thousand years earlier as “do penance.” Penance involves a voluntary self-punishment (often involving monetary payment) for wrongs committed.

The abuses that followed essentially amounted to “working off” one’s debt of sin and earning salvation. Anything that could be construed (or misconstrued) as “earning one’s salvation” became highly suspect and essentially abandoned. The spiritual disciplines were largely jettisoned from Protestant practice and one of the practical ramifications has been hints of gnosticism sneaking back in through an open window. Once again, the body was viewed as suspect and the mind/spirit viewed in stark contrast to that. There was no hope to be found in what could be done with/through the body.

It became commonplace to view salvation as simply agreeing to belief in a set of propositions about God. But remember, “even the demons believe (that there is One God)….” James 2:19. Church...We need to move well beyond agreement with demons.

A rough analogy might be a person who agrees that exercise is a good thing, buys a gym membership and watches people exercise every week while she sits and drinks a smoothie. Even out of shape people agree about what’s healthy.

Think back to the definition of metanoia: “Unconditional surrender to God and an exchange of the path one is on, for the path toward God.” What happens on a path? We walk. We engage in life. If your body is carrying around your spirit, it’s going to be really hard not to involve your body in this unconditional surrender. Any lingering doubts about the “goodness”of physical things can be put to rest by reading the first chapter of Genesis where God created ALL of it and pronounced it all “good.” In fact, after Eve’s creation it was “very good.” To claim that the body is “evil” is to tread in heresy territory. We’ve walked too close to this line in the last 500 years like a dog returning to its vomit. We must move from a mere “appreciation for Christ, to an “appropriation” of Christ and, like it or not, your body is coming along for the ride. Heck, it is the ride.

Works of the Flesh vs Spirit

At this point you might be getting nervous and thinking where’s Anthony when we need him? Let’s distinguish between the goodness of God’s physical world and the badness of works of the flesh.

Works of the flesh are those works which are attempted out of your resources alone. Often they are intended to get you noticed, or to create an obligation from God back to you. Works of the Flesh are about “earning.” They essentially say “God, do you see me.”

Example: Say I have a student who desperately wants to please me but does terrible on every assignment in spite of his very strenuous efforts. I notice this and offer to meet with him. I also offer the Tutoring Center, Success Coaching and the Writing Center. He refuses all these resources, continues producing bad academic fruit and will eventually fail the class and submit a scathing review of me on “Rate my Professor” because I did not see and appreciate their effort. This is a rough analogy for “works of the flesh.”

Let’s shed some light on works of the Spirit by way of some further analogy and discussion.

Looking “At” Versus Looking “Along”

C.S. Lewis once wrote of being in his garden shed. The door was closed and a shaft of light pierced through a crack in the door into the darkness of the shed. When he looked “at” the light he saw dust particles floating inside the beam. When he stepped into the shaft and looked “along” the light, the dust particles were no longer visible (even though they were still there) but now he saw a tree outside and the sun burning millions of miles away producing that light. Both experiences were true but both were very different. Each is diminished without the other.

In these last several centuries the sciences have caused a divorce of sorts between looking “at” and “looking along.” Backed by the Academy, modern science gives the authoritative nod to “looking at” as the superior, even the only, way of knowing. This way of knowing had been neglected since the ancient Greeks and the overreaction has proven extreme. This thinking has permeated our culture and has caused a great deal of rot within the Church. Looking “along” has been all but abandoned in Western Civilization, even in the Church.

Another quick example from Lewis just to make sure we’re clear on this point. Imagine two biologists attempting to give an explanation of what it means to be “in love.” One has been in love before, the other has not. Both can look “at” being in love and talk about the chemical and biological processes involved. However, one clearly has an advantage over the other. This is the advantage that we, in the West, have discarded.

The Ancients, by contrast, saw knowledge as thoroughly experiential. They would find it absurd that we award PhD’s in philosophy to people who can speak accurately about the implications of such-and-such school of thought. For them, if you weren’t a Stoic, or an Epicurean, or a Christian then you didn’t know these philosophies; you had, at best, looked “at” them. They would say that to know Christ was to look “along” Christianity; it was to do the things He told us to do. We have to move beyond “appreciation” of Christ to “appropriation” of Christ.

Have you experienced Jesus? More importantly, has Jesus experienced you? These two questions attempt to get at what it means to “know” in the Biblical sense. Think for a moment about a type of prayer we often engage in. “God please be with “so-and-so.” But, we know God is there, yet we (at times) drone out this prayer as if on auto-pilot. Perhaps what we need to pray is not that God would show up (we know He’s there), but that we would show up. Yes, my body is there, but where is my spirit? Perhaps this or that particular prayer concern is an opportunity for Jesus and I to experience each other and to spread the Kingdom.

Magic or Faith?

Perhaps it would be good to point out the difference between magic and faith at this point. Magic is the attempt to manipulate perceived powers to serve particular ends that we deem worthy of pursuit. It involves various actions, incantations of particular words and phrases which, if done correctly, will bring the result that is sought. Faith (in the Christian context) is complete trust in someone. It ultimately trusts that Good will be the result, regardless of the perceived outcome. Which of these two is more likely to require that you be present (not on auto-pilot)?

I recall visiting Ivan the Terrible’s church in Russia. Just down the valley from this ancient building were two stones on opposite sides of the valley. On the left, women came to sit on a stone to receive healing for “female” problems. On the right, men did the same thing for “male” problems. I witnessed serious parishioners coming from prayers at the church building, down to the stones to sit. They were navigating the various perceived sources of power in their lives trying to effect some sort of favorable outcome. Is this Faith?

We know that our bodies are carrying our spirits around. So, how do we show up, both body and spirit?

“I appeal to you therefore, brothers, by the mercies of God, to present your bodies as a living sacrifice, holy and acceptable to God, which is your spiritual worship.” Romans 12:1

The spiritual disciplines are based largely on this verse and the verse that immediately follows it. Their aim is to help us to be “present” in a way that we were not before. Offering up our bodies in fasting, solitude, silence, and a multitude of other disciplines is a means of offering up our bodies as “living sacrifices.” It breaks us free of the patterns of the world we see all around us and which we grew up in and which have been normalized by our culture-- our empire.

“Do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind. Then you will be able to test and approve what is the good, pleasing, and perfect will of God.”

The spiritual disciplines are not a means of earning. They are one of the places where God meets and transforms us. They are a part of the “grace” of God by which we become more like him--where we come to know His will. They are a Success Center, Tutoring Center, Gymnasium of the Spirit--resources we dare not ignore.

“When Jesus saw him lying there and realized that he had spent a long time in this condition, He asked him, “Do you want to get well?” 7“Sir,” the invalid replied, “I have no one to help me into the pool….”

Embodied Apologetics (transformed lives) is what the world is starving for today. Why would someone sign up (and pay) for the gym but not exercise? Why would someone use their treadmill only to hang laundry? Think for a moment about the paralytic at the pool of Bethsaida. Why on earth would someone NOT want to get well? That’s what Jesus asks him. Perhaps after 38 years, he’s found a pattern of life that suits him. His answer certainly was cagey. Do you want to be well? Is something keeping you from the water?

Anger can be a useful tool for getting your way, perhaps you’d rather not give that up. Asking the same question seven different ways until my child finally caves in and tells me what I want to hear may be an effective pattern of manipulation for me. If my “yes” actually is a “yes,” I may lose advantage over my child or over others. Perhaps I don’t really want to get into that water--especially after ---all ----these ----years.

How do I do the things Jesus told me to do? How do I “let my ‘yes’ be a ‘yes’ and my ‘no’ be a ‘no’”? How do I “do good to those who persecute” me? The spiritual disciplines are one of the places where God meets me for the express purpose of transforming me more perfectly into His image. They are a place where I can ask “God, do I see you”?

Some Quick Examples

  • I keep an image of one of my daughters on my cell phone. Every time I see it, I’m reminded that other people are precious to their parents in the same way my girls are precious to me. It short-circuits a whole raft of inappropriate thoughts and behaviors that tempt me.

  • I seek to let my “yes” be a “yes” and my “no” a “no” by asking “real” questions. Amy and I used to ask our girls, for example, “do you want to ask that little girl over to play”? If we didn’t hear the answer we wanted to hear we would rephrase the question over, and over until our poor kid would give up and say what we wanted to hear. We learned that if it isn’t a choice, not to phrase it as a choice; this manipulation just frustrated our girls and made liars of us. This also allowed their “yes” and “no” to be meaningful.

There are, so far as I can gather, an endless number of spiritual disciplines beyond the classics of fasting, praying, solitude and silence. Sharing these with each other could prove to be a deep well of transformation at CLG.

What does God get out of my spiritual transformation? The person I become.

Incidentally, this is also what I get out of my transformation. It’s all good, all ways, for all time and all eternity.

False Teachers Will Rise (2 Peter 1: 20 - 2:16)

“But notice first that no prophecy found in Scripture is a matter of the prophet’s own interpretation. Prophecy has never been a product of human initiative, but it comes when men and women are moved to speak on behalf of God by the Holy Spirit. But notice first that no prophecy found in Scripture is a matter of the prophet’s own interpretation (unpacking; untying interpretation knots”) . Prophecy has never been brought forth by or been a product of human initiative, but when men and women are brought forth to speak on behalf of God by the Holy Spirit.

2:1 Just as false prophets rose up in the past among God’s people, false teachers will rise up in the future among you. They will slip in with their destructive opinions (damnable heresies), denying the very Master who bought their freedom and dooming themselves to destruction swiftly, but not before they attract others by their unbridled and immoral behavior. Because of them and their ways, others will criticize and condemn the path of truth we walk as seedy and disreputable. These false teachers will follow their greed and exploit you with their fabrications, but be assured that their judgment was pronounced long ago and their destruction does not sleep.

For God did not spare the heavenly beings who sinned, but He cast them into the outer darkness and chaos of Tartarus to be kept until the time of judgment; and He did not spare the ancient world, but He sent a flood swirling over the ungodly (although He did save Noah, God’s herald for what is right, with seven other members of his family); and God condemned the cities of Sodom and Gomorrah, reducing them to ash as a lesson of what He will do with the ungodly in the days to come (although again He did rescue Lot, a person who did what was right in God’s eyes and who was distressed by the immorality and the lawlessness of the society around him. Day after day, the sights and sounds of their lawlessness were like daggers into that good man’s soul).

If all this happened in the past, it shows clearly the Lord knows how to rescue the godly from their trials and how to hold the wicked in punishment until the day of judgment. And above all, it shows He will punish those who let the desires of their bodies rule them and who have no respect for authority. People like this are so bold and willful that they aren’t even afraid of offending heavenly beings, although the heavenly messengers—in spite of the fact that they have greater strength and power—make no such accusations against these people before the Lord.

These people who speak ill of what they do not understand are no different from animals—without sense, operating only on their instincts, born to be captured and killed—and they will be destroyed just like those animals, receiving the penalty for their evil acts. They waste their days in parties and carousing. As they feast with you, these stains and blemishes on your community are feasting on their deceptions. Their eyes are always looking for their next adulterous conquests; their appetites for sin cannot be satisfied. They seduce the unwary soul, and greed is the only lesson they have learned by heart. God’s curse lies upon them.

They have veered off the right road and gotten lost, following in the steps of Balaam, the son of Beor, the false prophet. Balaam loved the reward he could get by doing evil, but he was rebuked for crossing the line into sin; his own speechless donkey scolded him in a human voice, an amazing miracle that reined in the prophet’s insanity.

We could get lost in the weeds explaining why those Old Testament references were important and relatable to Peter’s audience, but that’s not the point of this sermon. Just know he is pulling from a shared history to reference stories about how God does not abide the devastating effect of sin.

Peter is pretty concerned about false teachers. He gives quite a list of identifying features in the early church. People being what they are, the issues remain timeless even if the particular ways that false teachers and teaching show up then and now is different. I’m going to split this into two categories: What they taught and what they did.

WHAT THEY TAUGHT

1. False view of God. The temptation to make God in our image is as old as human history. Another way of saying this is that we tend to mold God into some kind of shape that feels good or is useful to us, which is very different from being true.

  1. Do you think God must love what you love, or do you make sure you love what God loves? If you think God is pleased with you, is it because you are pleased with you, or because the Bible reveals that you have aligned yourself with the things that please God? If a teacher does not present God in such a way that your ways and thoughts are not challenged by God’s ways and thoughts, something is off.

  2. Is God a God of justice, anger and consequences, or is God a God of mercy, love and grace? Are you never good enough for a demanding, perfectionist God, or is God madly in love with you just like you are? You might be surprised how much your answer has to do with family and church of origin rather than the Bible. If a teacher overemphasis/ignores God’s nature or acts, distortions are going to creep in.

  3. Is prayer an opportunity to get what I want, or an opportunity to align myself with God’s heart and pray for God’s will? If a teacher tells you that powerful prayer is the kind that manipulates God – if there is never, “not my will, but yours be done” – it’s a problem.

2. False use of Bible. We’ve talked about this principle before: never read a Bible verse. It’s the idea that context matters: verse, paragraph, section, chapter, book, entire Bible. There is a Big Picture that cannot be ignored if we want to read the Bible well, and that picture will either distort our view of God or what it means to live like image bearers – and sometimes both. Let’s take the issue of judging as just one example.

I hear the verse all the time: Matthew 7:1 – “Do not judge, or you will be judged.” That’s absolutely in the Bible, but look what else is there – in the same chapter.

• Matthew 7:5 – “You hypocrite!” #judgy

• Matthew 7:15 – “Watch out for false prophets.” #judgy

• Matthew 7:20 – “By their fruit you will recognize them.” #judgy

• Matthew 7:24-29 – Parable of the Wise and Foolish Builders #judgy

Very judgy chapter, actually. The overall message of the entirety of the biblical texts – which includes a book literally called Judges - is clear: Don’t judge hypocritically; judge impartially; judge fruit, not hearts; keep in mind that you get what you give.

WHAT THEY DID

False sense of self. They are arrogant fools in the most book-of-Proverbs sense of the word.

• They think they are the smartest person in the room.

• They respect no one but themselves.

• No one who disagrees with them can possibly be right.

• The focus of conversation always turns to them/their ministry.

• They make sure their face is always front and center.

• They build modern Babels where their name is made great not incidentally but purposefully.

Honestly, I am increasingly concerned about huge ministries where leaders pursue and/or embrace celebrity. Money, fame and power are a toxic mix. Those who navigate these things successfully - and some do, don’t get me wrong - have several things in common from what I see.

1. They didn’t pursue it.

2. They don’t really like it.

3. They reject the trappings of success.

4. They limit their pubic appearances.

5. They divest their power.

6. They humble themselves under authority.

False idea of freedom. Biblical freedom is freedom from the bondage of sin and the penalty of death, and freedom to follow the path of righteousness. That was clearly not happening. We occasionally see a scandal break where this is still a problem, but I think there is a more subtle kind of false freedom that tempts us.

One of our biggest challenges in the United States is confusing American freedom with biblical freedom. The Constitution is not the Bible. It’s possible it’s not perfect (!?)! it’s also certain that this country grants freedoms to me that the Bible does not.

• I am free in this country to cheat on my wife, but I’m not free to do that in the Kingdom of God.

• I am free in this country to hoard my money, but I’m not free to do that in the Kingdom of God.

• I am free in this country to say virtually anything I want to say; I’m not free to do that in the Kingdom of God.

• I am free in this country to watch pornography; I am not free to do that in the kingdom of God. I’m not free to objectify and commodify people.

• I am free in this country to love or hate whoever I want; I am not free to do that in the Kingdom of God. “You have been taught to love your neighbor and hate your enemy. But I tell you this: love your enemies. Pray for those who torment you and persecute you— in so doing, you become children of your Father in heaven. He, after all, loves each of us—good and evil, kind and cruel. He causes the sun to rise and shine on evil and good alike. He causes the rain to water the fields of the righteous and the fields of the sinner. It is easy to love those who love you—even a tax collector can love those who love him. And it is easy to greet your friends—even outsiders do that! 48 But you are called to something higher: “Be perfect (complete), as your Father in heaven is perfect.” (Matthew 5: 43-48)

False path of life. Three things stand out in this passage: greed, exploitation, and following desires like dumb animals.

• When you start to hear a giant vacuuming sound as teachers personally accumulate money and things because of the gifts from God’s people, beware.

• When people around teachers continually quit because they are used or abused spiritually, emotionally, physically or financially, beware.

• If you find out that a ministry has a buffer of people between a leader and everyone else, beware.

False view of community. These false teachers saw the church as a place for them to control and exploit rather than care for. They are presented here as predatory. The community of the church is where they gorge themselves on the people, the money, the food (probably “love feasts” associated with Communion). There is no mutual honor and respect; there is no accountability and transparency; there is no humility, no sense of an ebb and flow of repentance and forgiveness; no sense of serving rather than being served.

False representation of the church. False teachers ruin the reputation of Christ and His church. Not only are they not above reproach, they are more reproachable than most. It’s one of my biggest fears as a pastor, frankly. May God give me the strength to make His name great, not drag it through the mud.

* * * * *

First, I invite your inspection. God forbid I teach or live falsely. If you believe I am, you have the right if not the duty to confront me.

Second, apply this message to yourselves. You may not be formal teachers in a ministry or organization, but if you are a follower of Jesus, you have opportunity to teach – talk about and represent Jesus. This is for leaders for sure, but all of us are at times in a position where we lead someone else either towards Christ or away from Christ.

May we all, by God’s grace, be true in word and deed.

Don't Move The Stone

Deuteronomy 27:17 says, “Cursed is he who moves his neighbor's boundary stone.' And let all the people say, 'Amen!'“ Now, I have to admit that these boundary stone verses have been real headscratchers for me, and finding out what was behind them is what got me started on this in the first place. Why was this so important to God back then, and why is it important to us today?

We Are The Church

Hebrews 10: 23-25- “Let us hold unswervingly to the hope we profess, for he who promised is faithful. 24 And let us consider how we may spur one another on toward love and good deeds, 25 not giving up meeting together, as some are in the habit of doing, but encouraging one another—and all the more as you see the Day approaching.”