May
11
2009
Abraham had gone to extreme measures to make sure Isaac didn’t intermarry with Canaan and pollute the promise. He sent his most faithful servant as a forerunner to find a bride for his son. Like John the Forerunner, the most faithful servant found the beautiful bride, Rebekah, by the water in a garden of God. And like Paul the apostle, the servant adorned her with gold in preparation for her presentation to the Bridegroom. Like Herod and the Jews, Laban and his mother didn’t want to let her go, and were given no choice but to bless her with their riches.
Comments Off | tags: Abraham, Ecclesiology, Herod, Isaac, John the Baptist, Laban, Paul | posted in Biblical Theology, The Last Days, Totus Christus
May
3
2009
I just noticed that the passage concerning the slain Lamb (Rev. 5) and the passage concerning the victory of the church (in 9-11) correspond chiastically.
The first is the Adam conquering Herod’s Egypt and moving out through a bloody door (Passover/Circumcision)
SCROLL: Word – Most Holy Place – Garden
……LAMB: Sacrament – Holy Place – Land
…………NATIONS: Government – Courts – World
These cover the three territories corrupted by Adam, Cain and the ‘sons of God’. Between this ‘first generation’ (head) and the ‘next generation’ (body), there is a battle in the first century ‘wilderness’.
………………WILDERNESS BATTLE: Gospel as Pentecost Law
Later, there is the redeemed Eve conquering Herod’s Jericho and crossing the river into a heavenly country over the corpse (Atonement/Baptism)
…………SUNRISE ARMY of 200 million Jew/Gentile saints:
…………Government – Courts - World
……CHRIST the true brother/High Priest with the little scroll:
……Sacrament – Holy Place - Land (and Sea)
TWO WITNESSES, saints as the Ark cherubim: Word – Most Holy Place - Garden
Not only does this pattern follow the seven feasts of Leviticus 23 (if we include the central wilderness), each of these seven points contains the same sevenfold structure within itself. It is like Zechariah’s Lampstand with 49 lights. And this is just another overlay on the already manifold structures in Revelation. There really is no bottom to this book.
Comments Off | tags: Atonement, Baptism, Cain, Chiasm, Circumcision, Herod, Literary Structure, Passover, Revelation, Zechariah | posted in Biblical Theology, The Last Days
May
1
2009
“I pray for them. I do not pray for the world but for those whom You have given Me, for they are Yours. And all Mine are Yours, and Yours are Mine, and I am glorified in them.”
Jesus prayed these words shortly before these disciples betrayed, deserted and denied Him. As High Priest, the twelve were still just names etched on His shoulders. Unformed and uninteresting.
After Pentecost, with God’s breath breathed into them, each would become a precious stone, differing in glory from the others. They would be fully formed elders surrounding the slain Lamb (Rev. 5:6), walls and gates of a new Jerusalem.
With the seven eyes of the High Priest, the light of the Lampstand flames, Jesus could already see Pentecost, when the disciples would become the ‘angelic glories’ sent to warn Herod’s Sodom (Rev. 11:8) and curse it with blindness. Old Jerusalem was sulphur in God’s nostrils, but the apostles became an incense altar of aromatic smoke.
The twelve spoke words that changed the whole world in a matter of decades. Jesus sees us with those same eyes. We deny Him. We betray Him. We desert Him. But we are His, and He sees our future. Breathe into us, breath of God.
Comments Off | tags: Gethsemane, Herod, High Priest, Pentecost, Sodom | posted in Biblical Theology, The Last Days
Apr
28
2009
or How Modern Conservative Theologians Unwittingly Use Literary Genres to Mask Their Unbelief
One of the big problems with modern theology is its habit of categorising parts of the Bible into literary genres. For sure, the Bible contains historical prose, visions, poetry and songs. But many passages won’t actually fit into these neat little pigeon holes without hamstringing their intended purpose. And as it turns out, these “genre-lisations” are excuses to compromise with humanistic pop-philosophy and pop-history.
The three main gripes I have are misuses of the genres poetry, polemic and apocalyptic.
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1 comment | tags: Apocalyptic, Daniel, David Field, Esther, Ezekiel, Gnosticism, Ideology, James Jordan, John Dickson, Peter Leithart, Restoration, Revelation, Rowan Williams | posted in Biblical Theology, Creation, The Last Days, The Restoration Era
Apr
27
2009
From John Barach’s blog:
The Fruit of Dispensationalism
In the Portland airport, on my way back home, I read a new book on eschatology by Auburn Avenue’s associate pastor, Duane Garner. Here are a few paragraphs to whet your appetite. In the context, Garner has been talking about Hal Lindsey’s recommendation that Christians retreat from society because things are going to get worse and worse until Jesus returns:
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Comments Off | tags: Culture, Dispensationalism, Ethics, Postmillennialism | posted in The Last Days
Apr
24
2009
“If Satan was defeated at the cross, why was there so much Satanic activity before the destruction of the Temple?”
Christ was lifted up as head and by the Spirit the church became His Jew-Gentile body.
Christ’s death defeated the head (Satan) but Satan raised up a false Jew-Gentile body (Judaisers and Rome).* It was the deaths of the apostles and martyrs that brought about the defeat of this ‘body’ in AD70.
Now Christ and the church as a single body stand on the head of the serpent so he cannot cause all nations to conspire as a single body – until he is released for a short time to fill up his sins and bring about his destruction.
(*Satan was thrown out of the heavenly Temple but moved into the earthly one – seven worse demons – a false Lampstand. Judaism’s seven eyes were darkened. [Matt. 6:23])
Comments Off | tags: Judaisers, Lampstand, Satan, Temple, Totus Christus, Totus Diabolus | posted in Biblical Theology, The Last Days
Apr
24
2009
“Now if anyone builds on this foundation with gold, silver, precious stones, wood, hay, straw, each one’s work will become clear; for the Day will declare it, because it will be revealed by fire; and the fire will test each one’s work, of what sort it is. If anyone’s work which he has built on it endures, he will receive a reward. If anyone’s work is burned, he will suffer loss; but he himself will be saved, yet so as through fire. Do you not know that you are the temple of God and that the Spirit of God dwells in you? If anyone defiles the temple of God, God will destroy him. For the temple of God is holy, which temple you are.” (1 Cor. 3:12-17)
Are the gold, silver and precious stones our heavenly bling? From the structure of this passage, I think what Paul is referring to is the church. If we are building disciples who remain despite trials and testing from God, we will be rewarded. The immediate context of this is the false doctrine of Judaisers, and their house of gold, silver and precious stones (Herod’s Temple and his puppet High Priest’s robes). While Paul was building a Temple out of people, Herod was busy polishing the brass on the Titanic that he knew Jesus had said would be submerged under a Gentile flood (Daniel 9:26). Herod’s precious stones didn’t make it through God’s judgment. The Day declared what it was in truth.
The question is, are our disciples a robe/house for Jesus, or are they kindling in His nostrils? When He comes to judge, what will our ministry be revealed as?
Comments Off | tags: AD70, Daniel, Herod, High Priest, Holy Spirit, Judaisers, Paul, Temple, The flood | posted in Biblical Theology, The Last Days
Apr
22
2009
“Then He said to the disciple, ‘Behold your mother!’ And from that hour that disciple took her to his own home.” John 19:27
Although they are spread throughout the four gospels, Jesus’ seven words from the cross are easy to put in chronological order. Once in order, they follow the themes of the annual Feasts.
At Firstfruits, Christ on the cross is Moses, mediating between heaven and earth. From the mountain, He transfers His legal responsibility for His mother to John.
He calls her Woman. At this point in the garden, the Lord married Adam to Eve. Of the seven elected Judges, this is Deborah, the warrior-mother. This step is always about the Covenant head lifted up to make a house for Greater Eve.
With this loving act, Christ prefigures the responsibility for the faithful remnant of Old Covenant Israel being transfered to the Apostles.
Interestingly, Revelation 18:7-8 follows the same structure. At the Firstfruits/’Woman/Bride’ step, Israel, who has rejected and killed her Messiah, says, “I am no widow.”
Comments Off | tags: Feasts, Firstfruits, Greater Eve, John, Mary, Moses | posted in Biblical Theology, The Last Days
Apr
21
2009
A friend of mine discovered John Piper and devoured just about every online sermon in under 12 months. It changed him profoundly. (I highly recommend Piper’s biographical series. I should listen to them again.)
Anyhow, my friend shared that Piper had made a comment about not ‘getting’ the prophets. As there are so many views on what the prophets are talking about, this is understandable. Based on what I’ve heard from James Jordan and my resulting studies, I would like to offer some helpful hints. They seem to play out, from what I can see.
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Comments Off | tags: Bible history, Exile, James Jordan, John Piper, Literary Structure, Tabernacle, The Prophets | posted in Biblical Theology, The Last Days, The Restoration Era
Apr
20
2009
“Then God turned and gave them up to worship the host of heaven, as it is written in the book of the Prophets: ‘Did you offer Me slaughtered animals and sacrifices during forty years in the wilderness, O house of Israel?” Acts 7:42 [NKJV]
James Jordan observes that in using the phrase “The Book of the Prophets”, Stephen refers to what we call the minor prophets, considered as one book in the Hebrew canon. The main themes in this Book were the jealousy of the Lord and the day of the Lord. Another judgment, death and resurrection of Israel was on the horizon.
The Book of the Twelve, Lecture 1, available from www.wordmp3.com
Comments Off | tags: Amos, James Jordan, Minor Prophets, Stephen | posted in Biblical Theology, The Last Days