Monday, July 27, 2015
TITHING, FOOT WASHING, AND HOLY KISSES
Tithing
is an Old Testament commandment right out of the Law of Moses, with no precept
or application under New Covenant Grace, totally unsubstantiated by New
Testament scriptures. Tithing is endlessly taught – dragging Old Covenant
passages out of context – dragging legalism into God’s awesome Grace. Under the
Law tithing was a sure thing – obedient works insured God’s blessing – one
could call it giving to get! The Law actually required three ten percent
tithes, two yearly and one every three years -- i.e., 23 1/3% each year – and
each tithe had a specific purpose under the Old Covenant. As for New Covenant
giving, God doesn’t want 10%... 23 1/3%... or even 100%. God wants hearts raptured
by His love that give as prompted by the Holy Spirit -- giving sacrificially, even as the widow gave
out of her need – always depending on Him for our future provisions as we
demonstrate His love to others. New Testament giving
takes faith for there is no automatic reimbursement entitlement as there was
under the Law of Moses!
Washing
the saints’ feet is a New Covenant precept instituted by Jesus as an example
that we should do as He had done, promising that we would be blessed if we
washed one another’s feet: “If I then, your Lord and Teacher, have washed your feet, you also ought to
wash one another’s feet. For I
have given you an example, that you should do as I have done to you. Most assuredly, I say to you, a servant is
not greater than his master; nor is he who is sent greater than he who sent
him. If you know these things,
blessed are you if you do them.” It can’t get much clearer than this: “For I
have given you an example, that you should do as I have done to you.” “Ought” – opheilo in the Greek – is the verb
of “owe” and expresses a special personal obligation, a duty to do something...
a debt of love. Much like the command repeated five times in scripture to
“Greet one another with a holy kiss”, a “kiss of love”, we tend to ignore
precepts that bring us up close and personal with our brothers and sisters in
Christ. And, we miss out on the humbling transformational experience of
washing another saint’s feet... miss out
on emulating our Lord and invoking His promise: “Blessed are
you if you do them.”
In the
Old Testament the tithe was compulsory and was a means of earning the favor of
God. Under the Law the Jews were prone to do the external and material --
neglecting the expression of inner spiritual qualities -- more concerned with the outside of the cup
than the inside ( Lk. 11: 37-44). New Testament saints, however, are urged to
give voluntarily – from the heart – without neglecting the development of inner
spiritual qualities (2 Cor. 9:7). Note Jesus speaking in Luke 11:41: “But
rather give alms of such things as you have.”
The phrase “such things as you have” is a word cluster translating the
Greek word eneimi which means “to be within”, those things that are inside you
-- spiritual qualities, the nature of Jesus – literally “Give that which is
within as your alms.” Our relational Daddy wants His children to relate to one
another from their heart -- sharing the nature of our Lord He has deposited
there -- and His expectations go well
beyond the precepts under discussion. As we are transformed by the nature of
Christ, to give that which is within as our alms will take on a whole new
meaning. This verse immediately proceeds the ‘Woe to you” Jesus pronounced on
the Pharisees for tithing while neglecting justice and the love of God.
Now my
purpose here is not to convince anyone to quit tithing – that is the job of the
Holy Spirit to those who have an ear to hear -- rather to encourage obedience
to the commandments of our Lord. Anyone who takes the time to study tithing
will find it was instituted by the Roman emperor Constantine in the third
century becoming a common practice in the eighth century, and was never a part
of the first-century church. New Testament passages which reference tithing do
not impose it as a commandment under Grace; rather they reference it as a part
of Judaism, in commentary relating to the Pharisees and the tribe of Levy. Many
churches pull passages such as “Will a man rob God” out of their Old Testament
context -- where they were dealing with Israel’s failure to obey the Law – in a
veiled effort to leverage giving, rather than have faith in God for their ministry
provisions.
The
Apostle Paul said “the Law was our tutor to bring us to Christ”, for “Christ is the end of the Law ... for everyone who believes.” And
Paul likewise warned that to put oneself under any precept of the Law – be it
circumcision, sabbath keeping, tithing, etc. -- was to become a “debtor to keep
the whole Law”, calling the Law a curse: “Do not be entangled again with a yoke
of bondage ... For whoever shall keep the whole law, and yet stumble in one point,
he is guilty of all.” New Covenant
saints have been delivered from and died to the requirements of the Law so that
they can “serve in the newness of the Spirit.” It is most ironic that in our striving to prosper (through tithing) in a world our Lord
warned us not to love, we ignore those humbling most basic commandments that
are rooted and grounded in His desire for us to demonstrate His agape love to
one another.
Saints,
our lives should re-present our Lord to this world: We are our Lord’s hands as
we wash one another’s feet, our Lord’s kiss on the cheek, as we greet one
another with a holy kiss of love. These are simple things which are humbling to
express. Our Savior gave us these precepts as an example that we too would have
a servant’s heart. And, He said, “If you love me, keep my commandments.” Notice
whose commandments we are to keep: The Lord was not referring to the Old
Testament commandments of the Mosaic Law, but rather His commandments, the
commandments of the New Testament... the New Will... the New Covenant, written
in His blood!
Postscript: If we
embrace tithing, as a New Covenant precept, we should at the very least get the
amount right... 23 1/3 %. And, as New Covenant believers, we must all embrace the
commandments of our Lord, especially ones which go against our nature like the
examples noted. Obedience, after all, is the only scriptural method of
demonstrating the first, greatest, and most essential commandment... to love
God...
(Lev.
27:30-33; Num. 18:20-21; Deut. 12:17-18, 14:28-29, 26:12-13; Jn. 13:3-17; Rom. 7:6,
10:4, 16:16; 1 Cor. 16:20; 2 Cor. 13:12; 1 Thess. 5:26; 1 Peter 5: 14; Gal. 3:10,
24, 5:3; James 2:10; Jn. 14:15; Gal.)
“IF YOU LOVE
ME...
KEEP
MY COMMANDMENTS...”
Thursday, July 16, 2015
SIN, CHOICES, AND LAWLESSNESS
When we
drive down Temptation Lane there are many detours into the Badlands of
lawlessness. God does not tempt us, it is the tempter’s job, but it is our own
desires that bait the tempter’s sin trap, drawing us into sin once the trap is
sprung by our conceived desires. First John makes an important distinction
between sin, singular, occasional sinning, and sins, plural, practicing sin. Jesus
advocates Grace before the Father for all who occasionally sin... that would be
all the saints, inviting us to boldly approach the throne of Grace in
confession. When practiced sin becomes a habit of death, for habitual sin, be
it a besetting sin or sinning in general, leads to lawlessness. The Apostle
Paul’s strong repudiation of “over-abounding” Grace in the face of willful sin
must be noted lest we cheapen Grace in our presumption: “Shall we continue in
sin that grace may abound? Certainly
not! How shall we who died to sin live any longer in it”? How indeed! Truly sin
dead people... with nail scared hands and feet, don’t practice sin. Jesus spoke
of professing Christians who said they did great things for God’s Kingdom... but
they practiced sin... practiced lawlessness, and this lawlessness ultimately separated
them from God’s covenant of Grace: “I know you not.” We can sin our way out of
Grace, becoming “unknown” to God, lost in our lawlessness, not possessing that
which we profess.
Sin, under
The Law, is missing the mark... God’s mark, specific acts offensive to God. The
Law defined sin by actualizing sin and revealing its true character,
discharging its holy function by unmasking sin as sin. Under Grace the commands
and precepts of the New Testament -- the new will of God -- define and
actualize sin. New covenant sin has became an attitude of the heart, more
subtle and pervasive, where, for example, mental lusting becomes adultery and
anger in one’s heart becomes murder... the bar has been raised considerably
under Grace. The “Holy Road” is much more difficult under Grace so God indwells
us with His Holy Spirit to teach, guide, direct and comfort us... helping us
stay on the narrow gated difficult Way into transformation. But there is one
string attached: God helps us if... and this is a big IF, we willfully want to
be helped..
Sin
under Grace is still missing God’s mark, but our loving Father only inputs to
our account the marks we knowingly miss -- for sin to be sin to us it must be
known as such -- stretching His awesome Grace to cover sins committed without
our understanding. We are accountable to God to live within the revelation of
His will that we have received; as God grows us from babies into mature sons
and daughters our accountability changes with our progression of understanding.
Sin then is a choice between demonstrating our love for God in obedience...
turning from our desires that bait us, or demonstrating our love for Self by
giving in to the desires and pleasures of this earth-life. When we take the
devil for a ride... he’ll want to drive... you know. And he will take us
farther and keep us longer then we really wanted to go... he knows all the back
roads to nowhere! Frequent trips to the throne room will keep the Holy Spirit
in the driver’s seat and us out of the Badlands of lawlessness.
OBEDIENCE
IS A TEST OF LOVE
“IF
YOU LOVE ME...
Thursday, July 2, 2015
IF NOT FOR GRACE
We ask God as a means of receiving from Him, we seek God in
order to find Him, or rather to be found by Him, and we knock to gain entrance
into His Kingdom. The promised results of our efforts are stunning in their
spiritual significant: We receive, we find, and it is opened to us. In a sense
“knock” is to continue to ask and seek, sort of a built in metaphor, the
perseverance that unlocks the King’s domain. The “Pearl of Great Price” and the
“Treasure in the Field” are metaphorically interpreted several ways and rightly
so for God’s word is by no means shallow or common. They may represent man,
individually or corporately, as seen through the eyes of a loving Savior who
was willing to sacrifice His all on the Cross... to purchase us with His
precious blood. They may represent Jesus, who certainly is worthy of man’s
pitiful sacrifice, his life in submission to the Lordship of Jesus... death of
Self on the same cross... a life for a LIFE. They may also represent God’s
awesome Grace, His enabling power that provisions all that we experience as His
children... Grace enabling what it commands. We ask and Grace answers -- we receive.
We seek and Grace answers -- we find. We knock and Grace answers opening the
door into God’s presence. God releases an immense and unbroken supply of His
Grace to mankind, to draw willing hearts to Himself and reveal the mystery of
the indwelling Christ-Life. Our loving Father – The Great Physician – knows we
need heart surgery to remove the callus of Self that encases our heart
preventing the implanted DNA of Jesus from coming forth. Enter Grace. In Grace
we are transformed into Christlikeness... conformed into the nature of His Son.
Surely Christlikeness is yet another “Pearl of Great Price” and “Treasure in
the Field”, the ultimate desire of our Daddy’s heart. So, our task is to keep
asking... to keep seeking... to keep
knocking -- drawing ever closer as we pursue the one passionately pursuing us
-- while being engulfed in a deluge of His immeasurable superabounding Grace...
GRACE...
THE POWER OF INFINITE LOVE
Wednesday, July 1, 2015
THE HEAVENLY HOPE
The faith of the patriarchs
– Abraham, Isaac, Jacob -- as summarized by the writer of Hebrews, demonstrates
their faith was the title deed to their heavenly hope, the proof of things they
could not see, the conviction of a reality beyond the tangible. Their faith
perceived as real fact what was not revealed to their senses, and is an example
for twenty-first century Christians to emulate:
“These all died in faith,
not having received the promises, but having seen them afar off were assured of
them, embraced them and confessed that they were strangers and pilgrims on the
earth. For those who say such things declare plainly that they seek a homeland.
And truly if they had called to mind that country from which they had come out,
they would have had opportunity to return. But now they desire a better, that
is, a heavenly country. Therefore God is not ashamed to be called their God,
for He has prepared a city for them.” (Heb. 11: 8-16)
The patriarchs lived and
died controlled and sustained by their faith, not having received the tangible
fulfillment of God’s promises, only having seen and welcomed them from a great
distance by faith. They lived their whole life acknowledging and confessing
that they were strangers and temporary residents and exiles upon the earth.
They chose to dwell in tents exemplifying the temporal mindset of their earthly
existence. The way they spoke and lived show plainly they were in search of a
fatherland -- their own country – whose builder and maker is God. If they had
allowed their mind to dwell with homesick remembrance on that country from
which they were emigrants – the world -- they would have found constant desire
and opportunity to return to it. But the truth is that they were yearning for
and aspiring to a better and more desirable country, a heavenly one – they had
set their mind on things above. For this reason God was not ashamed to be
called their God, even to be surnamed their God -- the God of Abraham, Isaac,
and Jacob -- for He has prepared a city in heaven for them.
FOR THEY WAITED EXPECTANTLY
AND CONFIDENTLY
LOOKING FORWARD TO THE CITY
WHICH HAS FIXED AND FIRM FOUNDATIONS
WHOSE
ARCHITECT AND BUILDER IS GOD
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