Friday, October 17, 2014

Romans 7

Romans is a wondrous book of the Bible, full of God-glorifying, profound exposition of the Gospel. It is, along with the rest of the Bible, also a book that the typical Christian can understand with the help of the Holy Spirit. You don't need to go to seminary or have a degree, you simply need God's help! At the same time, there are passages in Romans which can be confusing and are much debated—perhaps none so much as Romans 7:7-25, in which Paul describes the interaction between the law, sin, and himself.

Ever since I was a toddler Christian, the most natural reading of this passage to me has been Paul describing his unconverted self abounding in sin in verses 7-12 and his converted self still struggling with sin in 13-25. Other interpreters, however, have read it differently. Some have claimed that this man that Paul describes has too much sin and therefore must be unregenerate. These interpreters must sin much less than I do. With Paul's shift to present tense and his apparently renewed mind (vv. 22,25), I find this reading unreasonable and I will not address it further. Others, such as F. J. Huegel in Reigning with Christ, see Paul as a Christian but in an unhealthy state. For my own confidence in interpretation and application, I have meditated on this passage and now seek to distill my thoughts into one short article. So help me God!

After a heartfelt description of his flesh's inability to submit to God's law, Paul concludes that his true self delights in the law of God, but his own flesh wars against him, forcing him to sin—even to the point of calling himself captive to the law of sin—in his own weakness. Even as a saved person, he still sins regularly, and I can sympathize! "Wretched man that I am! Who will deliver me from this body of death?" But he, as I, turn this near-despair around into praise to God: "Thanks be to God through Jesus Christ our Lord!" Without Jesus, we would have every reason to despair, but with Him we are carried along into victory and glory. Praise God!

F. J. Huegel, though, would say that Paul's thoughts are unhealthy. Specifically, Paul is describing himself or any other Christian "listen[ing] to the voice of the enemy" (Huegel, 18) and trying to obey God's law in the flesh instead of resting in his position in Christ. It is a fine distinction between my interpretation's and Huegel's, so let me clarify. I see this passage in Romans 7 as a regular realization that all Christians have which humbles them and draws them to Jesus. We must daily remind ourselves of our continual wretchedness apart from Him. Huegel, on the other hand, sees the passage as Paul erring in turning from the grace back to law:
There is an overflowing tendency for the Christian to turn from grace to law. To do so is to do violence to the glorious position which is his in Christ. We see it in Paul, great as he was. [...] We have the proof in Romans 7 where we have Paul under law, and what a time of it he had. The more he struggled the worse off he seemed to be. The divine injunction had lashed him into a frenzy until at last he comes to the end of himself with the cry of despair: Oh, wretched man that I am! Who will deliver me from the body of this death? Then he comes back into a position of rest. (Huegel, 29)
The contrast in interpretation is between a healthy realization and an unhealthy state brought by whispers of the flesh and the Accuser.

I can see Huegel's point, but since Paul makes no explicit statement of unhealthiness and there is no transition before or after this section (simply a transition from past to present before), I think it should be taken at face value if possible. Indeed, I think Huegel mis-interprets due to his overemphasis on the believer taking hold of his position in Christ as if it were the one key to the Christian life, as if all obedience and joy follows from, and only from, that faith position. But that is a topic for another day.

Looking again at the passage, the frustration that Paul expresses admittedly seems odd in contrast to the victory that he expresses elsewhere. But it is appropriate here because he is describing the interaction between himself, the law, and sin—particularly demonstrating what the law, weakened by the flesh, could not do (8:3). Not only was the law unable to save a sinner from death, but even now, after salvation, though the Christian delights in the law of God, the law cannot produce sanctification.

In the end, I do not think Huegel that far from the mark. A Christian need not live a frustrated life: he who raised Christ Jesus from the dead will also give life to your mortal bodies through his Spirit who dwells in you (8:11). But understanding the danger of the flesh and the law is important—not only for the sake of sanctification, which must be by the Spirit (see Romans 8, Galatians 5, and a previous post of mine), but to give God all the glory for His wonderful provision for us!

Saturday, May 17, 2014

Wild at Heart

When doing some house cleaning yesterday, I came upon a copy of Wild at Heart by John Eldredge. I had heard mixed reviews but wanted to check it out for myself before deciding whether to throw it away.

After skimming through some chapters--and accompanied by this essay--, I decided to throw it away. It's just another book that is vaguely Scriptural but more one man's opinions published for the masses. Eldredge oversimplifies aspects of God's character to support his view of God as "wild." He urges men to go out and fight battles in a way that could be done without God. And he panders to the worldly man by calling Bible studies boring but James Bond and Credence Clearwater Revival exciting. Yuck!

My friends, if you ever think about writing a book, think again. And then think again. And then only write the book if your true, faithfully-wounding friends think you actually have something both needed and good to say. And please hold me to the same standard.

P.S.: I think Don't Waste Your Life by John Piper, which I am reading now, has similar themes but is much better informed by the whole counsel of Scripture.

Sunday, March 23, 2014

Enjoying Dinner

Are you a Christian who enjoys a good dinner? Who enjoys traveling to beautiful places? Who enjoys watching—or even participating in—a contest of skill between two strong teams?

Paul says in Galatians 2:20, I have been crucified with Christ. It is no longer I who live, but Christ who lives in me. And the life I now live in the flesh I live by faith in the Son of God, who loved me and gave himself for me. He also says later, in 6:14, far be it from me to boast except in the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ, by which the world has been crucified to me, and I to the world. The entire New Testament echoes this theme of death and new life, including Romans chapter 6 which applies it to every believer.

So if all this is true, if the world is crucified to me, how can I enjoy a good cup of tea? How can I enjoy a good dinner, either at home with the family or on a date with Dream? How can you enjoy whatever pleasures you enjoy from the list above? Aren't all these things of the world?

First, the life you and I now live, we live to God. If your enjoyment of pleasures in the world is not living to God but actually pleasing yourself in deviation from God's calling upon you, it is sin. You need to give it up. You need to repent.

For if we go on sinning deliberately after receiving the knowledge of the truth, there no longer remains a sacrifice for sins, but a fearful expectation of judgment, and a fury of fire that will consume the adversaries. Anyone who has set aside the law of Moses dies without mercy on the evidence of two or three witnesses. How much worse punishment, do you think, will be deserved by the one who has spurned the Son of God, and has profaned the blood of the covenant by which he was sanctified, and has outraged the Spirit of grace? (Hebrews 10:26-29)

Some months ago, for example, I threw away the vast majority of my classic rock music that I used to listen to. I had kept it for a while after God saved me but after He revealed that listening to it was sin for me, I had to throw it away.

That said, however, Paul says in I Timothy 4:2-3 that we may enjoy foods as a gift from God. He says that there are false teachers whose consciences are seared, who forbid marriage and require abstinence from foods that God created to be received with thanksgiving by those who believe and know the truth. How do we do this?

Well, enjoying my cup of tea or my date with Dream is God-glorifying, and righteous, if and only if I do so giving thanks to God. And why do I give thanks? I am glad you asked!

First of all, I am a creature of the Creator God. He has a right over me as my Creator to treat me as He wishes. And not only am I a creature, but was (and, in a way, still am) a sinful man, deserving of His wrath! But God, despite all my merit to the contrary, treats me wonderfully! Unlike the Eastern gods and their ascetic followers, God's grace—due to the precious value of Jesus' blood—is abundant! I am not only saved to thereafter sit in "time out". I am not only saved to live a mediocre life and then get nosebleed seats in Heaven. I am saved to live a life of joy on Earth—sometimes joy in suffering, sometimes joy in a Rosemary Baked Chicken—and then pleasures forevermore at God's right hand (Psalm 16:11). Thank you, Jesus, for the food I eat, my hope of Heaven, and everything in-between!