Archive for January, 2007

A Woman’s Wish

I wrote this based upon and old joke I found online a while back. It will be included in my second short story book, When Shadows Dream: Midnight.

A young maiden danced in the early morning fog,
When she happened upon a magic green frog.
“Fear not,” said the frog in a perfect man’s voice,
“For I will grant you three wishes, please make your choice.”

“To find a magic frog is a dream come true,
But tell me young frog, is there a catch to this too?”
“There are conditions,” the frog said, “a first and a second,
If you agree to them now, then to your wishes I beckon.

“For each wish that you ask, I shall grant my best,
But I shall receive ten-fold your request.
And upon your first wish, my bride shall you be,
So wish wisely my dear, if you wish to agree.”

“I make my first wish,” the girl said with twirl,
“Make me the most beautiful lass in the world.”

The frog paused a moment, to remind her again,
“The beauty you receive, shall be mine times ten.
Think carefully now, can you compete?
For surely many women shall fall at my feet.”

“I care not young frog, for I shall be,
The desire of your eyes, and all that you see.”
So the frog granted the wish, and they instantly became,
Incredible to behold, in both form and frame.

“Were not my words true, and my magic a wonder?
Make your second wish now, and wait no longer.”
“Indeed I shall,” said the young bride,
I wish to be the richest woman alive.”

Again he tested her, saying, “Do not forget,
Ten-fold all your riches shall be mine to possess.
Will you be jealous, of the difference between,
The wealth that is yours, and what is mine, my queen?”

“How can a wife be jealous,” she answered this time,
“When what is mine is yours, and yours is mine?”
Her groom smiled broadly, “Truly you are wise,”
Then yelled, “Your beauty is now matched by the richest delights!”

Bursting with joy he embraced his bride,
Bending low for a kiss, but she stepped aside.
“Not too quickly my dear, one wish remains,
Until it is fulfilled, let us refrain.”

“Of course my sweet, let not time waste,
State your wish, with all due haste.
One part for you, whatever you say,
Ten-fold for me, without delay!”

The damsel resumed her dancing, then prancing away,
Giggling at how fortune had graced her this day.
Her new husband watched her as she took flight,
As she spoke her last wish with unfettered delight.

The damsel laughed knowing, only one thing she lacked,
“Grant me, I pray, a mild heart attack.”

The Tom Terry Club

My good buddy Chuck in Albuquerque wrote to me the other day when he learned that I’m soon to make a trip to the Duke City. I haven’t been back to Albuquerque since February 2003. Albuquerque is my second home – but in so many ways it’s the home of my heart. Of all of the places I’ve lived there isn’t a place or people I miss more. So when I received Chuck’s email I was…amused.

    “I understand that you are coming to Albuquerque next month. I understand that you now have a local number that one can call to get in touch with you [in Mongolia]. I was dumbfounded. Peter [Benson – KNKT Radio] was like, ‘Well, I’m sure you already know Tom’s coming out next month, etc….’”“Geez man. I feel like I’m not in the Tom Terry Club any more. Well, if I can’t be in that club, what about the Dead Red Club? Am I at least in that club?”

Oh man I just about fell on the floor. Was Chuck offended that I hadn’t let him know I was coming? Nope. I know Chuck. He just wants to make sure he gets his fill of the dead red with the KING OF THE DEAD RED! Don’t worry bro; Texas Land & Cattle doesn’t have enough beef to fill this fat boy’s tummy.

Chuck’s reference to the dead red is from Tom Terry Rule of Life #46: “If it’s dead and red, you are well fed.” This is an important rule. It’s doctrine. It’s dogma. Beef is one of the fruits on the Tree of Life. In fact, there’s a whole tree dedicated to various kinds of beef. Seriously. It all grows rare, very rare. It’s the beef tree, it’s righteous, and it’s planted right between the twin lakes of RED and GREEN.

I’ve noticed that when foreigners in Mongolia talk about what they miss about home the most the conversation always turns to food. A list of restaurants is fired off followed by specialty foods, and then wondering when the next care package of special treats is due. For me, I miss the RED and GREEN. On my morning eggs, in my burger, smothering my enchiladas, a disaster burrito piled high with curly fries drenched in red and green. And green chili stew – of which my friend Chuck gave me my first taste many years ago. I’m not totally without though. Last year a new couple from New Mexico showed up in Mongolia. They like the TV show Lost, I like green chili stew. So I get the latest episodes for them, and they whip up a pot of the real thing with real green chili from New Mexico. How sweet (or hot) is that? It’s not a fair exchange though, because I get the better end of the deal.

So now Chuck knows I’m coming. I can’t just walk into his door and surprise him. Bummer, but that’s okay. I’ll only be there for a couple of days as I’m on a fund raising swing through New Mexico and Arizona to talk with potential and current donors about Eagle TV. I wish I could see everyone, but 2-3 days isn’t enough time to squeeze in visits with more than a hundred people. It’s a major bummer (I really need to stay a month in Albuquerque just to rejuvenate). But that’s okay because they’re all in the Tom Terry Club – and Chuck is the honorary president. Hey Mr. President, do we need a logo? And when are we going to start charging dues? Join the Tom Terry Club. New members get ten percent off your next tithe! ;-)

Chuck, the dead red awaits. Cows willingly line up at the slaughterhouse in anticipation. Get me a hammer and a fork.

The Will of God

What is the will of God for your life? Just that question alone can open up a Pandora’s Box of trouble. Religions are filled with the idea of man serving a deity according to that deity’s will. The mainline Muslim believes in Allah’s will to destroy the unbeliever in Islam. Some Christian movements teach it is God’s will that His servants have no material want or be materially successful. Even the non-religious may subscribe to a kind of destiny, where impersonal fate prescribes a role in life, instead of a knowable Creator.

I once knew a woman who claimed that God told her during her first pregnancy that she would have a boy. It was God’s will. Delivery time came and she had a boy. During her second pregnancy she said God told her she would have girl. Delivery time came and she had another boy. She felt quite foolish, as her assumptions about God’s will lead her to say some silly things. It made her look bad, but not as bad as some take the will of God.

Famed American TV preacher Oral Roberts once taught it was God’s will for him to raise $8 million from his TV audience. He claimed that if the money didn’t come in that God would kill him. The money apparently did not come in. Much to the chagrin of some, Oral didn’t die. Oral said some pretty stupid things that made not only himself and his organization look bad, it made a lot of people look at the Church of Jesus Christ and perceive it as mythological foolishness.

Many Christians have given up their homes, livelihoods, even their liberties and lives believing that God has spoken to them about a direction their lives should take. They say things like, “It is God’s will for me to _________.” You fill in the blank. Many go on to do noble works – missionaries, pastors, mercy ministries, and so on. While others seem to stumble along, even making strange pronouncements about what God’s will is for them or their associates.

What is the “Will of God?”
There is more than one answer to this question. Bible study teachers sometimes divide this subject between what they call the “perfect” will of God, and the “permissive” will of God. Theologians define the subject more sharply. John M. Frame, professor of Systematic Theology defines God’s will in three parts:

  • Decretive Will (Genesis 50:20, Matthew 11:25-26, Acts 2:23, Romans 9:18-19, Ephesians 1:11). This is simply defined as God’s decrees. God’s Decretive Will always comes to pass.
  • Preceptive Will (Matthew 7:21, Ephesians 5:17, 6:6). This is defined as God’s precepts, preferences, values, and commands for our lives. His Preceptive Will is sometimes violated by man, and requires we submit in obedience for His Preceptive Will to be fulfilled.
  • Divine Vocation (Romans 12:2, Ephesians 5:10). This is that part of God’s will that through the circumstances He places us, we find ourselves with the ability to fulfill His Preceptive Will. This can mean full-time Christian ministry service, or nothing more than serving the needs of others in our neighborhood, workplaces, etc.

The most common-day use of the “God’s will” concept is when a Christian says, “It is God’s will for me to do this or that today.” Such declarations fall under the third category: Divine Vocation. This is also true of the more mistaken, or heretical pronouncements often made about God’s will, such as, “God will kill me if I don’t raise $8 million dollars,” or “God wants his children to always be healthy and wealthy,” or “God will heal you and give you a miracle,” “God never wants His children to suffer.” These statements, common with teachers in the Word of Faith movement, may be classified under the category of the Divine Vocation of God’s will except for one thing: They are contrary to God’s already revealed will in the Bible.

What Is God’s Will For YOUR Life?
The purpose of the Divine Vocation aspect to God’s will is the fulfillment of God’s Preceptive Will for our lives. This means that whatever God wants us to do with our lives is designed by God to enable us to fulfill the character goals He has for us. In fact, there are five things that the Bible says are “God’s will” for every Christian. Each of the five may be classified as God’s Preceptive Will. Furthermore, we can say with confidence that if we are not applying these five things in God’s will for us, then we will not likely see God working out other areas of His will (Divine Vocation) in us.

How often have you wondered what God’s will is for your life? How many times have you wondered if God will ever speak to you about His will for you? Have you struggled to know what God’s specific plan is for your life? The good news is that you can know, right now, God’s general plan for your life, and through that discovery become open to hearing from God about his more specific will for you (Divine Vocation).

There are five things the Bible says are God’s will for every Christian. All of these are Preceptive, meaning that we must bring ourselves into agreement with God about them. It is God’s will that you…

  • Renew your mind
    “Do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewal of your mind, that by testing you may discern what is the will of God, what is good and acceptable and perfect” (Romans 12:2). By first agreeing with God about what is true, and right, we prepare our minds to hear what God might have to say to us.
  • Set yourself apart to be holy
    “For this is the will of God, your sanctification: that you abstain from sexual immorality; that each one of you know how to control his own body in holiness and honor” (I Thessalonians 4:3-4). When we have come into a true agreement with God about what is true and right, our behavior – how we express ourselves with our bodies – must also follow suit. Sexual immorality destroys a Christian’s ability to serve God with a dedicated heart, because sexual immorality demonstrates that the heart of the believer is not in full agreement with God about what is true and right.
  • Do what is right
    “For this is the will of God, that by doing good you should put to silence the ignorance of foolish people” (I Peter 2:15). When we conform our minds to God’s values, and set our bodies (physical expression) apart to God for His service, then we are prepared to do that which is right. Some people view the idea of “doing the right thing” as avoiding sin, or refraining from doing wrong. But the scripture speaks very differently. “Doing the right thing,” means to proactively seek to do right. It is much more than avoiding wrong, it is the idea that by filling our lives with doing right, wrong has no opportunity for entrance.
  • Suffer for doing right – if necessary
    “For it is better to suffer for doing good, if that should be God’s will, than for doing evil” (I Peter 3:17). Some religions and worldviews believe that suffering is always evil, or is must always be avoided. However, the scripture makes clear that suffering is often used by God in and through our lives to bring about a greater result than might have taken place without it. As an ultimate example, in verse 18 Peter mentions “Christ also suffered once for sins, the righteous for the unrighteous, that he might bring us to God.”
  • In all things, give thanks – even for suffering
    “Give thanks in all circumstances; for this is the will of God in Christ Jesus for you” (I Thessalonians 5:18). Even when we are made to suffer for doing the right thing, even when we are mistreated or persecuted wrongly, God’s injunction is for us to thank Him. This does not mean to thank Him in the midst of the suffering, but to thank Him even for the suffering itself, as well as the good that comes to our lives. The Apostles gave us an example of this in Acts 5:41 when they rejoiced that they were counted worthy to suffer for Christ’s name.

The idea that God always wants us to be healthy or wealthy, or not suffer, or always heal or do miracles is contradicted by these foundational passages about His will for every Christian. In fact, the Bible also teaches that the Holy Spirit “intercedes for us according to God’s will” (Romans 8:27). This means that when the Holy Spirit is seeking God’s will for us, He is seeking God’s will for us according to God’s Preceptive Will – the five things listed above, and more. Sometimes He seeks for our suffering that we might learn endurance. “More than that, we rejoice in our sufferings, knowing that suffering produces endurance, and endurance produces character, and character produces hope” (Romans 5:3-4).

From Knowing God’s Will to Applying God’s Will
When we know God’s Preceptive Will for our lives we can then understand how God responds to us when we pray, how we respond to God’s answers to our prayers, and most importantly, what He is doing in our lives.

  • God answers all of our prayers according to His will – not ours
  • We must check to see if we are in God’s will (Psalm 66:18)
  • When we are living according to God’s Preceptive Will, we will become like Jesus Christ (Romans 8:29).

God’s Decretive Will – his decrees – are always performed and cannot be frustrated by man. When God decrees something it always happens. But when God’s Preceptive Will, that is, His desire for the outcome of our character is proactively applied in our lives, then God will, in His time, reveal to the Christian His will for Divine Vocation. If you are seeking God’s will for your life, but are not yet in agreement with God about basic moral issues, or you have not set your life apart for His service, or you are engaged in behaviors that are contrary to the word of God, then do not expect that God will speak to you about your Divine Vocation.

He will not.

God’s Preceptive Will is prerequisite to knowing your Divine Vocation. Another way of putting this is: If you are not listening to what God has already said in the Bible, why would He speak to you about anything further?

Reason for a Just War

“This war is more than a clash of arms – it is a decisive ideological struggle, and the security of our Nation is in the balance. To prevail, we must remove the conditions that inspire blind hatred, and drove 19 men to get onto airplanes and come to kill us. What every terrorist fears most is human freedom – societies where men and women make their own choices, answer to their own conscience, and live by their hopes instead of their resentments. Free people are not drawn to violent and malignant ideologies – and most will choose a better way when they are given a chance.”

- President George Bush – State of the Union Address, 2007

The Attitude of Sinful Man

The execution of Saddam Hussein drove me back to the Bible. It was alarming to read the reaction of so many people to Saddam’s execution. Regardless of whether he was executed with “dignity,” or whether the men carrying out the deed were vengeful or politically contrary, none of it matters in the sense that in the end Saddam Hussein received the just penalty for his crimes. In fact, he technically received less than justice, which I explained in my commenterry, The Rightness of the Rope for Saddam Hussein.

Watching the reactions on the news, and reading through dozens of blogs from the Middle East to the Americas, you would think that Iraq had executed an innocent man. Of course most commentary was focused on the behavior of the hooded men, the political motivations and implications. But so what? So the masked-men were jerks and made Saddam’s last moments more bitter than he expected. In the words of Michelle Malkin, “Boo-freaking-hoo.” The behavior of Saddam’s hangmen doesn’t change the fundamental rightness of the penalty he received.

This is how it always is with sinful man. Sinful man, that is, the person who approaches the world from a view that is different from God’s, always protests God’s justice. In fact, sinful man often protests mercy as less than merciful – such as those who complained that Saddam Hussein wasn’t receiving humane enough treatment in prison, or didn’t get to talk to his monstrous daughter before receiving his rope-burn.

These issues drove me back to the Bible during the week of execution to re-examine the death penalty as a justice concept from the scriptures. I pulled out old Bible studies on justice and mercy, and decided to take a close look at the first death penalty recorded in the Bible, and the first capital crime. What I discovered in this go around gave me reason to pause and think carefully. The most important thing I came away with from this study was not about the death penalty, or God’s ideas about justice and mercy, rather, it was man’s reactions to God’s justice and mercy.

Murder & Mercy
Read: Genesis 4:1-16.
The Old Testament’s Mosaic Law prescribed the death penalty for certain crimes including premeditated murder, rape, incest, witchcraft, kidnapping, adultery, homosexual encounters, bestiality, violence against parents, blaspheme, and breaking the Sabbath – ouch. Yet the laws that spelled out this detail were not in place when the first murder was committed. In fact, the first murderer did not receive the death penalty.

Cain, the eldest son of Adam and Eve, murdered his brother Abel for no other reason than his jealousy of his relationship to God (4:4-5). For his premeditated murder of his younger brother, God exiled him (4:11-12). He did not receive the death penalty. It might be argued that God was still in the process populating the earth and this need prevented a death sentence from being handed down. Yet the scripture is clear that God did not “need” Cain to populate the earth as Adam and Eve had many sons and daughters after Cain and Abel (Genesis 5:4-5).

Upon confronting Cain about the murder of his brother, God’s first act was to attempt to draw out a confession from Cain. “The Lord said to Cain, ‘Where is Abel your brother?’” (4:9) Certainly God knew where Abel was – probably standing next to him! The question was nearly identical to the question He asked Adam in the garden after Adam ate the forbidden fruit, “Adam, where are you?” (3:9) This brings us to our first point:

  • God’s preferred means of dealing with sin is to solicit confession for the purpose of demonstrating grace.

(Grace and mercy are different. Mercy is not receiving what is deserved. Grace is receiving more than we deserve, in good favor.)

When Eve sunk her teeth into the fruit God didn’t boom through the trees, “Get your lips off that!” Nor did He shout at Cain, “Murderer!” His first reaction in both cases was to try and coax a confession. In fact, throughout the Bible God’s first approach and requirement – even in the Mosaic Law – was to encourage confession, repentance, and restitution. When you think about it, we have a very crude (and often misused) form of this in our modern law – the plea bargain. In exchange for a confession a criminal may receive a reduced sentence.

In the Bible, when confession was not forthcoming things would become more difficult for the sinner.

The Mosaic Law required that the victim or victim’s family, under state supervision, execute a sentence of death. If God had applied this law to Cain, Adam and Eve would have had to execute their firstborn son. This was unlikely to happen, leaving only one person at the time that could carry out such a sentence – God (God did this once as we shall see later). Adam and Eve had already seen that God’s punishments could be severe (2:17), but it was also equally demonstrated that God’s practice of dealing with sin was merciful. Though God declared they would die if they ate the fruit, they did not immediately die – in fact they lived 10 times longer than we do! By allowing them to live God was also making preparation for the promised Savior – their descendant – who would atone for their sin and the sin of the world (3:15-16).

Cain followed in his father’s footsteps as a “tiller of the ground.” He brought sacrifices from what he harvested, however, his sacrifices did not please God (4:3-7). The scripture intimates that Cain did not bring the first fruits (best), but just a simple nondescript offering. This signified that Cain was first in Cain’s life.

His brother Abel did not follow in his father’s footsteps – he followed in God’s. Abel it seems, took his cues from God’s sacrifice of an animal to make coverings for Adam and Eve – he became a shepherd (3:20, 4:2). If scholar’s assumptions are correct and man did not eat meat at this time, then Abel’s profession had only one purpose – sacrificial worship. When Abel brought an offering, he brought God the best of his flock (first fruits), and the “fat portions.” This signified that God came first in Abel’s life. Interestingly, Cain brought offerings from a profession that was given to his father as the result of a curse. But Abel brought offerings from a profession that God modeled for redemption. This brings us to our second point:

  • Sinful man always places his desires above God and above others.

Cain didn’t bring the first fruits he kept them for himself. Cain was jealous of his brother’s fortune with God, wanting to have God’s fortune to himself, but did not want his brother to have it. Yet Cain was also unwilling to do that which would give him God’s favor.

Adam and Eve received exile and a delayed death sentence. Cain the murderer only received exile. But there’s another interesting aspect to the difference in punishments between Adam, Eve, and Cain. Adam’s punishment was to have the ground cursed because of his sin (3:17-19). But Cain’s punishment was to be cursed from the ground (4:11).

Cain’s punishment denied him the ability to sustain his life, and draw fulfillment from it. Additionally, since he was “cursed from the ground,” we can assume that his days as a farmer were over. The very profession he used to bring his offerings from was now removed from him. This was God’s way of saying to Cain, there is no sacrifice for your sin. This is true because Cain showed no remorse, sorrow, or repentance for what he had done. Nor did Cain even feign to ask for forgiveness. Cain’s only response to God was not that he was sorry, but that God’s response to him was unjust. Look at what Cain said when he found out he was to be exiled instead of killed, “My punishment is greater than I can bear” (4:13). This brings us to our third point:

  • Sinful man always views God’s justice as unjust, and often views God’s mercy as unjust.

The scripture also affirms this: “Evil men do not understand justice, but those who seek the Lord understand it completely” (Proverbs 28:5). By not exercising a sentence of immediate death God was giving Cain many more years of life to consider his sinful state so that he might eventually come to repentance. The New Testament echoes this concept in Romans 2:4, “God’s kindness is meant to lead you to repentance.” God granted a mercy to Cain that he did not deserve. Cain’s response was to protest both God’s justice and God’s mercy.

Cain also assumed a punishment for himself that God did not declare. He protested, “From your face I shall be hidden” (4:14). In fact God said no such thing. The punishment He gave was designed to lead Cain to repentance. All Cain had to do was recognize God’s unmerited favor toward him and respond. God’s face was not hidden from Cain. In fact, God was looking upon Cain with mercy in hopes that Cain would have a chance to see him face to face. Sadly, Cain rejected God’s kindness, signified when the writer says, “Then Cain went out from the presence of the Lord” (4:16). God did not leave Cain; Cain left God. This brings us to our fourth point:

  • Sinful man rejects God’s means of gaining His favor – repentance, obedience, and good character.

God already instructed Cain on how to gain his favor in 4:6-7. Instead of doing what God said to do to gain his favoring attention, he did the very thing that would gain God’s wrathful attention.

Cain’s error was the error of all sinful men who desire selfish benefit regardless of consequences. Sinful man rejects the notion of eternal consequences for their action. This is unlike the character of God who took the consequences of our actions upon Himself when Jesus Christ was crucified as a substitutionary sacrifice for our sins. God was the one who initiated the death penalty for certain crimes. And it was God the Son who received the penalty of death for the crimes we have committed. In fact, God even applied the principle of “life-for-life” to Himself, signifying that the death penalty, a life for a life, was a just principle.

Long after the days of Cain and Abel, God declared that the sin of man had become too great and that He would act to intentionally kill every living thing on earth. The scripture says:

    “The Lord saw that the wickedness of man was great in the earth, and that every intention of the thoughts of his heart was only evil continually. And the Lord was sorry that he had made man on the earth, and it grieved him to his heart. So the Lord said, I will blot out man whom I have created from the face of the land” (Genesis 6:5-7).

This is the first time the Bible says that God would take direct action to kill men. God in His justice decided to carry out the just punishment for sin on a world that only pursued “evil continually.” Yet after the flood, when Noah and his family were released to repopulate the earth, God declared a new law, a law that foreshadowed the coming of Christ:

    ”Whoever sheds the blood of man, by man shall his blood be shed, for God made man in his own image” (Genesis 9:6).

While God did not sin by subjecting the penalty of death upon sinful men (death, spiritually speaking, is a form of exile); He did give Noah a foreshadowing of what was to come. God had shed man’s blood in the deluge, and by man His blood – the blood of Jesus Christ – was to be shed.

The penalty of death for sin, especially the kind of gross sin where there is only evil continually, is a just penalty. At times men must suffer the penalty for their sin. But we can be thankful that for the chosen of God, those whom He has redeemed by His own sacrificial blood, that penalty of death is already paid.

The penalty of death sometimes suffered under secular law is a just penalty when prescribed for just reasons. God’s mercy does not negate the justice of the principle. And God did not prefer mercy over justice. He preferred both equally, which is why death is sometimes prescribed, and why the Son of God took that prescription for us. This is a stark contrast between the attitude of sinful man, who rejects God’s justice and mercy, and the righteous God, who embraced justice and mercy with outstretched arms on a cross.

Freedom is not Extraordinary

You would think that by managing a TV news station I would follow Mongolian politics closely. Once in a while that’s true, but usually my attention is so focused on other issues that I don’t have the time to give it that much attention anymore except where our basic mission of Faith & Freedom is concerned. Most people don’t know that a representative of our parent organization, AMONG Foundation, was highly instrumental in helping Mongolia’s early democratic lawmakers draft a clause on religious freedom following the rejection of communism in the early nineties. The clause has changed a bit, but it still remains a shining example of religious freedom compared to other Asian countries. So when I read President Enkhbayar’s speech on commemorating the 15th anniversary of Mongolia’s democratic constitution, I was encouraged because of a short but highly significant statement made by the president that, to me, demonstrates a fundamental way of thinking necessary to advance and protect freedom.

In his speech commemorating the Constitution, the president noted:

    “Today the Constitutional concept of freedom has become the belief of our citizens, and they fully understand that exercising their rights and freedom is not an extraordinary thing, but a norm of normal life. Many civil, social and mass media organizations have been established and freely conduct their activities in all types such as to support, examine and criticize the state actions realizing their opportunities according to laws. This is the change of quality and progress in the social consciousness and thinking of our people, and this is a remarkable achievement of the Constitution” (emphasis mine).

I love that! “Freedom is not an extraordinary thing” – it’s normal! That statement is more profound than you might think.

Sadly, for many centuries the ideas of freedom were extraordinary – or perhaps we should use the phrase, “out of the ordinary.” The so-called “divine-right” of kings, and arbitrary rule were the standards of history. It wasn’t until the Protestant Reformation that the idea of freedom as we understand it today began taking firm root – and even then it was only a seed. It took centuries more for that seed to grow into the modern concepts of freedom we cherish today. In the 20th century freedom gained new ground, but so did tyranny. The 20th century was the bloodiest in human history, but for all the blood spilled, more countries are free today than at any time in previous history. The 21st century faces yet more challenges. The old Evil Empires of Communism and Nazism have, for the most part been replaced by Islamic Fundamentalism. There will always be an evil to fight around the next corner. Such is the price of vigilance. But there is no denying that freedom is no longer considered extraordinary – freedom is normal. That is a radical and fundamental shift in thinking, especially in a former communist country like Mongolia.

President Enkhbayar’s statement is so right on the money it ought to be bankrolled. For how many centuries was freedom “extraordinary,” or to use our modified term, “out of the ordinary?” Far too long! We must always view freedom as the normal and natural condition of human beings, and oppose the oppressions of the so-called extraordinary.

Brains or Smarts?

A classic joke rewritten…by me.

An attorney and a fashion model found themselves seated together on a long flight across the country. Bored with the movie selection they began discussing their careers. The attorney complained that everyone regards his ilk as corrupt, always taking unfair advantage of people. The fashion model said she also thought that was true and didn’t trust attorneys. She then went on to complain about her own troubles – that everyone thinks fashion models are stupid. The attorney, still offended that the model thought he was dishonest, said he agreed that most fashion models weren’t that bright.

After several bouts of argument and silence the attorney proposed a duel of the minds. “Tell you what,” he said, “Let’s ask each other questions and for each question we get wrong, we have to pay the other five dollars.”

The fashion model looked skeptical. “See, I’m not that stupid. You are a college-educated lawyer. I wear dresses and bikinis for a living. Your challenge doesn’t seem that fair.”

The attorney changed the odds, “You pay five dollars, I’ll pay twenty dollars,” he said, but she refused. Finally the attorney said, “For every question I ask you, if you get the answer wrong I will pay you one hundred dollars. But if I can’t answer a question of yours, you only have to pay me five dollars.”

The fashion model looked at him skeptically then said, “Okay, go ahead and ask a question.”

The attorney rubbed his hands together excitingly and said, “What is a writ of habeas corpus?”

Without a word the model reached into her purse, pulled out a five-dollar bill and handed it to the lawyer. “My turn,” she said. The attorney folded the bill and stuffed it in his pocket, smiling. “Fire away,” he said.

“What goes up a hill with three legs but comes back down the hill with four legs?”

The attorney was stumped. Not wanting to be beaten in a game of wits by a dumb fashion model, he opened his laptop and searched his encyclopedia. When he couldn’t find the answer he asked around to other passengers seated nearby, but no one could give him the answer. Finally in frustration he gave up, pulled out his wallet and handed the model one hundred dollars.

As the model counted the cash the attorney said, “Okay, so what is the answer to your question?”

Without hesitation the model handed him another five dollars.

The Body of Christ

Since we are in a process of re-ordering things at Eagle TV, I thought this would be a good time to do the same with this blog, beginning with a new weekly feature: Friday Fundamentals. Each Friday I will post a new Bible study or commenterry on a different biblical issue that is fundamental to our expression of Christianity. My first topic, especially appropriate in Mongolia with its emphasis on the value of unity, is The Body of Christ.

Read I Corinthians 12:1,4,11-30 then click the back button to return here.

The Bible’s two primary dissertations on the Body of Christ (the Church) are found in Romans 12 and I Corinthians 12. The Apostle Paul, though writing to different audiences, penned both passages in the same year – 56 or 57 A.D. Thus they have some ideas in common, especially on the theme of the Body of Christ:

  • The body has many members (Romans 12:4, I Cor. 12:14)
  • Each member has its own function (Romans 12:4,6-8, I Cor. 12:4-7
  • Each member belongs to the other (Romans12:5, I Cor. 12:14-21
  • Each function of the members directly benefits the whole body and its individual members (Romans 12:6-8, I Cor. 12:7-11)
  • Both passages on the body are followed by a dissertation about love (Romans 12:9-21, I Cor. 12:31-13:1-13)

Paul’s use of the human body as an illustration of the nature of the church is not accidental. Elsewhere Paul says very clearly to his readers that Jesus Christ “is the head of the body, the church” (Colossians 1:18). Paul, a Jew, was writing to Romans and Corinthian Greeks. Corinth, in fact, was made up of nearly half a million people from all over the empire, from diverse cultures. They were people with different histories and backgrounds, and moral values, though still of the same political empire. Though Paul was a foreigner to both peoples (Romans and Greeks), and from a despised race (Jews), he wrote to both with the same authority as an Apostle of Christ, his authority signifying that his words were the standard by which the churches from both cultures must operate. Paul established one of the churches himself (Corinth) in 51 A.D., but had not been to Rome. In spite of this he writes with the same binding authority to both – authority that binds us even today.

Paul’s emphasis on the members of the body belonging to one another is prefaced first with the necessity of personal humility. Paul writes in Romans 12:3, “For through the grace given to me I say to every man among you not to think of himself more highly than he ought to think…” then he proceeds to teach about equal membership in the body of Christ. Equal membership in the body of Christ implies equal rights in that same body.

In I Corinthians 11:23-26 Paul prefaces his dissertation on the body by giving an example of humility during the Last Supper, as Christ prepared to die for mere men. Paul himself demonstrated his own humility by referring to his apostleship and the authority under which he wrote as “the grace given to me” (Romans 12:3). He again wrapped the topic in humility in Romans 12:16 when he says, “Do not be haughty in mind, but associate with the lowly. Do not be wise in your own estimation.”

With such a preface Paul states to his foreign brothers in Christ that their membership in Christ’s body is not determined by them individually or collectively, rather, they are “all members of one another” (Romans 12:5), that we were all baptized by the same Holy Spirit into the same body, with Paul intentionally stating that equal membership was given to Jews and Greeks (I Corinthians 12:13). Paul’s meaning is plain; there is no such thing as a national church, or race church. It does not matter if the believer or group of believes is Mongolian, or American, or Korean, or even – gasp – Chinese! All are equal members of Christ, receiving the same salvation, the same grace, and the same Spirit, by the same means. Thus all deserve the same love and respect. Paul states as much by saying, “Be devoted to one another in brotherly love, give preference to one another in honor” (Romans 12:10). Paul even goes so far as to reprimand his readers when he writes of the Christian who says of his brother, “I have no need of you” (I Corinthians 12:21). Look at his context:

    ”The eye cannot say to the hand, ‘I have no need of you;’ or again the head to the feet, ‘I have no need of you.’”

Did you catch the most important word in that passage?

”The head.”

Paul teaches that even Christ – the head of the church – considers even the lowliest regarded member of the body – the feet – as if He needs them equally. In fact, Paul calls such members, “Indispensable” (I Corinthians 12:22). What a strong statement! The God who created the universe, who is self-existent and needs nothing to sustain himself, says that He, the head, “needs” us. What a remarkable picture of God’s grace. If he needs us, then how much more do we need one another? Desperately!

Sadly, there are always some in the body of Christ who regard other members as unnecessary or undesirable. It is a sad and all too often frequent thing. We usually do this over areas of disagreement, theology, personal or worship expression, and so on. And while it’s important not to associate ourselves with false religion, a false teacher, or false prophet (Deuteronomy 18:12-14, 20), Paul makes no distinction between members of the body of different ideas, motivations, or functions. Paul says we have “gifts that differ according to the grace given to us” (Romans 12:6). Intimating of the offenses and wrongs often done by members of the body to one another, Paul says, “Never pay back evil for evil…Never take your own revenge…Do not be overcome with evil” (Romans 12:17-21).

Imagine the sad state of affairs for a church if a member or members of the body of Christ, against Paul’s admonitions in I Corinthians 12:21, refused to have anything to do with a fellow and equal brother over such minor things as personal disagreements or personality conflicts. Certainly such things are “normal,” even in the Christian church! But God has not called the church and its members to be “normal.” He has called us to live supernatural lives of forgiveness, grace, and peace.

As a conservative non-charismatic I cannot say that I don’t need charismatics. The beauty of Paul’s words is that I need charismatics, and they need non-charismatics equally, and we both need the head, who is Christ, who himself declares that he needs us! The Mongolian believer or church cannot say he/they do not need the “foreigner” – especially when his faith was birthed from a foreign source! Paul did this for the Corinthian church. Nor could the Romans declare they did not need him though they had never met (Romans 1:11-13), as Paul’s writings set the tone for what the church in Rome would eventually become. Nor can the foreigner say he is separate from, or does not need the Mongolian church. The foreign believer needs the Mongolian believer in no less or greater way than the Mongolian needs him. In Christ he is not a foreigner. In Christ he is not a Mongolian. There is no Mongolian church! There is no American, British, Korean, or even – gasp! – Chinese church. As Paul wrote, “There is neither Jew nor Greek, there is neither slave nor free, there is neither male nor female, for you all are one in Christ Jesus” (Galatians 3:28).

Paul’s emphasis on the equal membership and rights within the body of Christ concludes with his strong admonition to love in Romans 12:9-16 and I Corinthians 13. His meaning is clear for all. Those who shun their brothers without just cause are not following Christ’s command to love. It is no coincidence that immediately after detailing the various roles of the members of the body that Paul says in the same breath, “Let love be without hypocrisy” (Romans 12:9). Even the Apostle John noted something similar when he said, “We know that we have passed out of death into life because we love the brethren. He who does not love abides in death. Everyone who hates his brother is a murderer; and you know that no murderer has eternal life abiding in him” (I John 3:14-15).

The roles we play as members of the body of Christ are more than mere functions. God has designed that our gifts be expressions of His love. For if the roles we have within the body of Christ are gifts from God, empowered in us by His Holy Spirit (I Corinthians 12:4), then how much more that which Paul calls “a more excellent way” (I Corinthians 12:31) – love! Even Paul notes that our roles as members of the body become meaningless unless exercised in love (I Corinthians 13:1-3, 8-9).

Sometimes we refer to person who acts out of sorts by saying that he doesn’t have his head on straight. In the church we always have our head (Christ) on straight – but we sometimes don’t accept the signals He sends to control our functions, we disobey – we have a spasm.

The world is filled with spastic Christians. Join me at looking into the mirror.

May you and I always be in regular and obedient communion with Christ, allowing Him to express Himself through our lives with His very own love. As Bill Bright used to say, we must allow Christ to walk with our feet, work with our hands, think with our minds, and love with our hearts. Without true, Christ-like, Spirit-begotten love, we will not function properly, or meaningfully, and could find ourselves with the grievous attitude that we are the head and determiner of what the body is, and what it does, instead of ascribing that role to the only true head of the single church body, Jesus Christ.