Jun
28
2011
or Holy Smoke
Doug Wilson writes:
“The debate in the early church was not whether the Jews should stop circumcising their sons; it was whether the Gentiles had to start. The decision of the Jerusalem council was not that individual Gentiles did not have to be circumcised. If circumcision had been required of them, it would have obligated them to live as Jews under the Mosaic law — which included the circumcision of all subsequent generations. Circumcision was not being waived for individual Gentiles; circumcision was being waived for Gentiles and their seed. So the Christian church did not insist that Gentiles circumcise their infants — not because they were infants, but because they were Gentile infants” (To a Thousand Generations, pp. 68-69).
Since there is no ex-plicit proof of infant baptism, Pastor Wilson’s self-stated, continuing goal here is to find im-plicit proof. My goal in the following is to show that not only do circumcision and baptism not correspond, but also that the solution to the dispute in this passage he refers to is given in the passage, leaving no room for an im-plicit reference to infant baptism.
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16 comments | tags: AD70, Baptism, Circumcision, Covenant Theology, Culture, Doug Wilson, Federal Vision, Genesis, James, James Jordan, John, Literary Structure, Noah, Peter Leithart, Revelation | posted in Bible Matrix, Biblical Theology, Ethics, The Last Days
Jun
11
2011
You can find this over at Doug Wilson’s blog. I’m reposting it here because I’ve just spent over an hour responding to Doug R. and John B.’s good objections to comments on Shakin’ The Tree, so I’ve not got time to write anything new. Also, posting it here means I can find it more easily in future! So, at the risk of becoming the anti-paedobaptist/anti-hyperpreterist blog…
Baptism Points Away
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22 comments | tags: Abraham, Baptism, Circumcision, Covenant Theology, Doug Wilson, Parenting, Tabernacle | posted in Against Hyperpreterism, Bible Matrix, Biblical Theology, Ethics, Quotes, Totus Christus
Apr
15
2011
or Baptizing the World
After Pentecost, the firstfruits church met in the Temple. Over the next few decades, the Jewish leaders barred these worshippers from their premises. What they didn’t realise was that the glory was departing as it did in the time of Ezekiel, only this time it was inside people who were living Temples as Jesus was.
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10 comments | tags: Baptism, China, Dispensationalism, Persecution, Postmillennialism | posted in Biblical Theology, Christian Life, Creation, Ethics, Totus Christus
Jan
5
2011
“All these things I will give You if You will fall down and worship me.”
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The new atheists believe Christianity is a wet paper bag, and they are intent on punching their way out of it. They don’t understand that Christianity is the source of blessing, and that through their unbelief they are its bastard (or mutant) children. They are unlike the old atheists. Their moral outrages are not at all consistent with their nihilistic beliefs.
The truly evil are the ones who do understand the integrating, empowering, culture-building force of Christianity, and shamelessly steal it for their own ends. Satan knows the Scriptures. His policy isn’t scorched earth. His desire is a thorny crop of his own, and for that he must imitate Covenant hierarchy – a totus Diabolus. An authority structure has the potential for far more carnage than anarchy does, especially one with a dictatorial “Covenant succession” built-in.
It is a strange fact that many tinpot dictators, many terrorists, many proponents of promising but destructive modern philosophies, were products of a Western education. Or is it so strange? Counterfeiters invest a lot of time in studying the real tender before they manufacture their own currency, otherwise their plans will fail. The finished product is identical but for two things: the source of authority (Head); and the end result on the community (Body). Gary North writes:
“Satan needs a chain of command in order to exercise power. Thus, in order to create the greatest havoc for the church, Satan and his followers need to imitate the church. Like the child who needs to sit on his father’s lap in order to slap him, so does the rebel need a crude imitation of God’s dominion theology in order to exercise power. A child who rejects the idea of his father’s lap cannot seriously hope to slap him. The anti-Christian has officially adopted an “anti-lap” theory of existence. He admits no cause-and-effect relationship between lap and slap. To the extent that he acts consistently with this view, he becomes impotent to attack God’s people.
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2 comments | tags: Dominion Theology, Gary North, Satan, Totus Diabolus, Van Til | posted in Biblical Theology, Ethics
Dec
13
2010
“Deny that God speaks to any area of life, and you have denied God’s jurisdiction in that area of life.”
A very intelligent Christian recently posed the question, “What will be the most pressing intellectual challenge facing the church over the next 50 years?” What if the biggest challenge facing the church is not intellectual at all, but ethical. [1]
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1 comment | tags: Barth, Brueggemann, C. S. Lewis, Gary North, Genesis, Joseph, Postmillennialism, Socialism, Toby Sumpter, Van Til | posted in Ethics, Quotes
Oct
7
2010
Just as the Restoration, through death in Babylon, miraculously reunited Ephraim and Judah in a new body, the attacks on the Firstfruits church miraculously reunited Jew and Gentile. The Restoration body (pictured in Ezekiel 37) was a type of the Firstfruits church. In the big picture, this new body appears in the Bible Matrix at Maturity. It was an army from the grave, a multitude of shiny individuals united and animated by the Spirit of God, moving as a single shining entity. The Creation week pictures this as flocks of birds and schools of fish. The Tabernacle images it as clouds of incense. This is the warrior bride, terrible as an army with banners.
Light – Ark-Word (Sabbath) -
Make every effort to keep the unity of the Spirit
through the bond of peace.
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Comments Off | tags: Creation Week, Ephesians, Ezekiel, Feasts, Literary Structure, Paul, Solomon, Tabernacle | posted in Bible Matrix, Ethics, The Restoration Era
Oct
2
2010
The content of this post has been revised and included in Bible Matrix II: The Covenant Key.
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[1] See Behold Your Mother.
[2] See Incantation or Incarnation.
[3] Ray R. Sutton, That You May Prosper, pp. 73-75. Forget Calvin. Forget Barth. This book is a must-read.
[4] See Little Man With No Hair and Veiled Lawlessness.
Comments Off | tags: Covenant curse, Covenant Theology, Postmillennialism, Ray Sutton, Tabernacles, Zechariah | posted in Bible Matrix, Biblical Theology, Ethics, Quotes
Aug
30
2010
or Who Is My Neighbour?
The content of this post has been revised and included in Bible Matrix II: The Covenant Key.
1 comment | tags: Feasts, Literary Structure, Luke, Tabernacles | posted in Bible Matrix, Christian Life, Creation, Ethics
Jul
31
2010
Many atheists think it is their void-given right to make disrespectful, insulting or condescending remarks about religion. One I have heard a number of times is a common atheist response to “Your atheism is a religion”: If religion were a hair colour, then I am bald.
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3 comments | tags: Animism, Atheism, Education, Philosophy, Postmillennialism | posted in Apologetics, Christian Life, Ethics
Jul
1
2010
As I’ve mentioned here before, and in Totus Christus, the reference to the “man of sin” in Revelation is the sixth stanza of what is usually a seven stanza format. Only, in the case of this “Adam,” his seventh stanza is missing. [1] There is no Shekinah, no rest, no transfiguration, no bestowed glory. He crowned himself, so for him there would be no true crown.
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Comments Off | tags: AD70, antichrist, Ark of the Covenant, Corinth, Covenant Theology, Herod, Literary Structure, Man of sin, Paul, Systematic typology | posted in Bible Matrix, Biblical Theology, Ethics, The Last Days, Totus Christus