Thoughts On Dr. Mohler’s Article

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“Words matter, especially when words are at the center of controversy and conflict. It is the responsibility of all people to look at words carefully, to understand what the words are, what they mean, and what they are doing”

Above is the opening lines of Dr. Mohler’s post on Public Discourse in the article Black Lives Matter: Affirm the Sentence, Not the Movement. In the article, Dr Mohler affirms the sentence Black Lives Matter because people are made in the image of God and he also recognizes there are “moral concerns about the lives and well-being of black Americans. It is not wrong in our context, therefore, to say “black lives matter” as a sentence. But it’s not that simple.”

Dr. Mohler goes on to explain how Black Lives Matter has emerged as more than a sentence and into a movement with a history, values, and ideologies. The concern which Dr. Mohler addresses concerning Black Lives Matter the organization and movement are valid and important to bring to the forefront and discuss. Dr. Mohler does an excellent job in the rest of his article examining the movements affirmations, policy demands, statements, and definitions. Dr. Mohler compares the Black Lives Matter Movement to the Civil Rights Movement and Christian Theology and how they differ and are at odds with each other.

I encourage you to read Dr. Mohler’s argument he draws out important information that we should be aware of and Dr. Mohler’s evaluation is superb and beneficial.

My problem is I disagree with his conclusion, in his conclusion Dr. Mohler states,

 “Christians like me believe that God calls us to evaluate everything by his Word, by the gospel of Jesus Christ. While we affirm the sentence “black lives matter,” without hesitation and with full enthusiasm, we simply cannot use the sentence, because it will be heard, nearly universally, as a movement, not as a sentence. The sentence is no longer a sentence—it is a movement, a platform, an agenda of revolution at odds with the gospel, contrary to and destructive of God’s creational order.”

Defining and Explaining

Words matter and the explanation of the words we use are of vital importance. If people were to gather from various religions from across the globe in a room and explain the statement “For God so loved the world” we would get views of various kind, biblical views, heretical views and unbiblical views. The Christian would have the responsibility to explain faithfully what the Bible means, but of course, even within Christian circles we disagree on the meaning of this statement when we break it down. Now this statement does not describe a movement, my point is we do not throw away the statement because some describe it in heretical and unbiblical ways. As Christians, throughout the centuries of church history we have defined and explained the words we have used and what we mean by them, an overview of confessions and creeds would point that out.

While the words “for God so loved the world” are not the mantra of a movement and Dr. Mohler’s point is the movement and the sentence have become one in the same. What about the name and movement of the Southern Baptist Convention, history informs us, the issue of slavery was central to Baptists in the South separating from the North. The southern states were known for slavery, Jim Crow and Segregation. The term “the South” or “Southern” in the minds of many people are synonymous with slavery, segregation, and Jim Crow. Resolutions have been drawn up to change the name and the name has been changed, yet the name Southern Baptist Convention regardless of its founding and association with slavery, Jim Crow and segregation is still being used. While the SBC is dealing with the stain of the sin of partiality in its past, based on Dr. Mohler’s argument, we should do away with using the term “Southern” in the name of Southern Baptist Convention and Southern Seminary. Yet the name remains, and the people of the SBC explain the history, the resolutions and repentance associated with the organization’s history.

Why It Matters?

Our words matter and our African American brothers rejoice when pastors, friends, church members from various ethnic backgrounds, proclaim and affirm Black Lives Matter. When other fringe groups have come and hijacked terms and sentences, we do not allow them to. When a Mormon says I am a Christian, we are quick to respond why the Mormon faith does not align with Biblical Christianity, when prosperity Gospel preachers use the life, death and resurrection of Jesus to claim health and wealth, we are quick to define terms and differences between the prosperity gospel and Biblical Christianity. Yet when an organization who uses the sentence Black Lives Matter to define their organization, we are quick to drop the sentence because of what the organization stands for, instead of defining, explaining and defending what we as Christians mean when we say Black Lives Matter.

We can and should be better.

Redemption is a loaded term, too much for a blog post for sure. But if we look at the basic meaning of redeem it means, to gain or regain possession of something in exchange for payment. The Bible tells us that we have been redeemed by God, the payment or cost of that redemption was Jesus’ life and death. As a redeemed people we should be a people who redeem the society and culture we are a part of. As Christians, we can redeem the sentence Black Lives Matter, explain why we believe the statement is worth saying. My question is are we prepared to pay the price and do the work to redeem the sentence Black Lives Matter? Will we be willing to speak out when we see injustice? We will stand with our African American citizens and affirm Black Lives Matter? Are we willing to invite them to share spaces and allow them to speak from the heart without retribution? We will stand up for them when others try to defame their character? Redeeming the sentence will cost us, it will cost us jobs, friendships, allegiances and more. But the sentence is worth redeeming.

The reason we should say Black Lives Matter as Christians is because for far to long, the voice of the African American and other minority groups have been silenced, not only in society but in the church, in religious organizations, seminaries and denominations. Now we want to silence them again from using a sentence because another organization has embraced it, defined it, and proclaimed it louder than the Church of Jesus Christ.

May I ask who is at fault here?

We are, as the body of Christ are to blame because we have allowed a movement to champion a sentence, the church, from every ethnic heritage, should have championed long ago. We have allowed the rocks to cry out instead and that is a judgement on us, the church. Instead of clamping down on the statement we should proclaim, explain, and defend from the Scriptures what we mean when we say Black Lives Matter. We should champion biblical justice for our African American brothers and sisters, and other minority groups who have experienced injustice. We should with arms and hearts linked together, proclaim in unison with our African American brothers and sisters, Black Lives Matter.

Until Next Time

Soli Deo Gloria

The Early Bird Gets The Link

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Is It Biblical to Say, ‘Bloom Where You’re Planted’?

In the case of “bloom where you are planted,” it’s not enough to object, “That’s not in the Bible!” We should bring the whole teaching of Scripture to bear not only on the words of a phrase, but also on its meaning. This practice honors Paul’s admonition, “Abhor what is evil, cling to what is good” (Rom. 12:9; cf. 1 Thess. 5:21–22). In other words, ask what’s true about a statement—and what’s false.

The Food Scene of a Gospel Culture

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Every Master (But One) Leads to a Living Death

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Self-Control In Christ Alone Brings Freedom

The phrase “a believer in Christ” is essential to fruitful self-control, for here is the truth: Only the one who is in Christ can truly control their self.

The Early Bird Gets The Link

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How Often Do You Examine Your Fruit?

If you aren’t growing in godliness, this is a sign of trouble. At the root of failure to grow in godliness is always the spiritual problem of failure to live in Christ. 

1 Corinthians 10:13, Part 3: Will I Be Tempted Beyond My Willpower?

Worth the listen.

4 Things to Reset In Your Life and Ministry

While there’s no reset button in real life, the Lord does give us opportunities to re-adjust our outlook on life or to reconsider how we should spend our time and energy.

Maybe it’s time to “reset” a few things in your life. Here are four to consider.

Pursuing the Will of God as a Student

Throughout high school, I felt drawn to be a professional golfer but also had a call on my life that had been affirmed by others at church for vocational ministry. During my teenage years, I often asked myself, “Is God’s will for my life to go into vocational ministry or to go into professional golf?”

NUGGETS: Suicide

Some good resources on suicide.

The Early Bird Gets The Link

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Matthew’s Gospel as You’ve Never Read It Before

The Gospel of Matthew is best understood with one eye looking back to the old story, and the other attuned to shifts in the new story.

9 Ways Great Leaders Communicate

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Common Does Not Mean OK!

One of the many dangers with sin that has become common, is our sinful hearts begin to justify our own sin by comparison. Ordinary is confused with acceptable. Normal is distorted into moral.

Run Like the Wind from Sexual Sin

Paul tells the Christians in Corinth to “flee sexual immorality” (1 Cor 6:18). Men, don’t gloss over the urgency in his words. The imagery calls to mind refugees fleeing a war-torn battle zone. “Forget going back to the house for our stuff. Grab the kids, we have to run—now!”

The Root and Reward of Faithful Service

The root of these men’s faithfulness is their love for God and His Word. They remember what God has done for them throughout the years, how He has always been faithful, and they cling to His Word. They revere His holiness and they find rest in serving Him.

The Early Bird Gets The Link

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The Offensively Ordinary Steps to Godliness

The pursuit of holiness, then, is both easier and harder than many of us imagine: Easierbecause our growth in grace often happens gradually, one small step at a time. Harderbecause sanctification has now invaded all of life. Holiness is hidden in offensively ordinary tasks, and those tasks are all around us.

Seeking God’s Will in Disappointment

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Have You Ever Lost Trust in God?

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Write. Record. Release.

We have more God-given, communication resources than any people who have ever lived. Ever! How now should the wise Kingdom steward live in light of the fact: Every computer and cell phone is a recording studio, and book, magazine, and blog publisher?

Sticktoitiveness and the Christian Life

Sticktoitiveness is not something we value today. We are a nation of quitters. We quit jobs, quit towns, quit wives and children, and quit churches at an alarming rate. Just drive around on any Saturday morning for evidence of our quitting ways. Garage sales dominate our neighborhoods and enable us to attempt to receive back some return on our investment for all of the hobbies and life improvement changes we started but couldn’t complete.

Reflections In Mark: Commissioning And A Declaration Of War

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Jesus’ baptism was not your ordinary event. When Jesus comes up out of the water, the approval of heaven comes blaring through like lightning in a dark sky. Immediately we realize this is no ordinary event, this is a commissioning from the Father and a declaration of war from the enemy.

Commissioning

Hundreds of years before Jesus we read Isaiah’s cry to the Lord,

Isaiah 64:1 ESV

Oh that you would rend the heavens and come down, that the mountains might quake at your presence—

If we look throughout the nation of Israel’s history we can picture in our mind what Isaiah is asking for when we look at the story of Moses and the giving of the Law, when the Lord came down and spoke to Moses and shook the mountains with his thunderous voice. Isaiah is asking for the Lord to break open the skies and speak to his people.
In Mark 1, hundreds of years later the answer to Isaiah’s prayer finally arrives. But it isn’t like anything the Lord has done in the past. This time the Lord shows up on the scene in the person of Jesus, God in human flesh. He doesn’t come on the clouds or a royal throne, but through the humble family of Joseph and Mary, growing up in Nazareth. At his appointed time, he approaches John to be baptized and we are invited onto the scene by the Gospel writers.
Mark puts into words to help us visualize the answer to Isaiah’s prayer.  What is interesting in Mark compared to the other Gospel writers that tell them baptism narrative, is Mark uses the word σχίζω/schizo. Schizo describes something torn or split open. Mark is doing his best to describe this event of the Father from heaven splitting open the skies and displaying for everyone God is now here in the person of Jesus.
Mark also describes the Spirit descending on Jesus, the Greek intensifies this union by describing the Spirit coming “into him” indicating Jesus’ complete filling and equipping for ministry. Isaiah points out that one who was to come will but filled with the Spirit and power,
Behold my servant, whom I uphold, my chosen, in whom my soul delights; I have put my Spirit upon him; he will bring forth justice to the nations.
And the Spirit of the Lord shall rest upon him, the Spirit of wisdom and understanding, the Spirit of counsel and might, the Spirit of knowledge and the fear of the Lord.
The Spirit of the Lord God is upon me, because the Lord has anointed me to bring good news to the poor; he has sent me to bind up the brokenhearted, to proclaim liberty to the captives, and the opening of the prison to those who are bound;
The heavens ripped open, the Spirit descended on Jesus and now we have the sweet sound of the Father’s joy from heaven declaring, “you are my Son, whom I love, with you I am well pleased.” Mark describes the Father’s love and stamp of approval over his Son, which is also an Old Testament theme.

Psalm 2:7 ESV

I will tell of the decree: The Lord said to me, “You are my Son; today I have begotten you.

Isaiah 42:1 ESV

Behold my servant, whom I uphold, my chosen, in whom my soul delights; I have put my Spirit upon him; he will bring forth justice to the nations.

This whole event sums up the commissioning of Jesus and launching him out for ministry. What we discover is after the commissioning we have testing and a declaration of war from Satan.

Declaration of War

This should not surprise us, if you think back to the Garden of Eden, we have the commissioning of Adam and Eve to care for and fill the garden, when lo and behold we are introduced to the serpent who is there to declare war and to tempt Adam and Eve. If we think about the nation of Israel exiting Egypt and God’s hand protecting them and leading them to Mount Sinai, where they will be commissioned through covenant. We discover while Moses is on the mountain the nation is building and worshiping an idol. What we discover through out the Scriptures is whenever there is a commissioning of God on a person or a movement, their is a declaration of war by Satan.

Like Adam and Eve, like the nation of Israel, after the commissioning of Jesus their is a declaration of war on the person of Christ, unlike the other Gospel writers Mark’s description of the event is brief,

Mark 1:12–13 ESV

The Spirit immediately drove him out into the wilderness. And he was in the wilderness forty days, being tempted by Satan. And he was with the wild animals, and the angels were ministering to him.

There are important elements in Mark’s telling of history. The first is, Jesus was not alone. Mark tells us the Spirit drove him out into the wilderness. In the Baptism narrative we read the Holy Spirit came into him, now we read the Holy Spirit directing him. We see Jesus obediently following the direction of the Spirit, they are working in tandem to defeat an enemy who has waged war on the mission of God. We also read of the angels ministering to him.

We know from the other Gospel accounts that Jesus while in the wilderness for forty days, he was also fasting for forty days. While the other Gospel accounts record three specific temptations, Mark tells us Jesus was being tempted by Satan for forty days. Day after day, Satan is pulling out his bag of tricks trying to defeat the Son of God.

What is also interesting in Mark’s account is the mention of the wild beast in the wilderness. It’s almost as if the wild beast’s were working with Satan. Why would Mark mention this? I find it interesting Mark mentions this and I believe it was important because of Mark’s Roman audience. We know from history that the Romans used wild beasts to persecute Christians. They would immediately associate wild beasts with persecution and suffering.

What does all this mean?

We read in Matthew and Luke Jesus was victorious. Where Adam & Eve failed, where Israel failed, Jesus succeeded. A new Adam has arrived, one who is victorious. His victory was not just for himself. His victory is for all those who will look to him, repent and believe. His first victory was in the wilderness, ultimate victory came when he walked out of the tomb on the third day.

Just like the Father commissioned the Son, the Son has commissioned us to be ambassadors of the Kingdom of God on earth. He left us with a mission to be light in a dark world, to spread the good news of the kingdom to all the peoples of the Earth. His stamp of approval is on us who believe, His Spirit is in us, the words the Father spoke to the Son “you are my Son, you are my Daughter whom I love, with you I am well pleased”, echo throughout time and is spoken over us.

As we serve in our mission for the expansion of the kingdom of God, Satan will wage war on us. We are not alone. We have been empowered by the Spirit, we have ministering angels helping us, but most of all we have a high priests who was victorious, his victory is our victory.

Until Next Time

Soli Deo Gloria

 

 

The Early Bird Gets The Link

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Is the Universe Designed for Life?

 

Seven Things We Can Learn from Attractional Churches

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On the Issues: What to do if Your Parents Divorce

 

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Jesus was “tempted in every way, just as we are, yet without sin” (Hebrews 4:15). What an amazing truth. But what does it mean? Does it mean that he was tempted to do everything that any human has ever been tempted to do: murder, child abuse, genocide, and the rest? Most of us probably assume not. But why? And (more pressingly in our current context): how do we differentiate between the ways in which he was tempted, and the ways in which he wasn’t? If it says he was tempted “in every respect”, but there are a bunch of ways in which he wasn’t tempted, does that end up undermining his humanity, his priestly mediation for us, the clarity or authority of Scripture, and more besides?

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We need to reject that dichotomy and adopt instead what the Bible puts forward: distinctions of position and function in the body of Christ, but not distinctions of gifting, dignity, or value.

Kindle Deals

If you are a Logos user, the Free book of the month and the discounted books that come with it are excellent resources this month.