Sunday, December 25, 2022

Book Review: Dynamics of World History, by Christopher Dawson


Christopher Dawson, in Dynamics of World History (first published in 1958), explained his paradigm for history that goes beyond recording events, identifying physical causes and formal causes of historical shifts, to efficient causes and final causes. (He does not use Aristotelean terminology but clearly thinks in this framework). The foundations of history outline these causes, and his critiques of others’ views of history are largely based on their focus on a subset of the sources of culture change and history drivers. The factors that influence history and culture include geography, race, economics, physical environment, climate, knowledge, and religion. Changes on the world level are caused largely by either changes in one or more of these factors, or by the interaction of different cultures (resulting in adaptation and syncretism or war and conquest).  But no subset of the factors is sufficient to explain history.


Dawson's reviews of previous historians range from recognition of insight (Augustine) to critiques of obvious shortcomings of the others: Gibbon, Marx, Wells, Spengler, and Toynbee. He presciently (or perceptively) observed (in 1935) that the ultimate verdict on Communism will be that the house it is building for the new humanity is not a palace but a prison. But he is particularly strong on this point: If God exists and is sovereign and outside of our universe, His intervention cannot be understood by any of the factors that we can read about. This provides a view of history unique to Christianity, that it is the record of God building His kingdom, His city, on earth. This was first clearly articulated in Augustine of Hippo’s  The City of God, written in the fifth century. History is ultimately His story, with His purpose and plan. Although Dawson clearly states this (his view of final causation), most of his writings about history link material causes to efficient causes, not final causes.


The core of Dawson’s approach to understanding history is analysis of  interactions between previously isolated factors or players that result in events and change. One example: throughout most of history, city-dwellers have been culturally and socially isolated from farmers, hunters, miners, etc. - people who dwell in the countryside and only come to the city to do business. And these same factors have brought interactions between divergent cultures around the world.  Dawson touches on briefly is the impact of European culture on indigenous peoples around the world during the 18th and 19th centuries of worldwide empires.  In many cases, the native cultures were deemed primitive and collapsed under Western onslaught. Whether the economic benefits to these peoples outweighed the loss of their native way of life depends on several factors, which were not covered in this book, but alluded to.


It would have been interesting to get his analysis of the modern world, in which transportation and the internet have obliterated cultural separation. One of Dawson’s main paradigms is that when previously isolated social groups start to interact on a continuing basis for some reason, both parties are affected with long-term change. In my view, we need this kind of assessment to understand the state of the world today. It is more than just economics, language, culture, and information; there is a fundamental redefinition of the ground rules of behavior, resulting in mental health-driven crises, such as epidemics of drug abuse, gun violence, suicide, and mass migration. Who today assesses the causal relationship between technology and behaviors?



In sum, with 420 pages of densely packed scholarship, one must persevere to read this book in its entirety. Perhaps there are contemporary writers with this methodical approach, but I have not encountered them. Dawson provides a framework and a way of thinking about history, and cause and effect in understanding our past that bears on our present, from a Christian yet scholarly perspective. He cites scholarly references regarding events that are documented and supported by evidence, rather than Scripture. The bottom line is that history can be understood, and it is to our own hurt that we choose not to do so. 

Thursday, November 24, 2022

What will the post-apocalyptic world be like?

‘Apocalypse’ has become synonymous with a civilization-ending world-wide series of cataclysms. The genre of doomsday movies and of life afterwards portrays an earth ruined by nuclear war and rampant plagues, lack of basic necessities like food, in which individuals or small groups struggle to survive. The apocalyptic reference goes back to Revelation 1:1, the Greek word for revelation being apocalypse, the very first word in the book, linked to the worldwide catastrophes described therein. These events are also described in Matthew 24, Mark 13, Luke 17 & 21, and Ezekiel 38-39.  

Returning to Revelation 1:1, the verse says … “The Revelation of Jesus Christ, which God gave Him to show to His bond-servants, the things which must soon take place; and He sent and communicated it by His angel to His bond-servant John.” [NASB]  Substitute unveiling for revelation. This is the prophecy that unveils the mysteries associated with Jesus. These aren’t mysteries to believers - those who know Christ and serve Him - but these events will resolve mysteries of Christ to the world. That this unveiling involves calamity for the world system is an indicator of how depraved it is.


The accounts are indeed terrifying. In fact, in Mark 13:20 Jesus says that unless the Lord had shortened the days, no life would be saved. But the important part from the Biblical perspective is that the love and holiness and power and glory of Jesus’ divinity will be revealed for all to see. And then He will reign on the earth, just as He does in heaven. This reign will begin with 1,000 years of peace and righteousness as described in Revelation 20, because Satan will be bound. It does not say how long it will take to rebuild the earth from the devastation that will result from mankind’s rebellion, Satan’s war, and God’s setting things right. But with Christ physically and visibly reigning on the earth, there will not be the dysfunctional anarchy portrayed in the post-apocalyptic film genre. What Jesus is, He will remake human society to.


What is Jesus like? We get a hybrid picture of His behavior during the Incarnation, when He was on earth in the flesh, and the image of Him in heaven recorded in Revelation 1:12-18. His love is declared openly, but not with emotional attachment as its primary focus; His love chooses and wills the best long-term outcome for the beloved, whatever the cost to Him or to others. And because of His uncompromising holiness, this will result in pain over sin. He paid the price in His suffering on the cross, but we will experience pain when He disciplines us for our own good, so that we may share His holiness. (Hebrews 12:4-11) 



The outcome is that we enter into His joy.  This is the post-apocalyptic world we can expect. In the millennial reign of Christ, swords will be beaten into plowshares, righteousness will be the norm, the wolf will lie down with the lamb, with longevity and rejoicing in the Lord’s presence. (Isaiah 2:2-4, 11, & 65:11-24). I challenge Hollywood to portray that!

Friday, October 28, 2022

Eternity without Christ is ...

What is hell? Functionally, it is the eternal, spiritual destination of the devil and his angels, and of those who reject Christ. The question in my mind is what does it look like and what happens there? Jesus gave few specifics, nothing beyond saying that the their worm does not die and their fire is not quenched. (Mark 9:48)

Traditional imagery has pictured hell as a perpetual blast furnace (unquenched fire). Something like the third chapter of Daniel, except that the Hebrew young men and the Son of God were not harmed by that furnace. Fire is punishment, causing eternal torment. 


Let me propose a slightly different view. Fire also purifies, especially metals, from impurities. Perhaps in this eternal destination, God directly purifies those who cling to rebellion against Him. For those who love sin, this purification of sins they hold on to results in perpetual pain, because their vice is denied. Perhaps it is eternal insomnia in the middle of darkness in which the memory of actions and choices, now regretted, cannot be avoided by sleep and can no longer be remedied by repentance and atonement. A bad conscience for all eternity. Or perhaps God cleanses that by eliminating it, and there is nothing left but an empty shell, unable to enter His presence. 


C. S. Lewis offered another view in The Great Divorce. He addresses the question of how a loving God could send people to hell by picturing a post-death tableau in which people are offered the opportunity to go into God’s Presence but choose not to, for a variety of stupid reasons. The reasons are stupid because people choose transient soulish activities, and emotional relationship manipulation over permanent, transcendent bliss. And in Lewis’ depiction of hell, people reside in (can’t say live in because they are dead) ethereal dwellings in an endless slum, in which they keep moving farther and farther apart because they can’t stand each other.


Jesus said that hell was prepared for the devil and his angels. (Matthew 25:41) This certainly implies some forcible restraint because the demons don’t want to be there (Luke 8:31). In some respect their powers are curtailed. But their essential nature is unchanged since they chose to reject God’s love and holiness in full knowledge of the eternal consequences of that choice. They will eternally persevere in being fundamentally evil at heart. They have it, but I doubt they will like it.


Another possible view of hell might be that it is not a separation from God’s presence, but being in His presence, and the torture of feeling the pain of having our life essence being purified by His holiness. But this does not seem consistent with Scripture, which in several places has Jesus saying “Depart….” So perhaps sending people away from His presence is an act of mercy on God’s part. Their torture in the outer darkness is that they can no longer prey on those who have chosen God, and they recognize what they are missing out on because of their choice of evil instead.


We have a choice in this life: Jesus offers eternal life to those who will receive Him and choose to receive, however imperfectly, the nature and character of God. God is love. (1 John 4:7) He defines agape as sacrificial self-giving for the good of another, as demonstrated in Jesus’ death on the cross to redeem humankind. Not some namby-pamby feel-good emotional high, but a positive visceral, moral and ethical virtue or attribute. Willing and working for the best, long-term good of another. 


Hell will unfortunately include the ultimate reaping the fruits of sins, with the demons laughing at humans who foolishly chose them. It will be the eternal outcome of their own decisions and actions. For those who do not choose Christ, an endless eternity of emptiness; wanting something they can never have; all alone in pain and rejection remorse; emotional and physical desires always there but no way to satisfy them; knowing others are in heaven and enjoying God’s presence, while they have nothing; burning in their desires but no way to make the pain stop. Whatever its exact makeup, if we are separated from Christ, it will be hell.

Saturday, October 22, 2022

Book Review: Deliver Us From Evil by Don Basham

Originally published in 1972, Don Basham’s book, Deliver Us From Evil, starts with an autobiographical storyline of how the Lord led him into a ministry of deliverance. This book does not deal with evil on a national or global scale -  Nazi Germany, or gang warfare in 4th world countries. The author tells of his experiences ministering to people dealing with personal evil. One hears about such individuals all too frequently in today’s headlines of mass shootings. But this book deals with the spiritual evil that simply messes up individual people’s  lives. 

Don Basham was part of the Charismatic Renewal that exploded in the 1960’s as God began to pour out the Holy Spirit on those in many different churches who were open to Him. The author  was not the first to have a ministry that included deliverance, as he frequently acknowledges. He relates his story in an accessible, matter-of-fact narrative. Demons are real and they mess up lives, so much that Jesus devoted a quarter of His ministry on earth to dealing with them. They are still around, despite having been defeated by Jesus 2,000 years ago. The first half of the book relates stories of the author learning to take this victory to the lives of those who are so afflicted and seeking release. 

The last half of the book expounds the principles of the ministry, dealing with the basic questions such as:

  • How to discern whether a particular issue is just human depravity (sin) or supernatural (demonic) oppression. 
  • The steps to perform deliverance,  for another person or for one’s self.
  • How to keep the victory once gained over demonic attack.

The key point in all this is that Jesus has won the victory over the world, the flesh, and the devil 2,000 years ago, but we need to receive it from Him. There is a war going on that will not end until the return of Christ. If it seems that the evening news shows a broad offensive by evil against human civilization and society, then we need to go to boot camp so that we can be effective soldiers in this fight. Spiritual warfare is fought on all levels and we must engage the enemy when we encounter him. The authority of Jesus Christ, invoked by His name and the Word of God spoken by those who know and trust Him, is our weapon, and we must learn to use it. The need for the full armor of God (Ephesians 6:11-17 ) become obvious  necessities once we recognize the realities of the war in heavenly realms that we are in. Bringing Christ into every situation will subdue evil far more effectively than government initiatives, however well-intentioned they may be, because Jesus will intervene to defeat the root cause of evil.

Sunday, October 16, 2022

California Dreamin of Heaven

The Mamas and the Papas hit, recorded by the Beach Boys in 1986,  epitomized the feelings of discouragement and longing for relief so common to life. The Beach Boys' earlier song (1965) California Girls characterized youthful focus on fleshly pleasures. Today’s California exhibits neither of these attributes in the popular mind, except perhaps a wistful memory. What does this say to us? 

El Camino Real was first established by dedicated missionaries, who were called to establish bastions of Christianity in this part of the new world. Missions were established starting in 1683 (almost a century before the road was built) and many stand to this day was a testimony. Indeed the names of many cities, e.g. San Diego, Santa Barbara, San Jose, San Francisco,  remind us of this heritage. (That sometimes the missionaries did not live up to the standards of Jesus does not diminish the fact of their zeal for Him.)


The Gold Rush, starting in 1848 (after California was ceded to the U.S. following the Mexican War), appealed to those who sought instant wealth. Most of the consequences of this flood of immigrants were predictable, as the forty-niners’ greed, and the disease and lifestyle they brought decimated native Americans, and probably did not improve their lifestyle. [The outcomes for individuals who struck it rich were likely not much different from those who win the lottery in our day.] But this established a concept of California in popular culture that endures.


California became a place to run away to. The prodigal son went to a far country to squander his father’s wealth. Many since the gold rush fled to California, not to spend their inheritance, but perhaps to escape a miserable life, or to get a new start in life. When my maternal great uncle, who was born and raised in Michigan, married a divorced woman, this so offended the other members of his family the he and his bride moved to California in the 1920’s to escape, and had no further contact with them. My father’s parents divorced when he was nine, and continued their war so meanly that my father left Michigan to attend USC in 1941 to escape their incessant battles. California beckoned. 


Migrant workers traditionally were viewed as temporary laborers who came from Mexico to California (and a few other states) to be exploited by, I mean, to provide labor for the harvest. Many, perhaps most, traditionally returned home each year. Modern migrants have set up permanent tent encampments on the streets of major cities in California  (and other western states). This immigration has been dealt with elsewhere, but undoubtedly these migrants view California as the earthly culmination of their quest for a better life. 


Image from Nations Online Project


Recent conditions almost sound like divine judgment. Wildfires and high temperatures suggest a certain supernatural location that is not anybody’s preferred eternal destination. Anyone who has driven in the big metropolitan areas is acquainted with the driving habits of their denizens. Housing prices have soared beyond outrageous to ludicrous. Dare we ask why?


There is a basic problem. It is called original sin (theologically), but we are all acquainted with this problem in practical experience. When we run away, or move to a new location to better our lives, we take ourselves with us. And we have an adversary who will deceive us in unfamiliar settings, and then accuse us when we succumb to his lies. This is not unique to California, but universal to humankind. Why did Jacob go to Paddan-aram to find a wife? Why did Abram go to Egypt when there was a famine? They had legitimate issues and God met them where they went, but the point was that He used their travels as part of His plan to redeem them from self.


We can’t run away from ourselves - our baggage is internal to us until we take it to Jesus


Friday, September 23, 2022

Consulting others and finding Truth

Rehoboam and James - wise and foolish politics

I Kings 12 relates the story of King Rehoboam deciding how to respond to a request from all Israel, sent through Jeroboam, asking the new king to lighten their load (hard labor, taxes).  Acts 15 relates the story of the council in Jerusalem in which the Apostles were asked to require gentile converts to Christianity to be circumcised. There are differences in the context, but the most important lesson is in the differences in execution.

Rehoboam was the undisputed heir of Solomon’s throne. He had no parliament to deal with, but he had advisors, as had his father. When the request came to him, he took time to consult his father’s advisers, and then to consult the young men who had grown up with him. There is no mention of prophets being asked at all. And then he decided which answer he would give. That was it. I Kings 12:16-20 records the consequences of his foolish decision. After that, a prophet finally appears on the scene (verses 22-24).

When Paul arrived in Jerusalem and told of the amazing work of the Holy Spirit among the gentiles, legalists insisted that Judaism was the path to Christ. Circumcision was given as a sign that the Jews were set apart from the nations, going back to Abraham. (Genesis 17:9-14) The apostles and elders gathered to look into the question. There was a vigorous debate (Acts 15:7) Peter then recounted the story of his visit to the household of Cornelius (Acts 10), and then Paul and Barnabas told of God’s working among the gentiles in their journeys. And then James gave his decision. Superficially, it might look like the process was the same. Rehoboam decided to follow his friends’ advice, James decided to accept Paul’s recommendation.

But there is a layer deeper. There is no suggestion that Rehoboam sought dialog between his two sets of advisors. James evidently had them all in the same room, enough so that they argued vigorously, discussing no doubt the basis for their recommendations. This contrast would appear to recommend the best path to make wise decisions would be the thesis – antithesis – synthesis paradigm; integrate everyone’s perspective into a unified outcome.

And so, in modern life, can we distill principles that are universally applicable? The easiest lesson is that of Proverbs 15:22, that many counselors enable plans to succeed. The implication is that no single person had a monopoly on truth or wisdom, and it is in the process of debating an issue that wisdom and successful plans emerge. Perhaps if Rehoboam had gathered all the advisors together so that they could debate the merits of their recommendations a reasonable compromise might have emerged. We will never know.

However, yet another layer of contrast can be seen. Rehoboam’s decision (1 Kings 12:14) had no hint of listening to either the people or his father’s advisors, or even any of the prophets. He was king and his word was law. James’ decision, recorded in Acts 15:22-29, did not say there are no requirements on how gentile believers should live. The letter, composed by committee, said there are fundamental norms for behavior, and that only the burden of the ceremonial law was lifted. They mentioned the Holy Spirit’s guidance. It was not a compromise, but a distillation of a new truth about the relationship between God and His people that emerged from interaction between apparently irreconcilable parties.

But I correct myself, and herein is the key. One Man has all Truth, He was the way, the truth, and the life. (John 14:6) If you search for the word wisdom in Proverbs you can find almost 50 verses. Many of them refer to wisdom as coming from the Lord. (E.g., 1:7, 2:6, 9:10, 15:33) This is the most fundamental difference between Rehoboam and the early apostles. Rehoboam wanted a practical answer and took bad advice. James and Peter and Paul wanted to hear what the Lord wanted them to do (not just what was efficient or expedient), and looked to the counsel of others to discern His will. James quoted Amos 9:11-12 to link their present situation to God’s promise of saving the gentiles. Ultimately the group collectively wrote the letter and sent a delegation to Antioch to convey that this was a community consensus on God’s will.

We cannot impose faith into matters of worldly politics, because so few in the world know the Lord. (Although God desires all men everywhere to be saved.) Hence, there is no cure here for rancorous political disputes. But although there are believers in both parties to every political dispute, it seems inconceivable that they could meet together to seek to hear the Lord’s voice and jointly discern His will. Not that He wouldn’t reveal it, but that most politicians would not risk alienating their base by meeting with the enemy. And herein lies the lingering infection in our political system. Believing politicians value how their voters perceive them over their desire to know God closely and do His will. Would that they would recognize the implicit truth that if God has called and gifted an individual for leadership, it is for His purposes, not theirs. How great is our God!

Saturday, September 3, 2022

Book Review: Abandonment to Divine Providence by Jean-Pierre de Caussade

This book was first published in French in the 18th century as the sacrament of the present moment, and still appearing in English translations under both titles.  The subtitle is ‘how to fulfill your daily duties with God-given purpose’. The two sections deal with the virtue of abandonment to divine providence, and the state of abandonment.

The virtue described is that of allowing God to work His will in our life. He sanctifies us, setting us apart for His purposes, when we fully submit to all He does. We can only do this through obedience, without waiting for a full understanding of His design. This is not a call for all believers to some great endeavor, but simple trust by doing what He says in the moment-by-moment duties of everyday life. DeCaussade goes on to discuss how we can discover God’s will for us individually, and that is the source of our sanctification. Ultimately everything in our life becomes taken up in this supernatural activity enabled by abandoning ourselves to God’s will, focusing on present moment He has placed us in.

DeCaussade’s description of the state of abandonment includes the nature of this state, its excellence, the duties (in a bit more detail), God’s workings on those in this state, and the trials accompanying it. The virtues of faith, hope, and love unite us to God in a single decision. It is (and must be) a free decision. Those who choose this, to purify their heart of worldly desires, are blessed with spiritual graces. But the cost is that there will be trials - to be misunderstood and maligned by other believers not on this road, to be mocked by those in the world, to be humiliated in our own eyes so that we distrust ourselves, and to be tested by the adversary. We are blessed when we recognize that God despoils all things other than Himself (worldly treasures, worldly values, church practices that others deem to earn holiness, self-created works or actions designed to please God) so that we will recognize that our true treasure is Him and Him alone. We even find our enemies to be a useful help for us to grow in grace. Ultimately, we will learn to recognize God at work in all creatures and situations.

Such a state might seem to encourage passivity, as we wait for God to tell us what to do. However, this is the exact opposite of the author’s understanding. Total abandonment to God means putting all our energy into finding out what He wants us to do, and in responding and doing actively all the things we know He has already asked us for. The much harder challenge, IMHO, is to give up all the desires for worldly and personal stuff, as He reveals to us one by one that they stand between Him and us. Even as we say we have decided to give it all to Him, it is a daily growing process and new decision for the next step. That is the challenge laid before us.

Thursday, August 25, 2022

Book Review: Waiting for the Morning Train - An American Boyhood by Bruce Catton

Civil War historian Bruce Catton tells a delightful story of a carefree childhood in Benzonia, Michigan, from 1899 to 1916. He later realized (book was written when he was 72 or 73) that the delight in his childhood was totally oblivious to the realty of the situation. During this period, the last of the virgin forest of the northern lower peninsula of Michigan was being harvested for lumber and shipped out. And that when the virgin forests were gone, the economy collapsed. The land was poor for farming and the vacation/resort industry was just getting started. 


Benzonia was established around an academy that was founded by committed Christians who purposed to bring enlightenment to the workers and residents in the boondocks. He tells of his childhood activities in this environment, playing with his friends in a small town and in the wilderness. He talks about his schooling, his classmates, being in the band, and various church activities. Bruce Catton’s father taught for some years, eventually ran the academy for a few years. In 1916 the author left for Oberlin College. One year after his father’s departure departure from the academy, it closed.


Bruce Catton was two years younger than my grandfather, also born in Michigan. A completely different story - his father was a lighthouse keeper and he was raised by his aunts. He worked as an accountant raising his family through the Great Depression, and ultimately was quite successful in the world of business. But I never heard any stories from him about an idyllic childhood. Catton was privileged to enjoy the childhood he had


In his retirement, Bruce Catton wrote this memoir (published in 1972) to ruminate on parallel themes. In youth, we have no idea what lies ahead, and the world is full of possibilities. In mankind’s early days, the world was unlimited in space, in resources, in opportunity. At the cusp of the transition from adolescence to manhood, the future seems bright. In Catton’s experience, the First World War, the collapse of the Benzonia academy were realities that broke in. (He never finished college and was awarded an honorary degree in 1956). Mankind has been systematically using the resources of the earth, using them up, and some day there will be a reckoning, as with the collapse of the lumber industry in northern Michigan. He vaguely alludes to using up resources such as minerals, etc., but 50 years later, with the climate inching towards a warmer worldwide temperature with a higher frequency of severe storms, droughts, and the like, he seems like a prophet. He never referenced scriptures like Luke 21:11 or Revelation 6:8.


And so the author wraps up his metaphor of childhood being like waiting for the morning train, which he would board to an exciting adventure in life. The ending is the night train, old age, having seen the failure of dreams, boarding the sleeper car. Regrettably, he apparently lacked the belief, or did not want to proselytize, about the glorious hope recorded in Revelation 19. 

Friday, July 29, 2022

The Chosen - Generation Z Livestream: Reconciling Love and Holiness

In mid-July, the Chosen aired a two hour event in which they invited nine Gen Z’ers to binge-watch the first season episodes and then share their reactions. I don’t really know what the selection criteria were for which 20-something’s were invited. There were some commonalities but the single biggest feature is that none of them had previously watched any of the episodes and none of them shared the basic Christian faith of the producers and cast. 


Some of the life stories quickly emerged in the post-binge-ing discussions. 

  • Several had been brought up in various Christian denominations but none was a practicing Christian at this time. Their reasons for leaving the church varied, but none felt connected to the church they had left, except by memory. 
  • A few had had mental health issues as teenagers, at least one had contemplated suicide. Does this have common cause with the mental health epidemic in the U.S. that has resulted in young men committing mass shootings at an unprecedented rate?
  • A few had experienced some form of abuse as children or teenagers. Several expressed alienation from their parents as part of that. 
  • Virtually all felt that their true self was not affirmed by anyone - that everyone told them how bad they were and that they had to change to be validated.
  • One revealed that she was a lesbian and that no one would accept her for that reason. 

All expressed that the depiction of Jesus in the Chosen as kind, compassionate, and welcoming appealed to them, and that it was completely different from their experience with religious people. None had apparently ever had a personal relationship with Christ in which they personally experienced His nature and character in their life.


How can the church minister to Gen Z? We cannot abandon the fundamentals of the Christian faith. Perhaps we should examine the presentation of the gospel and our description of the Christian life. 

  • God is holy; that cannot change. 
  • God is love, and loves us.
  • God’s desire is for us to share his holiness, and we don’t measure up. (Romans 3:23)
  • Our sins are ultimately self-destructive; we can listen to wisdom or learn from experience.
  • God has provided a rescuer for us, Jesus Christ, who came to earth to redeem us, by dying for our sins.
  • If we receive Him, Jesus will  rescue us from both the judgment for and the power and consequences of our sin. 


Where do modern churches fail to connect with most 20-Somethings?

  • The typical church service consisting of the liturgy and preaching seems irrelevant and simply doesn’t connect to outsiders. The Chosen connects partly because it is so different.
  • The concept that in order to be saved, one has to beat unbelievers about the head and shoulders with their sinfulness. The reason is that if a person does not confess his or her sins, God will not forgive them. The practical out-working is that the unbeliever perceives the one browbeating them to have a “holier-than-thou” attitude. Having an internal sense of their own shortcomings, this does not sound like a God of love. They are looking for love.
  • The perceived irrelevance of Biblical norms and practices to modern life. Superficially, rules from two to four thousand years ago seem to have been needed in the Iron Age, but modern technology and medical advances have overcome many of the conditions these rules address or mitigate. Unspoken is the unchanging human nature, and what it takes to live together in harmony with fellow humans; the transcendent holiness of God is incomprehensible to people whose  intellectual input has been the Internet their entire lives.
  • How God can love us and yet issue all of the threats and warnings in Scripture. The empowerment of the Holy Spirit to overcome all of the issues from our upbringing and intrinsic self-centeredness is seldom presented so that outsiders can understand, let alone desire it. How to receive this empowerment is even more baffling when enshrouded with religious jargon.


The Chosen shows snippets of life in which Jesus reveals Himself in love,  holiness, and power, connecting to the down and out people of the first century. But the Chosen is not a church and cannot function as one. The actors are able to portray Jesus and the Biblical characters, but do not constitute a church. Jesus established the church and He is going to return for as His bride; it is His chosen instrument to minister eternal life on a continuing basis to those who respond to Him. What might the church do?

  • Follow up contact could be established, similar to the approach that the Billy Graham crusade used decades ago to establish a connection between those who responded at crusades and local churches. But the producers of The Chosen would have to be willing, and they do not typically (so far as I can tell) ask viewers to respond directly to them with statements of coming to Christ. There is a place on their app for comments, but I have no idea if there is any follow up, or it is just social media.
  • Small home gatherings could leverage episodes of the Chosen in a format similar to the Alpha course. To invite “seekers” in a format similar to that of the livestream special. To watch an episode and then get their reactions, and questions, without a preset theological curriculum. To connect them to experience God directly through a medium they can relate to. And then nurture that infant faith through appropriate ministry.
  • Frankly, the attitudes that believers in church exhibit need to be scrutinized. Theological depth and Scriptural exposition need to be in the context of ministry to the needs of hurting people. And Gen-Zers hurt, as described above.
  • What the church cannot do is compromise on truth. Truth. Because gen-Z-ers typically reject all authority if they feel like it, they must understand that God’s kingdom is those who humbly submit to God, even if we don’t feel like it or like what He says. (We need to be clear about the difference in authority between Scripture itself, and people’s interpretation of it.)


The bottom line is that the Chosen presents an opportunity for the church to minister to Gen-Z, but  challenges must be thoughtfully addressed. Perhaps the deepest challenge is to reconcile (in theology and in practice) perfect love with perfect holiness. 

Monday, July 11, 2022

Lepanto - the under-appreciated valor of 16th century Christendom

Book Review: Lepanto by G. K. Chesterton, Ed by Dale Ahlquist (Ignatius Press, 2004).


Lepanto, penned by Chesterton in 1911, provides a poetic interpretation of a battle that occurred in October, 1571, in 143 lines.  The significance of the battle of Lepanto: if the Turks had won, they would surely have invaded Rome and Venice, and Europe would have been dominated by Islamic rulers. Chesterton depicts various remote players, such as the Sultan, the Pope, the Prophet of Islam, each in their respective chambers, all while the heroic Don John is leading the charge to victory.


I initially found the poem obscure and confusing. Most of the book is devoted to explaining the context and the references that Chesterton made. I had never heard of this particular battle, which perhaps speaks to the narrowness of the world history I was taught in High School. Over the years I have learned about battles of Constantinople, Tours, Vienna,  Granada, and now Lepanto. The full scope of the Islamic Empire - its rapid expansion by military conquest, politicization into kingdoms and bureaucracies, ossification, and decay - all these were seldom or never touched on. They were certainly never presented as a unified story of the centuries-long struggle between Christendom and Islam on the geopolitical stage. [Bernard Lewis is sadly omitted from most history courses.]


The heart of Lepanto is an unlikely hero, Don John, the bastard son of King Philip, and half-brother to Philip II of Spain, emperor of the Holy Roman Empire. Pope Pius V appointed Don John (at age 24) admiral over the combined European fleet to confront and defeat the larger Turkish fleet being assembled at Lepanto (at the entrance to the Gulf of Corinth) for the Turkish invasion of Europe. 


Essays by Brandon Rogers and Melvin Kriesel summarize the background and the battle itself. A piece by William Cinfici describes the aftermath spanning the centuries from the 16th to the 21st. Dale Ahlquist helps us interpret the poem (imagery, allusions, references) and appreciate the poetic artistry. Finally, two related essays by G.K. Chesterton provide insight into his perspective: a 1911 short essay linking the true story of Don John to legend and faith; and a much longer essay from 1931 on the implications if Don John had married Mary Queen of Scots. That was reportedly his intention, but he died suddenly before they even met in person. The latter essay delves into the intertwined threads of religion, wars, and royalty in 16th century Europe. 


The overall conclusion I drew from the entire book is this: In 16th century Europe, between the splintering of Christendom due to the Reformation and rival political and royal establishments, it was only by the grace of God working through an unlikely vessel that Islamic conquest of Europe was halted. 

Saturday, July 2, 2022

Book Review: Our Lady of Guadalupe and the Conquest of Darkness by Warren H. Carroll

In 1487, the Aztec empire under the dominance of Tlacaellel, dedicated the new pyramid-temple of Huitzilopochtli with human sacrifices of 80,000 men in four days, far surpassing the typical annual total of Aztec sacrifices of approximately 50,000. At the same time, in Europe, Spain was in the final stages of its war with the Muslim invaders, to repel their armies, which was completed in 1492. The completion of this freed the Spanish government to commission and provision Christopher Columbus to sail west to Asia, only to discover the Americas instead. The Spanish unknowingly set out in a conquest similar to that of the Israelites when the iniquity of the Amorites was fully accomplished (Genesis 15:16).



The Bible records multiple judgments of nations and cultures totally given over to evil, besides the Canaanites. The antediluvian world and Sodom and Gomorrah are two examples in which God eschewed human agency. But that is not what Warren Carroll writes about. In 1517, 25 years after Columbus’ arrival in the Caribbean, Mexico was discovered, and first contact occurred between the Spanish and the Aztec Empire, a.k.a. Mexica. Within four years, Cortes and a handful of Spanish soldiers dethroned the Hummingbird Wizard and ruled Mexica. 


What follows this is the equally miraculous transformation of a culture. How can 15 million people who have lived (and been terrorized) by pagan idol worship of evil spirits claiming to be gods and demanding human sacrifice be freed? In a few decades, over half the population of Mexica became Christians. This was due to the efforts of the Spanish Catholic Church in sending and supporting those called to this missionary endeavor. Rather than destroying the nation as the Israelites did Canaan, the Spanish brought life and deliverance to the Aztecs. [The vision of Guadalupe is almost a footnote to this.]


What is the difference between evangelization and cultural imperialism? If there were (hypothetically) no objective standard for good and evil, this would be a difficult question. But since God demonstrated His love for us by sending His Son to rescue us from our sin and its consequences, we have an ultimate standard. The good news of the Gospel is a spiritual truth of a fundamentally different kind than pagan idol worship that demands human sacrifice. When the spiritual war in heavenly places becomes visible on earth, we must choose sides.


What is the lesson for us? The Aztec Empire did an annual human sacrifice of approximately one person for every 300 population. They were judged and saved from evil after military defeat. In our nation there occurs an abortion for approximately one in 40 population. While the stench of this unchecked evil is not the sole evidence, it may serve as a bellwether for the core values of a culture. The Supreme Court opened the door to changing our cultural direction, but … they do not decide the ultimate outcome. [Selah] A rebellious and evil society cannot escape judgment if it rejects all warnings. Sodom and Gomorrah (Genesis 19:14) reaped in full measure, the Aztecs were conquered, and six justices pointed it out, but ultimately our society will decide its own fate.


Monday, June 27, 2022

Darkness, Cortes, and the Supreme Court

Book Review: Our Lady of Guadalupe and the Conquest of Darkness by Warren H. Carroll, 1980.

In 1487, the Aztec empire under the dominance of Tlacaellel, dedicated the new pyramid-temple of Huitzilopochtli with human sacrifices of 80,000 men in four days, far surpassing the typical annual total of Aztec sacrifices of approximately 50,000. At the same time, in Europe, Spain was in the final stages of its war with the Muslim invaders, to repel their armies, which was completed in 1492. The completion of this freed the Spanish government to commission and provision Christopher Columbus to sail west to Asia, only to discover the Americas instead. The Spanish unknowingly set out in a conquest similar to that of the Israelites when the iniquity of the Amorites was fully accomplished (Genesis 15:16).


The Bible records multiple judgments of nations and cultures totally given over to evil, besides the Canaanites. The antediluvian world and Sodom and Gomorrah are two examples in which God eschewed human agency. But that is not what Warren Carroll writes about. In 1517, 25 years after Columbus’ arrival in the Caribbean, Mexico was discovered, and first contact occurred between the Spanish and the Aztec Empire, a.k.a. Mexica. Within four years, Cortes and a handful of Spanish soldiers dethroned the Hummingbird Wizard and ruled Mexica. 


What follows this is the equally miraculous transformation of a culture. How can 15 million people who have lived (and been terrorized) by pagan idol worship of evil spirits claiming to be gods and demanding human sacrifice be freed? In a few decades, over half the population of Mexica became Christians. This was due to the efforts of the Spanish Catholic Church in sending and supporting those called to this missionary endeavor. Rather than destroying the nation as the Israelites did Canaan, the Spanish brought life and deliverance to the Aztecs. [The vision of Guadalupe is almost a footnote to this.]


What is the difference between evangelization and cultural imperialism? If there were (hypothetically) no objective standard for good and evil, this would be a difficult question. But since God demonstrated His love for us by sending His Son to rescue us from our sin and its consequences, we have an ultimate standard. The good news of the Gospel is a spiritual truth of a fundamentally different kind than pagan idol worship that demands human sacrifice. When the spiritual war in heavenly places becomes visible on earth, we must choose sides.


What is the lesson for us? The Aztec Empire did an annual human sacrifice of approximately one person for every 300 population. They were judged and saved from evil after military defeat. In our nation there occurs an abortion for approximately one in 40 population. While the stench of this unchecked evil is not the sole evidence, it may serve as a bellwether for the core values of a culture. The Supreme Court opened the door to changing our cultural direction, but … they do not decide the ultimate outcome. [Selah] A rebellious and evil society cannot escape judgment if it rejects all warnings. Sodom and Gomorrah (Genesis 19:14) reaped in full measure, the Aztecs were conquered, and six justices pointed it out, but ultimately our society will decide its own fate.


Friday, June 10, 2022

Discerning what God is calling us to

As we grow up, typically in adolescence, we have to decide for ourselves (ultimately) what path we will take. There are several dimensions of life.

  • Values
  • Friends 
  • Family choices
  • Social behavior norms
  • Spiritual beliefs and practices 
  • Career
  • Financial behaviors

And although we start life without questioning our parents’ choices for themselves and for us, as we develop we begin to discover other sources of authority, values, norms, etc. This may include teachers, church leaders, television role models (both characters and actors), peers, influencers on social media, historical writings (philosophers, historians, etc.). Sadly, most make their decisions about the source of values, and the resulting means to achieve them, without considering the fundamental question of why. Why should we leave our parents’ value system? Why should we choose to adopt values and behaviors from some specific source? 


Without a philosophical digression about the summum bonum of life, I propose to take as a given that we should seek to value the things God values and do the things He tells us to do. What do Scriptures say about this?


Firstly, both the written and spoken words of God are our primary sources of God’s message to  us. We can find almost innumerable verses advising us to seek God by study of the Scripture.  What about God speaking to us directly? How do we recognize His voice? One sure sign is referred to in Luke 24:32. When His written word becomes alive to us, or what He says to us in our heart directly causes our heart to burn within us, we must learn to recognize and respond.


The study of Scripture systematically becomes theology. What we believe about God should be the logical result of the propositional statements of Scripture. Countless theologians through the ages have written about the doctrines they have thus derived. We can learn from them, but they conflict. In any event, no writings of any theologian should be elevated to the same level as Scripture itself. (Matthew 15:9, Mark 7:7) But propositional statements about God are not the essence of life choices, they are guideposts along the road.


The foremost calling is simply a statement of God’s universal expectation. What does God require?

He has told you, mortal one, what is good;
And what does the Lord require of you
But to do justice, to love kindness,
And to walk humbly with your God? (Micah 6:8)

And Peter instructs his readers to make sure that their response to Jesus’ calling and choice is firm, that the practice of virtues will supply entrance into Jesus’ eternal kingdom. He calls us but we must choose to respond to His call. (2 Peter 1:5-11)


https://images.app.goo.gl/TezUK2ryXa1WGVky9


On a practical level, discerning whether God has called us to full time ministry, or what form of service to His body, or to others outside the church, or to humankind as a whole, is a challenge. Evidence of God’s call can take various forms, such as an inner confirmation, the working of the spiritual gifts (e.g., words of knowledge, wisdom, etc.), ease of understanding difficult subject matter, coincidences or confirming signs, etc. The linkage between God’s calling and gifts is referenced a few places: Romans 11:29; Ephesians 4:1-8.


It is important that we understand that these giftings are not for our personal benefit, but the means by which God is ministering to His people and to the world at large, through us. This is manifest evidence of His love for humankind, that He gives people gifts to be pastors and teachers, but equally to be doctors and scientists and farmers and truck drivers and entrepreneurs. We go astray when we hijack His gifts for our own purposes. 


We must also keep in mind that we are not saved by our callings, but by faith in Christ. But He does not stop with salvation - that is His starting point. There is a progression. There is perhaps no greater joy than being a tool in the hand of the Maker, except, maybe, the joy we will one day experience in His presence in heaven. Out of His love, He knows what will fulfill us. That is why He calls us to join Him, both in fellowship and in His work, until the two are indistinguishably merged in us.



Sunday, May 22, 2022

Modern Rage - the end of the Day of Grace?

On Pentecost, Peter quoted Joel (Acts 2:17-21). 

Joel 2:28  “And it shall come to pass afterward,
    
that I will pour out my Spirit on all flesh;
your sons and your daughters shall prophesy,
    
your old men shall dream dreams,
    
and your young men shall see visions.

29 Even on the male and female servants
    
in those days I will pour out my Spirit.

30 “And I will show wonders in the heavens and on the earth, blood and fire and columns of smoke. 31 The sun shall be turned to darkness, and the moon to blood, before the great and awesome day of the Lord comes. 32 And it shall come to pass that everyone who calls on the name of the Lord shall be saved. For in Mount Zion and in Jerusalem there shall be those who escape, as the Lord has said, and among the survivors shall be those whom the Lord calls.

One aspect of the Holy Spirit outpouring on all flesh is that the listeners’ (believers) sons and daughters would prophesy, dream, and have visions. But what about unbelievers? If the Holy Spirit is poured out on all flesh, then the coming of the Holy Spirit on the world would result in the things described by Jesus at the last supper.

John 16:8 And He, when He comes, will convict the world regarding sin, and righteousness, and judgment: 9 regarding sin, because they do not believe in Me; 10 and regarding righteousness, because I am going to the Father and you no longer are going to see Me; 11 and regarding judgment, because the ruler of this world has been judged.

The impact of this conviction has been seen in the world since that first day of Pentecost, but is the current rage manifested in mass shooting and senseless wars, on the highways, and on the political scene just a result of conviction? While the events described in Joel 2:30-31 seem apocalyptic in the sense that such events are also described in Revelation, we have had blood moons, solar eclipses, and wars from time to time, throughout history. Perhaps blood on earth refers to the epidemic of mass shootings and insane wars caused by boundless rage. Does this go beyond Jesus’ words recorded in John 16, to perhaps evidence of Revelation 12:12 being fulfilled?

For this reason, rejoice, you heavens and you who dwell in them. Woe to the earth and the sea, because the devil has come down to you with great wrath, knowing that he has only a short time.

What is to be the believer’s response to this bizarre behavior? Joel 2:28 seems to describe what God intends - manifestations of the Holy Spirit. John 15:26-27 & 16:13-15 record Jesus’ words.

John 15:26 When the Helper comes, whom I will send to you from the Father, namely, the Spirit of truth who comes from the Father, He will testify about Me, 27 and you are testifying as well, because you have been with Me from the beginning.

John 16:13 But when He, the Spirit of truth, comes, He will guide you into all the truth; for He will not speak on His own, but whatever He hears, He will speak; and He will disclose to you what is to come. 14 He will glorify Me, for He will take from Mine and will disclose it to you. 15 All things that the Father has are Mine; this is why I said that He takes from Mine and will disclose it to you.

The Holy Spirit will reveal Jesus’ truth to the believer, who will in turn testify. How the world that is under conviction responds to Truth is up to them. But it sets the stage for the statements recorded in Revelation 6:15-17.

15 Then the kings of the earth and the eminent people, and the commanders and the wealthy and the strong, and every slave and free person hid themselves in the caves and among the rocks of the mountains; 16 and they *said to the mountains and the rocks, “Fall on us and hide us from the sight of Him who sits on the throne, and from the wrath of the Lamb; 17 for the great day of Their wrath has come, and who is able to stand?”

Jesus initiated the day-age of grace. The kingdom of God is at hand, available to anyone who will receive Him. But just as ancient Israel tested God’s patience until the deportation, modern man will ultimately reach a day of justice. Under grace, we do not necessarily reap what we sow, because a merciful God uses circumstances to warn us, to form us into His likeness, to refine us. We are chastised but not destroyed. 

2 Corinthians 4:we are afflicted in every way, but not crushed; perplexed, but not despairing; persecuted, but not abandoned; struck down, but not destroyed; 10 always carrying around in the body the dying of Jesus, so that the life of Jesus may also be revealed in our body. 11 For we who live are constantly being handed over to death because of Jesus, so that the life of Jesus may also be revealed in our mortal flesh. 12 So death works in us, but life in you. 

Nebuchadnezzar (a pagan king!) was brought to his knees by God’s grace (Daniel 4:34-37), but Belshazzar was judged. (Daniel 5:26-30) The unveiling recorded by John seems to be simply the record seen from afar of modern rebellion against God and rejection of His grace (Revelation 6:15-17), and the reaping of the sown seed. (Revelation14:14-16)

14 Then I looked, and behold, a white cloud, and sitting on the cloud was one like a son of man, with a golden crown on His head and a sharp sickle in His hand. 15 And another angel came out of the temple, calling out with a loud voice to Him who sat on the cloud, “Put in your sickle and reap, for the hour to reap has come, because the harvest of the earth is ripe.” 16 Then He who sat on the cloud swung His sickle over the earth, and the earth was reaped.