Showing posts with label The Fall. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Fall. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 18, 2020

Romans 5:17 - Human Inability

Romans 5:17 

For if by the transgression of the one, death reigned through the one, much more those who receive the abundance of grace and of the gift of righteousness will reign in life through the One, Jesus Christ. 

Message: Human Inability

Time: The Apostle Paul wrote to the Romans from the Greek city of Corinth in AD 57, just three years after the 16 year old Nero had ascended to the throne as Emperor of Rome. Persecution of Christians wouldn't begin until AD 64. The church was experiencing times of relative peace. From where he wrote, Corinth, was a hotbed of sexual immorality and idol worship.

What the Lord is Saying: 

Paul does a contrast of righteousness and condemnation in Romans 5:12-21. Today, let's just look at the condemnation. 

Verse 12 says that -- Through one man (Adam) sin came to all mankind -- and with sin came death to all mankind because all sinned. This is the matter of Adam being our federal head. He sinned once and it spread to all mankind and in the process all are doomed to death because all have sinned. Everyone does not have to sin the same way as Adam to be condemned, simply sinning one time in any way makes one condemned. 

This condemnation of man occurred before the Law was given and in the world. I looked at this previously in my lesson of Romans 5:13-14 whereby Paul is not saying in verse 13 that the Law must be present for there to be sin. The Law is written on our hearts. Abraham who was present 430 years before the Law was still accountable to obedience in all its forms. 

The big concluding point here is that man is not capable of justifying Himself. Adam's sin condemned all mankind. At this point death reigns in us and obedience to the Law will not happen because sin is present. So humans have an inability to attempt to keep the Law for justification. I think this is one of the chief lies of Satan - to be good enough. But, good enough is not the issue, the issue is never sinning. Only Jesus is capable because only Jesus does not sin. 

Promise: Mankind is not born neutral, but rather born guilty and corrupted, then called ones are renewed by the Holy Spirit so those can then please Him. 

Prayer: O Lord, keep me humble for I had nothing to do in being saved by You. I am condemned because I sinned. Thank you Jesus for fulfilling that which I cannot. Thank you for allowing me to receive your grace. Now I need to live everyday for you. Thank you for continuing to reinforce this in my life. As your ambassador, vessel, bond-servant - be my words and voice to communicate this to others. 


Note: I follow the readings from the Tabletalk Magazine devotional, though I am a little behind and working through 2017 devotionals. 2017 is a study of key biblical doctrines celebrating the 500th year of the Reformation. The month of June is about justification; May was about solus Christus - Christ Alone; April, salvation by grace alone; March, the sovereign providence of God; February, the doctrine of revelation and the various aspects of the doctrine of Scripture that sola Scriptura seeks to preserve; January, the doctrine of God.

 - The Sins of the Gentiles - Though born with God being evident, Gentiles do not honor God or give thanks, look to their selves for truth, and God gives them over to their sin, and in the process God's wrath is sin which will culminate on the Day of the Lord. The Sins of the Jews - Jews thought their status meant only Gentiles were true sinners. Romans 2 and 3 explains that Jews are just as guilty before God. The Law and Accountability - the Law reminds us we are sinners and doing good will not outweigh this bad; I am condemned. Righteousness According to the Law - The Law can make one righteous if obedient to all. Our sin keeps us from this. 

Wednesday, October 30, 2019

Romans 3:10-11 - A Divided Will

Romans 3:10-11
10 as it is written,
“There is none righteous, not even one;
11 There is none who understands,
There is none who seeks for God;


Message: A Divided Will; Does man cooperate with God at the point of salvation or is man passive?

Time: Paul wrote Romans from Corinth as he prepared to leave for Palestine. Phoebe (16:1,2) was given the great responsibility of delivering the letter to the Romans believers. At this time, Rome had a population of 1 million, many of whom were slaves. The Roman church was doctrinally sound, but it still needed rich doctrine and practical application. Rome had massive buildings but also slums.

What the Lord is Saying:

While Pelagianism and semi-Pelagianism were condemned at the Second Council of Orange in AD 529, there are remnants of it that still seem to be held today. Catholicism condemns it and yet in practice, they seem to lapse back into semi-Pelagianism. RC Sproul in his message "Is Grace Irresistible" mentions that there is an always present conflict in the church between semi-Pelagianism and Augustinian as it relates to the issue of man's involvement in salvation. He mentions that Arminius held to something similar to semi-Pelagianism. (I get the idea that he thinks that a person can be saved believing in semi-Pelagianism as well as Augustinian's view because both believe in grace.)

Again, semi-Pelagianism upholds the doctrine of grace but believes that man takes the first step toward God. Pelagius argues that if God commanded people to do something, then he felt that man must have the ability to do it, for why would God make a command if man was unable to heed it. The conclusion of Pelagius is that grace is not needed for man has the ability on his own for goodness. [I have read a few commentaries on Pelagius and it seems that what he wrote about grace contradicted himself - at times he said grace was necessary, at times unnecessary; what seems to be clear is he was concerned that grace made man sort of irresponsible and therefore could gave license to sin; Christians were therefore lax in their service because the view they had about sin.]

I find these beliefs interesting because we have so many seemingly different beliefs today and yet as I study this material I see we actually have a few beliefs with some small variations (recently, I have begun to identify that the variations are often a difference in opinion as to what constitutes essential and non-essential doctrines). It is interesting to see the origin of theology and how concepts have been concluded by some and not concluded by others. Who we are today in our thinking is really a product of thinking from hundreds of years ago.

It seems that the crux of what most people want from God or their beliefs is something that makes sense or sounds reasonable to them. They seem to want something all inclusive. In a way, I can understand the stumbling block that results in believing that God does all the work because man seems to want to see worth and value in who he himself is. Therefore, God choosing His elect, God doing all the work, and man not even capable of denying God, but rather works in a way that he must - well, these concepts for me anyway create a sort of struggle and a struggle to others.

Even the atheist seems to arrive at his or her conclusion because of a belief that life is unreasonable if there is a God and it is easier to conclude that there is no God and life is only what we see now. I was listening to an interview with Ravi Zacharias and he said the most common and prevalent question he gets is over the problem of evil, suffering and life operating in a seemingly random manner. And how is it a God could love me and yet allow others to suffer. I've always found this puzzling that people have simply come to the conclusion that life can only be for our good. On one hand I don't think people think this and that toil has merits, but not to the extremes of perhaps suffering.

Therefore, it seems to me that their is a conclusion that there is no God. Even in these other beliefs that theologians and monks have had, it appears this idea of reason that sweeps into the view of the Bible - that at first glance, in the reading of scripture it doesn't make sense that, for example, a command would be given by God and yet man would be incapable of adhering to that command. In addition, the exclusive notion of God only saving the elect, at times feels peculiar.

Much of life is based upon training and we are trained in thought by our surroundings - our parents, our churches and naturally some people can at times stare at this and wonder if the training has been valid. At times in my reading of the Bible, I'm looking at the words of the text and thinking about them to see if my conclusion lines up with the training in which I have received. Thus, when I examine these beliefs I want to understand them. Even this study, the writers have already concluded that they are heresies. Granted, others have concluded that in that past as well. I really want my beliefs to be based upon the Word of God and not the Words of Men. Yet, God speaks through men and gives them understanding into the things of God.

RC Sproul in the message titled A Divided Will looks at the Roman Catholic view toward original sin. Original Sin is defined as Adam sinning first and then his sin passed on to every other person after Adam; one person's sin made everyone a sinner. The Roman Catholic church condemned Pelagianism in the past and even today. What seems surprising is that at one time they upheld Augustine. Then they condemned semi-Pelagianism in 529, but then they also condemned Luther at the time of the Reformation in the 16th century. Thus, all of the options concerning the will and original sin seem to have been condemned. But the appearance is that they seem to mirror semi-Pelagianism which tries to say that grace and man choosing can go hand in hand.

In the Council of Trent from the 16th century, he (Sproul) looks at the Roman Catholic view of will and original sin. In Canon 4, there is some sort of condemnation toward the reformers. Rome has maintained that baptism cleanses the soul from original sin; grace is infused into the soul and thus grace is necessary for salvation, but the grace must meet with a response or cooperation with the person; at this point a person becomes inherently righteous. However, according to reformers, man is dead in sin and must be awakened by God through regeneration. The issue seems to be here as to whether there is cooperation with man or if the first step of grace is God doing the work. According to reformers, at this point, man is passive. God is not waiting for man to agree with Him. Man instead is quickened back to life. Thus, it is monergistic whereby God works through the Holy Spirit to bring about the salvation of the individual. But, according to the catechism man still has the power to choose good or evil. Reformers says that man does have the freedom to choose, but will only choose evil.

In his message titled Bondage of the Will, RC Sproul speaks of Martin Luther and sola fide "by faith alone" and this summarizes Luther's doctrine of justification by faith alone. Yet Luther felt that sola gratia "by grace alone" was an even more important subject as sola fide grows out of sola gratia. He thought that the study of election was at the heart of the church's mission in understanding. We are saved by grace and it has to then be by faith. Luther felt it was of pinnacle importance to understand whether our salvation is the work of God or work based upon our own merits, our own striving, our own efforts. Sproul talks about the debate between Erasmus and Luther over the issue of whether free will is even a subject that academics should study and debate. Erasmus felt conversely that it shouldn't be studied for he felt that to understand grace alone and faith alone would make man feel that his live of living had no value. To this Luther responds. Erasmus says "Who will respond to reform his life?" Luther - "Nobody." Erasmus - "Who will believe that God loves him?" Luther - "Nobody." And this is in a way Luther's point that no one seeks after God as it says here in Romans 3:11.

We don't want to come to the things of God, on our own. Our only hope is that God seeks us out and turns us around and brings us to Himself. How can one say that one person, on his own accord chooses grace while another person does not? There must be something between the action of the will and making the choice. The in between is inclination of the soul. Why are you a Christian and your neighbor isn't? And they'll say, "Well, I chose to be and they chose not to be." And I will say - Is it because you are more righteous than your neighbor? Most people will shrink from saying this. So why isn't it because you are more righteous? You made the right decision, didn't you? And yet this is what they really believe that they made the righteous choice. And then there is the subject of necessity. For Erasmus, necessity meant coercion and therefore felt like there was no free will. If my actions are necessary because of God's foreknowledge then they must take place through coercion - says Erasmus. Luther says - God does not force me to make decisions in my normal daily living, but they are necessary in respect to his knowledge, because if God knows today what I am going to do freely tomorrow, without His coercion, will I do that tomorrow? God's knowledge of it happening does not mean that God is forcing it to happen. God does not coerce sinners to sin. People choose what they want, but the problem is what they want is wicked. He does not force people who want only to do evil, to do good.

RC Sproul in the message title Voluntary Slaves, Sproul starts by clarifying that Calvin gets his understanding of election from Augustine and Luther. Following Luther's death, the Lutheran church was persuaded by a colleague Phillipp Melanchthon of Luther's who disagreed with some of Luther's philosophies, namely the one of whether individuals cooperated with their salvation. This is why the Lutheran church is in conflict with Calvin even today.

Calvin often gets the credit for the doctrine of free will and God's sovereignty because of his TULIP. T is for Total Depravity. This total depravity does not mean that a person is completely evil for even in thinking of a person that is evil, like Hitler, that person could be more evil than he was. Instead what this means is that as a result of the fall, sin affected the entire human race. And this fallenness affects the entire person - the mind, the heart, the the body, the will. Thus we are morally incapable. Calvin said we are still capable of making choices and he says we are still capable of achieving what he calls "civil" or "civic virtue." This means that on the level of human interaction, fallen man can do good things to and for each other. These are horizontal choices. What Calvin is getting at is whether man has any desire to good things vertically. On his own accord, vertically, will he choose the things of God?

Now what is most controversial by Calvin is the letter U which stands for Unconditional Election. What this means is God chooses man not based upon their actions because no one would respond positively to the gospel. As he said, man is fallen and therefore incapable of choosing horizontal devotion to God, apart from God giving them aid and drawing them to Himself. Jesus said that the flesh profits nothing. Apart from the work of the Holy Spirit in our lives to regenerate us we are incapable of choosing the things of God.

Our mind has been seriously affected by the Fall. But it has not been destroyed. The mind is still capable of achieving greatness. Some people have been bestowed on them a great intellect and work hard at learning and have in the process achieved much greatness on the earthly plane - horizontally, but in the matters of the vertical or in the matters of God the only way they can achieve the things of God is when the Spirit of God intercedes into their lives. I Corinthians 2:14 - The person without the Spirit does not accept the things that come from the Spirit of God but considers them foolishness, and cannot understand them because they are discerned only through the Spirit. No one ever of himself will be able to come to Christ. No one can. Jesus says that no one can come to Him unless it is given to him or unless the Father draws him. Arminian speaks of this drawing as God luring or assisting man in coming to him. Calvin though speaks of drawing as working internally in the heart and soul of a person and make them willing to come to him. If left to themselves they would not be willing. God does the work and they become willing. Apart from his work they would never come to him. He changes their disposition.

Summary - What I am seeing in this discourse is the tendency I think in some thinkers, like Pelagius and Erasmus is maybe not necessarily disputing the words of the Bible, but struggling in believing this is actually as it is. Feelings creep into our lives and we in turn struggle to believe that God really intended people to operate in a manner of Him doing the work in drawing man to Himself. I thought it was most compelling in this study to think about the vertical and horizontal. That we can make choices on the horizontal and even live seemingly good lives, do good things, and make good choices, but in the matter of the vertical, in the matter of God and desiring Him above else, this is our problem. And it is only God that can give us this type of desire for Him. We cannot do it on our own. Thus, as I have said before, we are trained in life to live in such a way horizontally and we naturally think this is how God works vertically. But He does not. There is no trade-off with Him of us doing good deeds and then receiving a reward in return. The reality is this is the way it works most of the time in our horizontal living and therefore we equate it with God. But scripture says differently and so we must submit to the Word of God, in its entirety. I think I've thought that maybe the Apostle Paul and Jesus and the rest of the Bible were somehow in conflict, but this is not so. Paul simply expands on principles of the rest of the book. This has been an enlightening message and I know it has taken me two months to complete, but it does seem like it has sunk into me now. Thus, where we reside today is the idea that people simply are not as fallen as scripture makes them out to be.

Promise: From Tabletalk - Understanding our fallenness, that we will not seek God without His effectual grace, enables us to worship Him more fervently as the source of every good and perfect gift.

Prayer: O Father, I thank you for the clarity of Your Word. Yes, it is hard work and it takes time to understand what it says. I thank you for this, that there is depth to You. Thank you for speaking through men like Sproul and weaving your message through history. Give me empathy towards people that do not share this knowledge. I pray for them that you would illuminate people and give them understanding. Keep me focus on this practice of prayer and not towards the practice of me seeking to change others. Thank you for salvation and allowing me to see the beauty of your grace and have it affect me for all eternity. Thank you Jesus for bearing the punishment of my sins, for bearing the punishment of all of our sins, thereby fulfilling the punishment of my sins so that I could be sealed in righteousness for eternity.

Note: I follow the readings from the Tabletalk Magazine devotional, though I am a little behind and working through 2017 devotionals. 2017 is a study of key biblical doctrines celebrating the 500th year of the Reformation. The month of April is about salvation by grace alone. March was about the sovereign providence of God; February was about the doctrine of revelation and the various aspects of the doctrine of Scripture that sola Scriptura seeks to preserve; January is about the doctrine of God.

Monday, July 29, 2019

Genesis 3:6-7 - The Loss and Restoration of Liberty

Genesis 3:6-7
6 When the woman saw that the tree was good for food, and that it was a delight to the eyes, and that the tree was desirable to make one wise, she took from its fruit and ate; and she gave also to her husband with her, and he ate. 7 Then the eyes of both of them were opened, and they knew that they were naked; and they sewed fig leaves together and made themselves loin coverings.

Message: The Loss and Restoration of Liberty

Time: Genesis is the first book and Moses is credited as authoring. The book spans 2400 years of time. It was originally written in Hebrew.

What the Lord is Saying:

These passages are mirroring a series that RC Sproul did called Willing to Believe available here. I purchased the complete series for only $5. Currently, he is looking at Pelagius, a 5th century monk that taught that Adam's sin didn't mean that all people are sinners. Instead, people are basically good and grace is not necessarily needed as each person is able to follow the Lord's commands and make themselves worthy before God. This was in opposition to Saint Augustine and his words of the necessity of grace for salvation. I have also been listening to a sermon series by Tommy Nelson on Galatians where he mentions that this entire book is focused on the idea that grace is invalid if anything is added to it.

The following are my notes on RC Sproul's message - The Loss of Liberty.

Augustine coined the term sola gratia which means salvation is by grace alone. We have a fallen condition and a bondage to sin and only grace can set us free. On the subject of free will, Augustine made a distinction between liberium arbitrium (free will) and libertas (liberty). His point was after the fall man still had free will, but what he lost was his liberty. According to Augustine, liberty is the freedom to do good and to do evil. It is the power to embrace the holy things of God.

Man was created with a mind and the ability to think and he was created with the faculty to make choices. At the fall, something was lost. Paul talks about the human mind being darkened (Ephesians 4:18). The Noetic effect refers to how our mind is effected of sin. Thus, our cogitation (thinking deeply about something) has been affected just as our bodies have been affected as they are subject to disease and death. The mind has also been weakened. We also are impacted now by bias or prejudice.

Man did not lose his mind after the fall. We still have the ability to think. What Augustine is getting at is even though the fall has affected our volition (the power of using one's will), to our choices and decision making - it has not destroyed the will. And this will still has a choice and that will is not forced into action by an external agency or power. Thus, he is saying that before and after the fall, man still has a will and is free from external coercion.

The word freedom needs to be looked at is it is a term that is thrown around a lot. For Americans, freedom was a hallmark of the revolutionary war in that freedom has allowed us to do certain things without being hindered by an external authority. President Franklin Roosevelt redefined freedom as it being freedom from external things such as freedom from fear, freedom from want, freedom from starvation and that sort of thing.

Augustine says that man still has the ability to make choices according to our desires. Yet, he would argue that after the fall, the will is free, but the will is now evil. We have free will but our desires are only wicked in respect to the things of God. Thus, man has lost the desire to please God, to have God in his thinking, to seek after God. Thus, we will not choose God because we do not desire Him. Thus, he is spiritually dead and lacks liberty. He lacks the freedom to do good and to do evil.

In Latin is the term posse peccare. Posse is where we get power or possibility and peccare is the infinitive form of the Latin word meaning "to sin." Thus, if something is impeccable then it is without sin. Posse peccare is the ability or power to sin. Man had the ability to sin so prior to the fall man had the posse peccare. And he also had the posse non peccare or the power to not sin. This was Adam's structure of free will. Pelagius felt that both before and after the fall, man retained the power to sin or not to sin. The humanist and pagan thought today agrees that that man equally has the ability to choose good or evil and there is no bias or prejudice toward one or the other.

Adam does not have the non posse peccare or the inability to sin. This is something you would ascribe to God. God lacks the motive to sin because he is always about righteousness.

The biggest problem has been non posse non peccare. This means it is not possible to not sin or it is impossible for a person to live without sin. Augustine says we have lost our righteousness so it is impossible for us to live a sinless life. Today we call this moral inability. I do not have the power to choose God by myself because I have no desire to choose God by myself. Without the power I will not choose that which I do not want or do not desire.

The dilemma is then how can I be held responsible for sinning when it is my nature to sin. The fall was a judgment on the human race. Thus, we are living in the Fall. We are living in the judgment of the human race.

Summary - I have struggled to digest this message. Liberty is a term thrown around in our land. There is the proclamation in the Declaration of Independence of 1776, "Life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness" which proclaims the ability to do as one pleases. In this lesson is the contrasting views of Pelagius and Augustine. Pelagius made no distinction between free will and liberty. Free will is the ability to make choices according to my desires. Liberty is the freedom to do good and to do evil. The point of this lesson was to consider how we have been affected by the Fall (Original Sin). Before and after the Fall man still has a will. What man lacks after the Fall is the ability to choose good in relation to the things of God because after the Fall man only wants to please himself. Only God has the inability to sin. For man, it is not possible for us to live a sinless life. Pelagius disagrees.

Promise: By eating of the fruit, man knew he was naked, thus he knew that he would always be a sinner on this earth.

Prayer: Father, thank you always for the truth of Your Word. You continue to help me understand the nature of sin and what transpired from sin and how your grace is needed. I am not worthy and this world continues to make cloudy your message of grace. Help me to proclaim your message well. Help me to honor you.

Note: I follow the readings from the Tabletalk Magazine devotional, though I am a little behind and working through 2017 devotionals. 2017 is a study of key biblical doctrines celebrating the 500th year of the Reformation. The month of April is about salvation by grace alone. March was about the sovereign providence of God; February was about the doctrine of revelation and the various aspects of the doctrine of Scripture that sola Scriptura seeks to preserve; January is about the doctrine of God.

Wednesday, February 15, 2017

Ecclesiastes 10:5-7 - When Reality is Upside Down

Ecclesiastes 10:5-7
There is an evil I have seen under the sun, like an error which goes forth from the ruler— folly is set in many exalted places while rich men sit in humble places. I have seen slaves riding on horses and princes walking like slaves on the land.

Message: When Reality is Upside Down

Time: Solomon's authorship is not stated. Solomon's reign as king of Israel lasted from around 970 B.C. to around 930 B.C. The Book of Ecclesiastes was likely written towards the end of his reign, approximately 935 B.C.

What the Lord is Saying: One of the results of the Fall is how the world function in an upside down way. This passage is Solomon or the Preacher looking out on the landscape of life and seeing the people who have the duty of ruler or prince or often foolish ones while those that deserve to be in that place are serving the leaders rather than leading them. It is a reminder that sometimes people get to high status in an undeserving manner. I see this at work where people get into high positions based upon who they know not necessarily due to their expertise.

Benson Commentary: I have observed another great vanity and misdemeanor among men, an erroneous conduct coming from those who have power of conferring honor and authority. That is, foolish and unworthy persons are frequently advanced by the favor or humor of princes into places of great trust and dignity, which is at once a great reproach to the prince, and a sore calamity to his people. Wise and worthy men, rich in endowments of the mind, are neglected and despised, or removed from those places to which their merits and had raised them. I have seen men of a servile condition and disposition riding in pomp and state as princes; and then men of noble birth and qualities, fit to rule a kingdom in a state of poverty and degradation, despised and disregarded.

I like Benson's comments for it simply clarifies further what the Preacher (Solomon) is stating in these verses and that is, unfortunately, at times, people who should be servants are leaders and leaders are sometimes mere servants.

I see this also on what we in society have done with stars and sports figures. We pay these people inordinate of money, simply because they have the ability to entertain us either by making a basket, throwing a pass really well, or taking on a different character very well (acting) or singing a song and yet, many times, the manner in which these people live life can be questionable. The problem is what we see from these individuals is moments from their lives while the people we work with we see 40 to 50 hours a week or most of our awake hours of the week and so we tend to see them as they are, but for entertainers we don't see them as they are. Instead we see excerpts and then are amazed when their lives are often not that great. And yet we are paying them all this money. To me that is also an error.

Promise: Something is wrong when we see fools in power. One day it will be overturned and the world will be right side up again. Knowing that truth encourages us to serve the Lord.

Prayer: Lord, thank you for righting wrongs. Thank you for the wisdom of the Bible and how it speaks to life the way it is being lived today, despite these words being penned thousands of years ago.


Wednesday, February 24, 2016

Proverbs 16:7 - Granting Us Peace

Proverbs 16:7
When a man's ways please the Lord, he makes even his enemies to be at peace with him.

Message: Granting us peace

Time: It seems that Proverbs was written and then compiled sometime between the tenth and sixth centuries B.C. Proverbs was probably written during the reign of Solomon, 971-931 B.C.

What the Lord is Saying:

According to the TableTalk reading on this passage for today, the fall of Adam and Eve introduced several wars into creation.


  1. War with God - every thought of the fallen heart is only evil continually, and people seek to overthrow the Lord's rightful place as ruler over their lives. In Genesis 8:21, the Lord said that the intention of man's heart is evil, since his youth. In Romans 3:1-20 speaks of how the unrighteousness of man upholds the righteousness of God. Man does not want to do good; there is none righteous, not even one; no one understands, no one seeks for God; all have turned aside. Man's tongue, mouth, feet are swift to inflict evil. 
  2. War with Himself - Romans 2 says the Law is written on our hearts; right and wrong is written on our heart and accuses us all of our days. This is a plain and simple reality, yet one that causes us tension all of our days. The pain is no matter how hard we try, we will never be fully good and proper. 
  3. War with Other People - The moment after Adam and Eve sinned, Adam immediately laid the blame on Eve. Human society has been characterized by strife, disagreement, and hatred between people. 
The third point is the focus of today's passage from Proverbs with the result of this promise that man's enemies will be at peace with us when our ways please the Lord. And it is interesting because in this passage the way we have peace with our fellow man is not by being a better person towards them or having more sensitivity; this may be the result, but our focus is to be on pleasing the Lord. 

This makes sense, if I follow the Lord's commands to not lie, steal, commit adultery, murder, then it naturally will result in people not being harmed or feeling harmed. But, I cannot guarantee that all people all the time will be kind with me, no matter how I act. And yet Jesus pronounces a blessing upon those who are hated in Matthew 5 reminding us to look toward heaven and the hope we have with him there. And yet we do know that things will work out for good. Matthew Henry comment:
"God can turn foes into friends when he pleases. He that has all hearts in his hand has access to men's spirits and power over them, working insensibly, but irresistibly upon them, can make a man's enemies to be at peace with him, can change their minds, or force them into a feigned submission. He can slay all enemies, and bring those together that were at the greatest distance from each other." 
Promise: This is a good reminder. We are programmed to solve problems through time management, leadership development, becoming a better communicator, conflict resolutions -- but I must remember that the real focus of my heart should be doing things that please the Lord. 



Friday, June 22, 2012

Hebrews 2:8


putting everything in subjection under his feet.”
Now in putting everything in subjection to him, he left nothing outside his control. At present, we do not yet see everything in subjection to him.
(Hebrews 2:8 ESV)

Everything has been put under man's leadership.Yet, his dominion over the lower world was temporarily removed when Adam/Eve sinned. Jesus has completely fulfilled this role.