“Word for Today” -1 Timothy 4 – www.concordialutheranchurch.com

boy and vegetablesPeriodically, my wife Melody and I have the pleasure of babysitting our two little nephews, Noah and Nicholas.  And, much to my chagrin, Noah and Nicholas, along with my wife and her sister, can sometimes prove to be picky eaters.  I guess it’s something that runs in the family.  That means that, if food is placed in front of my nephews and they don’t particularly care for it, they’ll stare at it with a mild disgust, refusing even to try it.  But then comes the injunction from either Melody or I:  “You have to at least try a bite.”  And after a little more placid prodding, they’ll usually pick up their forks, taste the dish, and then immediately return their forks to their plates and say, “I’m done.  I tried it!  Can I go now?”  At which point Melody will usually chime in:  “Can I go now?  That’s not how you ask.  What do you say?”  Remembering their manners, and anxious to leave the table so they can go play, they’ll respond, “Can I be excused, please?”

These words are words that we all have to use from time to time:  “Can I be excused, please?”  If I’m in the middle of a conversation and I receive a phone call that I have to take, I’ll always say, “Excuse me for a moment, please.”  Or if Melody and I get invited to a party that we cannot attend, I’ll often tell the host, “I’m sorry.  Could you excuse us from your party?  We already have prior plans.”

In our reading for today from 1 Timothy 4, Paul talks about the importance, and even the necessity, of being able to excuse yourself from certain situations:  “Have nothing to do with godless myths and old wives’ tales” (verse 7).  The Greek word for the phrase “have nothing to do with” is pareiteomai, meaning “to excuse oneself.”  Indeed, this is the word that Jesus uses in a parable that he tells about a man who holds a dinner, only to have the invitees pareiteomai themselves:  “A certain man was preparing a great banquet and invited many guests. At the time of the banquet he sent his servant to tell those who had been invited, ‘Come, for everything is now ready.’ But they all alike began to make excuses. The first said, ‘I have just bought a field, and I must go and see it. Please excuse me.’ Another said, ‘I have just bought five yoke of oxen, and I’m on my way to try them out. Please excuse me’” (Luke 14:15-19).  And although the excuses of the people in Jesus’ story were clearly illegitimate, Paul explains that there are times when a person has a legitimate reason to excuse him or herself, such as when people are gossiping, telling “old wives’ tales.”

I wonder how much dissension and distrust could be avoided if we would simply follow Paul’s sage advice in 1 Timothy 4:7.  If someone is talking bad about someone else, if someone is using ungodly speech, simply excuse yourself!  Simply say, “I’m not sure I want to a part of this conversation.  Would you please excuse me?”  And then walk away.  Yet, so often, we don’t.  Instead, we listen interestedly as someone breathlessly recounts the raucous details of someone else’s sordid life.

Part of the tragedy of not excusing yourself from such godless chatter, Paul says, is that you have less time to devote yourself to talk and words that are righteous.  That is why Paul later instructs Timothy:  “Until I come, devote yourself to the public reading of Scripture, to preaching and teaching” (verse 13).  Excuse yourself from gossipy words.  Devote yourself to God’s Word.  This is Paul’s instruction.

So today, if someone begins a conversation with a phrase like, “You wouldn’t believe what I just heard about…” and then proceeds to gossip, won’t you politely and gently excuse yourself from the conversation?  After all, you have some better words to listen to.  For you have God’s Word to listen to.

April 28, 2009 at 4:45 am Leave a comment

“Word for Today” – 1 Timothy 3 – www.concordialutheranchurch.com

pli-2This past week, Concordia had the pleasure and honor of hosting the Pastoral Leadership Institute, a gathering of 400 pastors and pastor’s wives from all over the country, along with some international guests.  During this conference, these men and women were trained and encouraged so that they may better serve the ministries in which God has placed them.  Some bear the brunt of challenging and harrying situations and need support.  Others are looking for new insights into how to reach out to their communities.  All are walking through a continuing education process as they learn how to faithfully serve their congregations and their Lord.   As I had opportunity to meet a few of the participants, I came to believe more than ever that these men and women deserve our thanks, prayers, and support. They are a blessing to the Kingdom of God.

“Here is a trustworthy saying:  If anyone sets his heart on being an overseer, he desires a noble task” (verse 1).  So Paul opens our reading for today from 1 Timothy 3.  What follows is a description of the virtues vital to being a pastor in the church of God:

Now the overseer must be above reproach, the husband of but one wife, temperate, self-controlled, respectable, hospitable, able to teach, not given to drunkenness, not violent but gentle, not quarrelsome, not a lover of money. He must manage his own family well and see that his children obey him with proper respect. (If anyone does not know how to manage his own family, how can he take care of God’s church?) He must not be a recent convert, or he may become conceited and fall under the same judgment as the devil. (verses 2-6)

Many times, as I have read these words, I have felt woefully inadequate.  I wish I could say that I live out all of these virtues gracefully and magnanimously, but I do not.  I am most certainly not above reproach, for I am a sinner.  I have been known to lose my self-control and become less than respectable.  And although I do not particularly love money, I can think of many other things for which I am greedy.  I fall painfully short of this list.  Then again, so do you.  Then again, so does everyone.

What, then, is the point of this list of virtues if no one, whether pastor or otherwise, can live up to them?  Is it merely to make us feel guilty?  Hardly.

The Greek word for “sets his heart” in verse 1 is oregomai.  This word describes a “longing” or a “yearning” – something to which one aspires.  And it is this word that frames Paul’s discussion of the virtues that he outlines in the subsequent verses.  For Paul knows that no one displays these virtues perfectly.  Yet, these are all virtues to which we should oregomai.  For these are all holy virtues which reflect the nature and character of our Heavenly Father.  This is why 400 ministry leaders visited our campus this past week.  Because they oregomai to 1 Timothy 3 and wanted to better serve our Lord and his church.  You too should oregomai to the virtues of 1 Timothy 3, whether or not you are a pastor.  For these are virtues for us all.

No, you will not live out these virtues perfectly.  However, by God’s grace and Spirit, you can indeed grow in these virtues.  As Paul writes elsewhere, “Become imitators of God, therefore, as dearly loved children and live a life of love, just as Christ loved us and gave himself up for us as a fragrant offering and sacrifice to God” (Ephesians 5:1-2).  Notice the first word:  “become.”  We’re not perfect in our imitation of God, but we are becoming imitators of God, one step at a time.

So today, ask yourself, what can I do, however imperfectly, to aspire to 1 Timothy 3?  Maybe it’s practicing patience when you feel like you’re going to lose your temper.  Maybe it’s being hospitable when you would rather be left alone.  Maybe it’s setting aside a struggle with greed for a generous spirit.  Whatever it is, remember, God’s grace empowers you and his Spirit guides you.  So go and do his noble tasks.

April 27, 2009 at 4:45 am Leave a comment

“Word for Today” – 1 Timothy 2 – www.concordialutheranchurch.com

bible-3Today’s blog is of a slightly different nature than my normal posts.  1 Timothy 2 constitutes one of the most controversial chapters in all Scripture.  Why?  First, many accuse Paul of revealing his true stripes of misogyny and unabashed chauvinism in his injunction against female pastors as outlined in this chapter.  Second, many church bodies, including our own Lutheran Church – Missouri Synod, understand Paul’s words here to be transcultural.  That is, his instruction relates not only to the first century, but also to our twenty-first century.  Thus, in the LCMS, we do not ordain women as pastors.

Because of the debate and dispute surrounding this chapter, I have decided to post a brief theological study that I wrote a while back due in large part to the many questions that I perennially receive on this particular passage of Scripture.  This study represents my humble, and most probably feeble, attempt to explain Paul’s words in a way that affirms his integrity and, more importantly, the integrity of God’s Word.  I offer it below in the hope that it might be of some value to you as you struggle with these difficult words from 1 Timothy 2 in your “Word for Today” reading.  Remember, even when a text is controversial, it is well worth our time and attention.  For the words of Scripture are the very words of God.  Thus, they speak to our minds, our souls, our hearts, and our lives and transform us into precious new creations in Christ.

With that, here is the study:

In 1 Timothy 2:11-15, Paul writes to a young pastor named Timothy: 

A woman should learn in quietness and full submission. I do not permit a woman to teach or to have authority over a man; she must be silent. For Adam was formed first, then Eve. And Adam was not the one deceived; it was the woman who was deceived and became a sinner. But women will be saved through childbearing – if they continue in faith, love and holiness with propriety.

There are several things in this passage that are worth noting.

First, the context of this passage is important.  Paul begins this chapter by explaining the inclusive nature of the gospel:

I urge, then, first of all, that requests, prayers, intercession and thanksgiving be made for everyone – for kings and all those in authority, that we may live peaceful and quiet lives in all godliness and holiness. This is good, and pleases God our Savior, who wants all men to be saved and to come to a knowledge of the truth. For there is one God and one mediator between God and men, the man Christ Jesus, who gave himself as a ransom for all men – the testimony given in its proper time. (1 Timothy 2:1-6)

If you note, Paul consistently talks about how the gospel is for “all people.”  Thus, it is not because women are somehow lesser heirs to the gospel that they are not permitted to be pastors.  No, God gives his gospel to all because his deepest desire is that all be saved.

Second, a couple of words are worth noting in 1 Timothy 2:11-15.  First is the word “learn” in verse 11.  When we read the words of this verse, the first word that usually jumps out to us is “submission.”  But for Paul’s readers, to have learning women would have represented a radical departure from the cultural mores of his time.  In general, women were not permitted to learn theology.  Rabbi Eliezer, a prominent teacher in the first and second centuries, wrote, “He who teaches her daughter Torah teaches her obscenity.”  That is, women were not to be taught Scripture because they were not intellectually astute enough to handle it.  Conversely, Paul, encourages women to learn God’s Word, but says they also ought to learn politely.  In other words, they ought to be quiet during the sermon and submissive to the clear teachings of God’s Word (as we all are to be).  The second key word is the word “teach” in verse 12.  The context of this word refers to the preaching of the Word of God in a worship service, not to any and every kind of teaching.  That is why there is prayer and the raising of hands going on in verse 8.  This is worship!  Thus, women are precluded from being pastors who preach, not Sunday school teachers or even participants in a worship service in other ways, such as in the reading of Scripture or in the singing of songs.

Third, it is important to note that when Paul makes a distinction between men and women and what they do in a worship service, he is in no way saying that one person is better than another.  As Paul has already noted at the beginning of this chapter, we are all precious and valued in God’s sight.  Paul is saying, however, that God, in his wisdom, has chosen to give some people some roles and other people other roles in worship and in life in general.  Indeed, God has been doing this ever since creation.  Paul says in verse 13 that Adam and Eve themselves were different from their very creation.  One was made from dust, the other from a rib.  Does this make one better than the other?  No.  It just makes them different.  Sadly, even in sin men and women proved to be different (verse 14).  Eve was conned by Satan, Adam was led to sin by Eve.  Thus, differences abound.  Yet, in spite of sin, each person still has a special role to play in God’s Kingdom.  Paul says that the special role of pastor is to be given to some men who are appropriately trained for the job (see 1 Timothy 3:1-7).  That does not mean that women do not have a special role to play, however.  Paul concludes chapter 2 with these words:  “But women will be saved through childbearing – if they continue in faith, love and holiness with propriety.”  I have done quite a bit of study on this passage in Greek, and my best translation would differ from the NIV, quoted here.  I, along with many others, translate this passage:  “But women will be saved through the child born.”  In other words, women are saved by the One who is born of a woman only, Jesus Christ.  It is here that Paul commends women for their special and unique role in salvation history.  When God wanted to save humanity, he chose a woman, not a man, to bear his Son.  Indeed, a man had nothing to do with it, for Jesus was born of a virgin.  This birth was first foretold to Eve by God in Genesis 3:15 when God says to Satan:  “And I will put enmity between you and the woman, and between your offspring and hers; he will crush your head, and you will strike his heel.”  God says that he will send a Savior who will crush the head of Satan.  But notice, this Savior will be only the offspring of Eve, not of Adam.  Thus, we find here the first foreshadowing of a virgin birth.  Women, then, from Eve on, have a special connection to the Savior.  For God chose a woman to bear his Savior Son, Jesus Christ.  That is a role unique and specific to women just as being a pastor is a role unique and specific to some men.

Finally, the upshot of all of this is that God chooses different people for different tasks.  God chose Abraham to be the father of Israel.  He chose Moses to lead his people out of slavery Egypt.  He chose Joshua to lead the people into the Promised Land.  He chose Deborah as a judge over Israel.  He chose Esther to save the Jews from an evil plot aimed at their extinction.  He chose twelve disciples to follow his Son Jesus and an apostle named Paul to spread the gospel to the Gentiles.  God is constantly choosing certain people for certain tasks.  Does this mean that he loves some people more than others or thinks more of some people than he does of others?  No, of course not.  But God, in his infinite wisdom, always seems to know the right person or people for the right job.  Thus, God has chosen some men to be pastors in his church and a woman to bear his Son.   Praise God for the unique roles we all have to play in his Kingdom.

April 24, 2009 at 4:45 am Leave a comment

“Word for Today” – 1 Timothy 1 – www.concordialutheranchurch.com

taco-cabana-1This past Tuesday, I went to lunch at Taco Cabana with a buddy of mine.  When it comes to fast food, I have two favorite restaurants:  Whataburger and Taco Cabana.  The problem is that although I dearly love the Whataburger with jalapenos as well as the giant Cabana bowl of queso, they don’t love me back.  Because for a few years now, I’ve suffered from a weak stomach.  Thus, whenever I eat there, Tums quickly become my intimate post-meal friends.

Of course, I can eat at these restaurants with minimal ill effects as long as I eat reasonably small portions.  Ashamedly, however, my eyes usually prove to be bigger than my stomach and I wind up overeating and then paying the painful consequences.  And this is what happened on Tuesday.  I felt sick all afternoon.  The food was good, but for me, it was too much of a good thing.

Too much of a good thing.  This is an insightful maxim that accuses all too many of us.  For we all fall prey to the allure of over-indulgence.  Food is a good thing.  But too much of it can cause all sorts of disastrous health problems.  Money is a good thing.  But too much of it, if not managed wisely and humbly, can breed greed.  Sleep is a good thing.  But too much of it can make you feel groggy and hinder productivity.  In just about every area of life, a good thing can quickly turn harmful if over-used or misused.

As we begin reading through 1 Timothy, Paul opens in chapter 1 by warning Timothy to guard against those who would fall into the trap of obsessing over too much of a good thing:  “As I urged you when I went into Macedonia, stay there in Ephesus so that you may command certain men not to teach false doctrines any longer nor to devote themselves to myths and endless genealogies.  These promote controversies rather than God’s work – which is faith” (verses 3-4).  The Greek root word for “controversies” is zetesis.  In the ancient world, this was a technical term for philosophical investigation.  This term described philosophers who would discuss what may have at first glance appeared to be minutia, but, in reality, pressed toward significant and profound answers concerning important matters.  Indeed, this is the term that is used in Acts 15:1-2 during a weighty theological debate over circumcision:  “Some men came down from Judea to Antioch and were teaching the brothers: ‘Unless you are circumcised, according to the custom taught by Moses, you cannot be saved.’  This brought Paul and Barnabas into sharp dispute and debate with them.”  The Greek word for “debate” is zetesis.  The upshot of this zetesis was the critical pronouncement that circumcision was not necessary for salvation because “it is through the grace of our Lord Jesus that we are saved” (Acts 15:11).  In this instance, zetesis was a good thing.  But as the old saying goes, too much of a good thing…

This brings us back to 1 Timothy 1.  Apparently, there were some in Timothy’s church who “devoted themselves to myths and endless genealogies.”  A myth is not necessarily a bad thing.  For these often serve as pleasant children’s tales.  Neither is genealogical research bad.  Knowing one’s roots can be an eye-opening experience.  But notice that these people “devoted” themselves to these things.  That is, they obsessed over them and thereby caused controversies, or zetesis.  Interestingly, when Paul writes about these controversies, he calls them not just zetesis, but adds a prefix and calls them exzetesis.  We use this prefix even in English:  excursive, excoriate, extreme, excessive.  This prefix, in many instances, marks too much of a good thing.

“Moderation is better than muscle” (Proverbs 16:32).  So says the wise man Solomon.  And Solomon was a man who knew well the dangers of exzetesis.  For he was a man with much fame, much power, and much money.  And, tellingly, he used it irresponsibly and excessively at times.  And it cost him dearly.  So today, enjoy God’s good gifts.  But remember to enjoy them in a good way – in the way that God intended them and not for sinful exzetesis.  For the gifts of God, used in the way God intended them, bring exceeding joy.  And that’s an ex that we can indulge in.  Because that’s an ex that’s from God.

April 23, 2009 at 4:45 am Leave a comment

“Word for Today” – Galatians 6 – www.concordialutheranchurch.com

mansion-1Maybe you did this when you were in junior high as well.  During my pre-pubescent years, reputation and status became increasingly important to me and my peers.  This means that we would, often in very awkward and sometimes comical ways, regularly boast to each other concerning achievements and accomplishments which had little or no basis in reality.  I can remember one time when I was fighting with a friend of mine over whose father made more money – mine or his.  After some verbal sparring that began in the $50,000 a year range, our fathers’ respective salaries quickly skyrocketed well into the six and even seven figure stratosphere, well beyond the limits of what we both knew our fathers actually made.  Finally, after several rounds of bickering over paternal salaries, I said to my friend, “Well I live in a mansion!  What do you live in?”  To which my friend replied, “You don’t live in a mansion!  I’ve been over to your house before.”  Apparently, I had gotten so caught up in the heat of the moment that I forgot that my friend knew where I really lived.  So much for my attempt to impress my friend with affluence I didn’t have.

In our reading for today from Galatians 6, Paul warns the Christians at Galatia against some religious folks “who want to make a good impression outwardly and are trying to compel you to be circumcised” (verse 12).  The Greek word for “make a good impression” is euprosopeo, meaning literally “to give a good face.”  These religious folks, it seems, were trying to “save face,” as it were, among their Jewish colleagues for whom circumcision was a mandatory rite, meant to mark one off as a person of God.  They feared persecution from these Jews (cf. verse 12) and so tried to compel as many Galatian Christians as possible to become circumcised.  Whatever success they had, they then quickly boasted about in an attempt to further galvanize their Jewish friends.

Paul, however, is not impressed by these religious folks’ attempt to bolster their status and reputation among the Jews by boasting in the number of circumcisions they can claim.  May I never boast,” Paul exclaims, “except in the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ” (verse 14).  Paul feels no need to try to euprosopeo with anyone.  He will not boast in how much money his father makes.  And he will not boast in how many people he has circumcised.  Instead, he boasts in Christ and Christ alone.

It is all too easy, whether in puberty or as an adult, to seek to impress others by our affluence, accolades, and accomplishments.  But in the end, all of these supposedly “boast-worthy” resume-builders are worthless.  As Paul says concerning circumcision, “Neither circumcision nor uncircumcision means anything” (verse 15).  For “what is highly valued among men is detestable in God’s sight” (Luke 16:15).  As Christians, we are called to boast not in what we do, but in a bloodied, bruised, and beaten Savior, so seemingly unimpressive and even appalling to the world, yet precious to God.  Indeed, Jesus’ work on the cross is altogether salvific and sanctifying.

So today, when you’re tempted to boast in yourself, no matter how little or how slyly, instead, lift high the cross of Christ.  After all, in the eternal scheme of things, Christ’s work is much more impressive than any work we could ever hope to do.  So if we’re going to boast in something, we might as well boast in something really good.  We might as well boast in the best.  And so, we boast in Christ.

April 22, 2009 at 4:45 am Leave a comment

“Word for Today” – Galatians 5 – www.concordialutheranchurch.com

law-11It seems that, over the years, local and state governments, along with their federal counterpart, have managed to draft laws which legislate just about every conceivable scenario, occasion, and behavior.  Indeed, many of these laws sound quite silly and esoteric.  For example, in Blythe, California, you are not allowed to wear cowboy boots unless you already own at least two cows.  In Kentucky, it is illegal to dye a duckling blue and sell it unless more than six are for sale at once.  In Massachusetts, it is unlawful for mourners to eat more than three sandwiches at a wake.  Even in our great state of Texas, a recently passed anticrime law requires criminals 24 hours notice, either in writing or orally, explaining to their victims the nature of the crime to be committed.  Remember that if you’re planning to commit a crime this week.  Government bureaucracy at its most humorous.

In our reading for today from Galatians 5, Paul pens some of the most famous and beloved words in all Scripture:  “But the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness and self control” (verses 22-23).  With these words, Paul outlines a list of virtues, fueled by and founded on Christ’s Spirit, that ought to be displayed in the life of every Christian.  But he then continues with these marvelous words:  “Against such things there is no law.” In other words, in a world that seems so overly legislated and regulated and moderated, there are still a few things that you are free to do and be.  There are still a few things that aren’t illegal.  And these things are the things of the Spirit.

Sadly, even in spite of Paul’s declaration of freedom which liberates us to unreservedly live out the fruit of the Spirit, some still try to temper these virtues.  “It’s okay to be loving,” someone might say, “but there are limits to love.  I mean, love fades.  And some people hurt you so much, you just can’t love them anymore.”  To which Paul would respond, “No!  You’re allowed to love even the most unlovable among us.  Against love, there is no law.”  Others might say, “I consider myself to be a pretty patient person, but my patience still eventually runs out.  After all, the line at the Whataburger drive-thru at 5:30 pm will try anyone’s patience!”  To which Paul would respond, “It’s okay to be patient even when the line is long and the service is slow.  And it’s okay to be courteous to your servers too.  Against patience, there is no law.”  Still others might say, “I’m all about being self-controlled, but I don’t want to come off as some sort of up-tight religious fanatic.  I need to let my hair down every once in a while and ‘live a little.’  Sure, my actions may be a little on the risqué side, but everyone loses control from time to time.  It’s just part of life.”  To which Paul would once more respond, “Truthfully, you’re allowed to practice self-control even when you’re ‘living a little.’  Just because you drink doesn’t mean you have to get drunk.  Just because you share a dance doesn’t mean you have to take it farther.  Against self-control, there is no law.”

Paul opens Galatians 5 with these words:  “It is for freedom that Christ has set us free.  Stand firm, then, and do not let yourselves be burdened again by a yoke of slavery” (verse 1).  All too often, we exchange our freedom in Christ for a burden of sinfulness.  But Paul reminds us that it doesn’t have to be this way.  We are free to be full of the Spirit’s fruit.  We are free to let go of our sinful past.  We are free to live by the Spirit.  In a world full of laws, against those things, there is no law.  So today, celebrate your freedom and say “no” to the law of sin and “yes” to the fruit of Christ’s Spirit.

April 21, 2009 at 4:45 am Leave a comment

“Word for Today” – Galatians 4 – www.concordialutheranchurch.com

T-041-0108In the state of Oregon where I grew up, there was a rite of passage into manhood that every young teenage boy looked forward to and hoped for and dreamed of – the day he would turn 15 and be able to get a state issued, small, rectangular piece of plastic with his picture on it, otherwise known a Learner’s Permit.  I’ll never forget how excited I was when I was finally able to get one.  As the DMV employee took my picture, I beamed with pride and joy.  For I would finally be able to put the keys into the ignition of our family car, stick my foot on the gas pedal, and cruise down the road effortlessly and carefreely with the windows rolled down, the radio turned up, and the wind blowing through my hair.  Or so, that’s what I thought.

My parents did not seem quite as thrilled as I was at the prospect that I was now driving.  And thus, the first time I got behind the wheel did not quite match with my envisioned expectations.  For there was no carefree attitude, no windows rolled down, no radio turned up, and no wind blowing through my hair.  In fact, there wasn’t even a road.  Instead, there was just an empty parking lot.  “Make sure you’re in neutral,” my dad instructed, “and press down on the clutch.  Now, while you’re on the clutch, shift into first, and then slowly release the clutch while you’re pressing down on the gas.”  So that’s what I did.  And the car lurched forward.  And then stalled.  So much for my long awaited rite of passage into manhood.

Just as there are certain rites of passage into adulthood in our society, there were rites of passage into adulthood even in first century society.  For example, in ancient Rome, usually at age 14, a young man would celebrate his Liberalia, a festival held annually on March 17 celebrating the passage of Roman boys into manhood.  At this festival, a young man would discard his childhood toga, which was decorated with a purple border to mark him as a youth, and exchange it for a toga virilis, or a pure white toga, that marked him as an adult and a legal citizen of Rome.  Before this time, a Roman boy, even though he may have been the eventual heir of his father’s estate, had the same status as a common slave.  He could make no decisions and he had no freedom.

It is probably this festival of Liberalia that Paul has in mind when he writes these words in our reading for today from Galatians 4:  “What I am saying is that as long as the heir is a child, he is no different from a slave, although he owns the whole estate.  He is subject to guardians and trustees until the time set by his father.  So also, when we were children, we were in slavery to the basic principles of the world” (verses 1-3).  In these verses, Paul draws upon the tradition of the Liberalia to illustrate our spiritual state before faith in Christ.  To paraphrase:  “Before trusting in Christ, we were just like children before their Liberalia.  No rights.  No say.  No freedom.  Indeed, we were slaves to sin and the waywardness of the world.  We wore not a toga of purple, but rags stained with sin to mark us as spiritually childish” (cf. Isaiah 64:6).  But then came the Liberalia of Christ:  “But when the time had fully come, God sent his Son, born of a woman, born under the law, that we might receive the full rights of sons” (verses 4-5).  “Christ and his cross is our Liberalia,” Paul says.  Christ moves us from spiritual childhood to spiritual adulthood.  He liberates us from our slavery to Satan and leads us to freedom in the gospel.  He exchanges our toga stained with sin for the pure white toga of his righteousness (cf. Revelation 7:9).  Christ and his cross is our rite of passage.  But not just into adulthood.  Instead, he is our very rite of passage into salvation.

So today, don your white toga of Christ and celebrate.  You’re all grown up now.

April 20, 2009 at 4:45 am Leave a comment

“Word for Today” – Galatians 3 – www.concordialutheranchurch.com

aig-1One of the great concerns looming on the American political landscape these days are the endless bailout packages relentlessly being pushed through Washington DC.  A bailout for the subprime mortgage lenders.  A bailout for Wall Street.  A bailout for the automakers.  Many Americans, in the face of such astronomical government spending, are suffering from what has been popularly deemed as “bailout fatigue,” both because they are exhausted by the expenditures of countless dollars and because many are not so sure that even these huge injections of capital into ailing industries will actually accomplish its stated goal of stimulus.  Indeed, one of the most pointed questions concerning these bailout packages was posed last month by Representative Gresham Barrett from South Carolina to Timothy Geithner, Secretary of the Treasury, when he asked, “The $64 trillion question is, ‘What’s the backup plan?’ I mean, if everything fails, what do we do?”  Geithner’s response was clear and unequivocal: “Congressman, this plan will work.”  In other words, there’s no need for a plan b because Geithner’s plan a is so sure and sturdy.

When reading the Bible, many people assume that the Old Testament and the New Testament represent God’s plan a and plan b respectively.  In the Old Testament, we meet a man named Moses who “lays down the law,” so to speak, with the Ten Commandments and other such pedagogical guidance.  Tragically, however, the ancient Israelites break these laws and so require salvation from their transgressions.  Enter the New Testament and God’s plan b of Jesus who comes not with the law of God, but with the grace of God to forgive us our sins.  Such is the view of many Christians.

As popular as this view might be among many of the faithful, we learn in our reading for today from Galatians 3 that it’s incorrect.  The Old Testament was not God’s plan a the New Testament is not God’s plan b.  Instead, throughout the ages, there has been only one plan:  Jesus.  Indeed, Paul says that Abraham, who lived in the Old Testament and 430 years before Moses received the law from God, knew of only one divine plan.  And this divine plan was the plan of Jesus:  “The promises were spoken to Abraham and to his seed.  The Scripture does not say ‘and to seeds,’ meaning many people, but ‘and to your seed,’ meaning one person, who is Christ” (verse 16).  Paul, quoting Genesis 12:7, insists that God planned to save the world through Jesus and his grace all along.  He never planned to save us through a laundry list of laws.

What, then, is the purpose of Moses and the law?  Paul says, “It was added because of transgressions until the Seed to whom the promise referred had come…So the law was put in charge to lead us to Christ that we might be justified by faith” (verses 19, 24).  The purpose of the law was simply to point us to God’s singular plan of Christ and the salvation to be found in him and him alone.

Why is this important?  For two reasons.  First, it reminds us that our salvation is not of our own doing.  It is not due to our own morality, integrity, intelligence, or decency.  Our salvation is wholly the work of Christ.  Second, it reminds us that we need never fear whether or not God’s plan of salvation will work.  After all, it’s not as if God tried to save us through the law of Moses, but then that didn’t work and so now he’s trying to save us through the cross of Christ, and if that doesn’t work, maybe he’ll try something else.  No.  God’s plan has always and only been Jesus for the forgiveness of our sins and the salvation of our souls.  “But,” we may ask, “What’s the backup plan?  I mean, if Jesus fails, what do we do?”  To which our heavenly Father responds, “This plan will work.”  Indeed, this plan already has worked.  For Christ has already conquered sin, death, and Satan.  And he’s surer and sturdier than even a bailout package.

April 17, 2009 at 4:45 am Leave a comment

“Word for Today” – Galatians 2 – www.concordialutheranchurch.com

faith-1When I was in high school I had a friend named Max.  Especially my freshman year, Max and I were inseparable.  We would hang out together after school.  We would walk down the street to the coffee shop during lunch and buy the strongest espresso drinks on the menu so that our hands would be trembling all afternoon.  And, of course, we got into our fair share of trouble.  But beneath the veneer of typical adolescent lighthearted fun and foolishness, Max and I were fundamentally different people.  For I was a Christian while Max was not.

Over the course of our time together in high school, I tried to share my faith with Max countless times.  I told him about the difference that Jesus had made in my life.  I invited him to church with me.  But all of it was to no avail.  Max just wasn’t interested.  “To be real honest with you, Zach,” Max told me one time, “I think faith is for weak people who just need something to believe in.”

“Faith is for weak people who just need something to believe in.”  A lot of people feel this way.  The world-renowned Oxford professor and Darwinian atheist Richard Dawkins once said, “Faith is the great cop-out, the great excuse to evade the need to think and evaluate evidence. Faith is belief in spite of, even perhaps because of, the lack of evidence.”  No need for faith, says Dawkins.  It’s simply for the feeble and faint minded.  With all due respect, however, I would beg to differ with this preeminent Oxford scholar.  For I would say that, whether we recognize it or not, we all live by faith.

“I believe I’ll have the Caesar salad.”  “I believe it’s time for a vacation.”  “I believe I need to run to by the grocery store on the way home.”  These are sentences that many of us have muttered at one time or another.  And their openings, “I believe,” are indicators that we are all people who live by faith.  We believe that when we order the Caesar salad, that’s what we will receive.  We believe that when we schedule a vacation, we’ll be able to take it.  And we believe that when we run an errand to the grocery store, the store will be open for us to make a purchase.  We live by faith.  For when we make each of these statements, we don’t know for sure that they will come to pass.  Indeed, sometimes they do not come to pass.  The waiter messes up our order and brings us the garden salad rather than the Caesar salad.  Our vacation plans get postponed by a family emergency.  The grocery store does not have an item we are looking for.  And we walk away disappointed because our faith has been dashed.  Nevertheless, we believe anyway.  Why?  Because we have a reasonable expectation that what we believe is true and will happen.

This, in fact, is one of the ways in which I would define faith:  A reasonable expectation that what we believe is true and will happen.  I think that all too often, too many people conceive of faith as something that is “other-worldly.”  Something that is needed to get a person in good with God so that they can go to heaven when they die.  But faith is much more profound and encompassing than that.  That’s part of the reason I appreciate Paul’s words in our reading for today from Galatians 2:  “The life I live in the body, I live by faith in the Son of God, who loved me and gave himself for me” (verse 20).  Notice that for Paul, faith is not something that is otherworldly, ethereal, and detached from his everyday life; instead, it is something that is part and parcel of his very earthly being.  It’s essential to the “life he lives in the body.”  And so Paul says, “The life I live in the body, I live by faith…”  But then, Paul adds an all-important preposition:  “in.”  You see, it’s not just that Paul has faith, it’s that Paul has faith in something.  Paul has faith in someone.  He has faith “in the Son of God, who loved me and gave himself for me.”  This is where Paul’s faith rests.  And this is why all of us, whether we’re willing to admit it or not, are creatures of faith.  Because we all have reasonable expectations in someone or something.  Richard Dawkins has a reasonable expectation in his atheistic and naturalistic view of the universe as a correct one.  I, along with Paul, have a reasonable expectation in the Son of God who loved me and gave himself for me.  The question is not, “Do you have faith?”  Rather, it’s, “What do you have faith in?”  I’m placing “Jesus” at the end of my “in.”  How about you?

April 16, 2009 at 4:45 am 2 comments

“Word for Today” – Galatians 1 – www.concordialutheranchurch.com

resume-1My wife, Melody, grew up at Concordia.  As a little girl, she went to school here.  As a middle schooler, she was confirmed here.  As a high schooler, she was part of the youth group.  And then, upon graduating from college, she taught here for five years.  But then she met a guy.  A pastor who was working in Corpus Christi, actually.  And she married him and moved down to the Gulf Coast to be with him.  But now she – and he – are back.  And I am so glad we are.  It is a privilege and a blessing to be a pastor at Concordia.

A while back, I was having a conversation with a friend of mine who asked how I “landed” my job at Concordia.  I explained that I didn’t land my job.  After all, it wasn’t as if I went looking for it.  I simply received a phone call asking if I might be interested in working at Concordia and things proceeded from there.  “But why did they call you?” my friend pressed.  It was then that I explained the warm rapport that my wife has had with this congregation and how the Lord used that long standing relationship in his providence to call us both to San Antonio.  “Oh,” my friend replied with a twinge of incredulity in his voice, “So it was all in who you knew.”  “I don’t think of it like that,” I demurred.  “Instead, I believe the Lord used relationships we already had to accomplish his will for our lives.”  But there was no redirecting my friend’s cynicism.  He was convinced that course of my life was driven by a kind of crass “good-ole-boy” system with little or no guidance from the hand of God.

Sadly, this mentality is all too common.  “It’s not what you know, it’s who you know,” the old pessimistic proverb protests.  And it is this kind of mindset that Paul encounters in our reading for today from Galatians 1.  Paul writes, “I want you to know, brothers, that the gospel I preached is not something that man made up. I did not receive it from any man, nor was I taught it; rather, I received it by revelation from Jesus Christ” (verse 11-12).  Apparently, the veracity and authenticity of Paul’s preaching and ministry were being called into question by some outside the Galatian Christian church.  “He doesn’t really know what he’s talking about,” the claims must have went.  “He just hung out with Peter, James, and John, learned some stuff from them and then leveraged his connections to strike it big on the preaching circuit.” 

But Paul vigorously defends himself against these kinds of assailments:  “I did not consult any man, nor did I go up to Jerusalem to see those who were apostles before I was, but I went immediately into Arabia and later returned to Damascus” (verses 16-17).  Paul’s ministry, he insists, is not based merely on knowing the right people.  Rather, it’s founded on the call and will of God, as Paul himself proudly proclaims in the very first verse of his letter to the Galatians:  “Paul, an apostle – sent not from men nor by man, but by Jesus Christ and God the Father, who raised him from the dead” (verse 1).  Indeed, as Paul freely admits, his ministry could not be based on his “connections” because the “connections” to his past are actually quite shady:  “I persecuted the church of God and tried to destroy it” (verse 13).  Thus, it’s not as though Paul was a rising star in the church before his ministry breakout.  No, he was an enemy of it.

This, then, is one of the cardinal doctrines of ministry:  It is not a person’s connections which makes a minister, it is the Lord.  And this is good news for every one of us.  Because this means that every one of us, regardless of our background or connectedness, can minister to and serve others in the name of Jesus.  And this ministry can be as simple as offering someone a friendly “God bless you” when they appear forlorn or as involved as heading up a large ministry organization.  But that’s up to the Lord, not to us.  And thank God it is.  Because although we are connected to only a relatively few number of people, God is connected to each and every one of us.  And God wants to use his connection to you to deploy you in his ministry.  Will you listen for his call today?

April 15, 2009 at 4:45 am Leave a comment

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