Chapter 1
Outline of chapter One:
Verses 1-2, Prologue.
Verses 3-7, the purpose
of the pastor.
Verse 8-11, the purpose
of the Mosaic law.
Verses 12-17, the
purpose of grace.
Verses 18-20, combat
orders for Timothy.
The subject if the chapter, which is
really an introductory chapter: Purpose in the Church Age.
Verse 1 — the human author. “Paul” —
this is the name he adopted after salvation: Pauloj.
The word means “little.” His pre-salvation name was Saul. Saul is Hebrew. He
was from the tribe of Benjamin and a lot of people in that tribe were named
Saul. The assumed name connotes grace orientation — 1 Corinthians 15:10; 1
Timothy 1:12-16 explain his name as well as it can be explained.
“apostle” — this is one time when
the human writer pulls his rank. The Greek word is a)postoloj. This is rank. “Apostle” is a Greek word, not a Latin word. It is a
navy word The highest-ranking admiral in the fleet was called A)postoloj. It doesn’t refer to a missionary. The word is
taken from the Greek a)po; stolh means to send. The last apostle, John, died in AD
96, or thereabouts. There are no apostles today. Paul was not only an apostle,
he was the highest-ranking apostle. No one in the Church Age ever had as much
authority as Paul. The word was derived in the days when the Athenian navy
ruled the seas. But people found that you couldn’t defeat the Athenians on the
water, the only way they could be defeated was with money — bribe the admiral
to throw the battle. The Spartans had a lot of money and they used to do that.
So the council of ten finally got wise and the Archon who was the head of the
council of ten would meet with the council. Outside would be four of the
highest ranking admirals in the Athenian navy. The fleet is ready to set sail.
The council of ten would then decide which one of the admirals was going to be a)postoloj to be sent to command the fleet. He was then
escorted to his ship. He is then a)postoloj, sent to command that
fleet. It doesn’t mean one sent, it means one sent to command. When God sent
the apostle Paul into the church the church was in a state of confusion and
consternation. The reason was that someone by the name of Saul was persecuting
the church and the church couldn’t take it. The gift of apostleship is the
highest rank that God ever gave in the church. Paul was an absolute dictator
and an absolute communicator to all the churches. The apostle had the authority
to establish churches, to appoint pastors, to regulate doctrine, to judge
dissension, train pastors, until the canon of scripture was completed. He had
the authority to write scripture. The gift was a temporary one carrying all of
this tremendous weight.
The doctrine of apostleship
1. The etymology of a)postoloj: Used for the Athenian admiral appointed by the
Archon to command the fleet. The appointment was made just before weighing
anchor to avoid bribery. It was used in the New Testament for the highest
spiritual gift ever given in the Church Age. 1 Corinthians 12:11, 28; Ephesians
4:11 specify apostleship as a spiritual gift.
2. The function of apostleship.
Since the gift carried absolute authority it was designed to carry the church
during the pre-canon period of the Church Age (from AD 30-96). The function can
be classified under two categories: apostles or someone closely associated with
apostles were the human authors of scripture; apostles established the early
local churches, communicated the doctrine, appointed and trained the pastors,
acted as policy-makers, prior to the completion of the scriptures. Once the New
testament is completed and the doctrine of the mystery is recorded then it is
no longer necessary for apostles to set the policy, the policy is in written
form.
3. The time of appointment. The
apostles were not appointed until after the resurrection of Jesus Christ and
the completion of His strategical victory — resurrection, ascension, session.
This is taught in Ephesians 4:8 cf. verse 11. Jesus Christ did all of the
appointing. There was no voting. Matthew 10 has twelve apostles but they were
apostles to Israel and had nothing to do with the church. There were no
apostles to the church until after the resurrection. That means that the eleven
surviving apostles to Israel had to be reappointed before they were apostles to
the church.
4. The extent of the gift. It
carried as much authority as God ever gave in the Church Age or ever will give.
The apostle had authority over all the local churches, in contrast to the
pastor who has authority over one local church. It was a temporary gift removed
at the completion of the canon of scripture. Today all local churches should be
autonomous with authority vested in the completed canon of scripture and the
local pastor-teacher.
5. The distinction between the
apostles to Israel and the apostles to the church. Matthew 10:2ff — Jesus
appointed apostles to Israel during the course of His earthly ministry. With
the exception of Judas Iscariot the personnel were the same but with an
entirely different function and ministry. Paul was appointed by God to replace
Judas Iscariot — 1 Corinthians 15:7-10. In Acts chapter one Matthias was
elected by the church but he was not an apostle because the church cannot elect
apostles. They are appointed by the Lord Jesus Christ — Ephesians 4:11. All
spiritual gifts today are appointed by the Holy Spirit but the apostles were
appointed by the Lord Jesus Christ.
6. The qualifications. Apostles were
qualified by receiving the gift of apostleship from Jesus Christ — Ephesians
4:11. After the initial appointment all selection of spiritual gifts became the
sovereign ministry of the Holy Spirit — 1 Corinthians 12:11. All apostles had
to be an eyewitness to the resurrection of Christ. This qualified the eleven
but Paul was qualified on the Damascus road — Acts 1:22; 1 Corinthians 9:1;
15:8,9.
7. The identification of apostles.
Apostolic authority resides in the gift of apostleship. There were other gifts
which went with apostleship — identification gifts. Paul had ID cards: the gift
of healing, the gift of tongues, and the gift of miracles. All of the apostles
had these three as ID cards. They were, by the way, inferior gifts. They were
subordinate, temporary gifts — Acts 5:15; 16:16-18; 28:8,9. One the authority
of the apostle was established and once he was identified as an apostle in the
early church these ID cards were pulled away immediately. So when he wanted to
heal Epaphroditus he had to pray for him, he couldn’t heal him — Philippians
2:27. The same thing is true of Trophimus in 2 Timothy 4:20. Everyone knew he
was an apostle by this time, he didn’t need his ID card even though it would
have been handy in those two cases.
8. The roster of the apostles. This
includes the eleven minus Judas Iscariot. The election of Matthias — Acts
1:15-26 — was a farce. The twelfth who replaced Judas was Saul of Tarsus, the
apostle Paul, the human writer of 1 Timothy — 1 Corinthians 7-10.
9. The delegation of apostolic
authority gives some people the title of apostle without the gift of
apostleship. E.g. Barnabas was not an apostle but he had the delegated
authority of an apostle — Acts 14:14; Galatians 2:9. John Mark was not an
apostle but he was Peter’s delegate in writing the second Gospel and carried
the title under delegated authority. James, the Lord’s half-brother was
delegated by the Lord to write the epistle of James, and Jude , the Lord’s
half-brother, also the same. Apollos, Paul’s delegate to Corinth — 1
Corinthians 4:6,9. Silas and Timothy were mentioned as Paul’s delegates in 1
Thessalonians 1:1; 2:6. They carried delegated authority for a short time.
“of Christ Jesus” — the word
“Christ” refers to Messiahship, David’s greater son. Whenever you fin Xristoj in the Greek it means the one anointed. It means
the son of David and indicates the Davidic covenant. “Jesus” is the humanity of
Christ.
“by the commandment” — the
preposition kata plus the accusative of e)pitagh, one of the strongest words for an order or a
command. It should be translated “according to the command.”
“of God” should be “from God” — the
ablative of source from qeoj. “God” is the deity of
Christ here.
“our saviour” — swthr is His humanity. We have the hypostatic union here.
Notice again that the apostle Paul was not self-appointed. He was the twelfth
apostle and was appointed by the resurrected Christ — Ephesians 4:7-11.
“and” is incorrect. This is “even.”
The last word in verse 1 is the
possessive genitive singular of the noun e)lpij and it means confidence or security. Hope these days implies
possibility; hope in the Bible means absoluteness. So it should be, “even
Christ Jesus our confidence.”
Translation: “Paul, an apostle of
Christ Jesus according to the command from God our Saviour, even Christ Jesus,
our confidence.”
Verse 2 — the direction of this
verse: “Unto Timothy.”
Profile of Timothy
1. He was the son of an unbelieving
Greek and a Jewess — Acts 16:1-3.
2. He possessed a spiritual heritage
in Bible doctrine — 2 Timothy 3:15. The spiritual heritage was of no use to him
until he was born again. In other words, he was taught all of the Old Testament
scriptures.
3. He was converted under the
ministry of the apostle Paul in the second missionary journey at Lystra — Acts
14:6, 23.
4. Paul had him circumcised — Acts
16:3.
5. He was ordained to the ministry
because he recognised his own spiritual gift — 1 Timothy 4:14; 2 Timothy 4:5.
6. He went to Philippi with Paul,
Silas and Luke — Acts 16:12.
7. However, Paul thought that he
could trust him with a congregation so he was left behind at Philippi to
supervise the new Philippian church — Philippians 2:22.
8. He was left behind with Silas at
Berea — Acts 17:14 — and joined Paul in Athens. There was no problem with these
churches where the congregation was positive to doctrine.
9. From Athens he was sent to
Thessalonica — 1 Thessalonians 3:2, and there was no problem there because the
Thessalonians were strong for doctrine.
10. He was sent to Corinth and this
is where he washed out — 1 Corinthians 16:10 — and failed miserably because the
Corinthians were tough, hard-nosed, realistic, hell-raising. They tossed him
around like a football and punted him through the door. He failed completely.
The only person who ever tamed Corinth was Titus. Timothy had to be hauled back
under Paul’s wing and trained again.
11. He shared the first imprisonment
in Rome — Philippians 1:1; 2:19; Colossians 1:1; Philemon 1. This is a training
period, he is licking his wounds from Corinth.
12. After his first imprisonment he
went with Paul to Ephesus where he remained as the pastor. At the time of this
epistle Timothy was the pastor of Ephesus and his failure at Corinth comes out.
He was great where people were positive. Timothy was a great teacher.
“my own son” — Paul is talking to
his student, to someone who is under strict academic discipline to him. He is a
general talking to a private. We have here a dative of possession of an
adjective, gnhsioj; its meaning is explained
two ways: “not a bastard” or “legitimate.” This also have a figurative
connotation meaning “reliable.” In other words, “Timothy you are my legitimate
son, you are always under my authority.” The word also means reliable, and by
this he means a faithful student. This is what is going to cause Timothy to
turn out all right eventually, after the canon is closed. No matter how he
fails he stays in there with doctrine. So the dative of possession is followed
by the dative of advantage of the noun teknon
which has a dual connotation. It is a child with relationship to parents, under
discipline to parents, but here it is technical for Timothy as Paul’s student —
under discipline to Paul. “To Timothy, reliable student.”
“in the faith” — preposition e)n plus the locative of pistij. Pistij has three meanings, here the meaning is doctrine.
“Grace, mercy, and peace” — Xarij, e)leoj e)irhnh. This is a full salutation
with great meaning. Xarij or grace = God’s plan. E)leoj [mercy] is grace in action and is what Timothy is
going to get throughout this epistle. E)irhnh means here “prosperity,” the result of the plan.
“from God” is the preposition a)po plus the ablative from qeoj.
There are no verbs in the prologue. The Holy Spirit is not mentioned in the
salutation and this is compatible with the present ministry of the Holy Spirit
to glorify Jesus Christ — “from God the Father and Christ Jesus our Lord.”
Translation: “To Timothy, reliable
student in doctrine: Grace, mercy, prosperity, from God the Father and Christ
Jesus our Lord.”
The doctrine of grace
Definition: Grace is all that God is free to do for man on the
basis of the work of Christ on the cross.
Grace
is God’s freedom and consistency to express His love for mankind without
compromising or jeopardising His essence. No one can truly give and rightly
give apart from freedom, and God gives out of total freedom because of the
cross. Consequently, grace is the plan of God on behalf of man beginning at the
cross. Grace is both God’s plan and God’s policy regarding mankind. Grace
therefore is the plan, the policy, the function, the mechanics of divine modus
operandi. Under grace God does all the work, all the providing; man does all
the receiving, all of the benefiting.
Under the concept of grace, grace
depends on the essence or character of God. Therefore grace depends on who and
what God is. Grace is what God can do for man and be consistent with His own
essence. Grace is God’s relationship with the believer as well as God’s way of
salvation. Grace is all that God can do for man from salvation to eternity
totally apart from man’s merit, ability, plans or talent. In other words, grace
is the genius of God and doctrine is the manifestation of that genius.
The great enemy to grace is
legalism, reversionism, and evil. Legalism as the enemy of grace is man’s
intrusion into the plan of God with his own works, ability, talents, plans,
schemes, or man’s intrusion into the plan of God with his own spiritual
declension — reversionism, or man’s intrusion into the plan of God under the
influence of evil. That is why grace is so antagonistic to evil, to legalism,
to religionism; and that is why when a believer is influenced by legalism or
reversionism or evil he intrudes into the plan of God. The difference is that
if he is influenced by legalism it is his own personal energy-of-the-flesh
intrusion. If he is influenced by evil it is a Satanic intrusion since evil puts
the believer under the influence of Satan and Satan’s policy. If it is
reversionism it is an apostate intrusion which combines the first two.
So the believer must learn to sort
out the difference between grace and legalism, the difference between being
influenced by doctrine and being influenced by evil, the difference between
spiritual growth and super-grace versus reversionism or spiritual declension.
The believer often clings to some talent, some ability, some plan, some gimmick
by which he seeks to infiltrate the plan of God. Anything that man could throw
into the plan of God would destroy the concept of grace. So the plan of God,
operation grace, is never destroyed or neutralised because grace rejects human
energy of the flesh, human ability, human talent, human viewpoint ideas.
Legalism and grace cannot coexist, evil and grace cannot coexist, reversionism
and grace cannot coexist. A little leaven of legalism or evil or reversionism
leavens the whole lump.
Verses 3-7, the purpose of the
pastor-teacher. This is not a detailed study of the pastor-teacher at this
point. Timothy has already had that and understands all the principles of the
pastor-teacher. These are special selected things to cause Timothy to refocus
on his purpose, to fill in some gaps where he has failed to apply what he has
learned from Paul.
Verse 3 — “As” is an adverb used as
a casual conjunction: Kaqwj is translated better,
“since.”
“I besought” — aorist active
indicative of parakalew, which means here to
command. It means a command given in a nice way. The aorist tense is a
constative aorist, it refers to a momentary action in which Paul commands
Timothy to remain at Ephesus. The active voice: Paul produces the action of the
verb as an apostle and Timothy’s commanding officer. The indicative mood is
declarative indicating the reality of Paul ordering Timothy to remain at
Ephesus in spite of the fact that up to this point he has failed. In other
words, failure is no reason to run. Principle: You don’t run away because you fail.
“thee” should be “you” — accusative
singular direct object of the personal pronoun su.
“to abide still” — the aorist active
infinitive of prosmenw which means “stay where you
are.”
“when I went” — present middle
participle of poreuomai. The participle is a
temporal participle and it should be translated “while I went into Macedonia.”
“that” is the conjunction i(na introducing a final clause — purpose, aim, goal.
“thou mightest charge” — aorist
active subjunctive paraggellw which means to instruct by
direct command. The aorist tense is a constative aorist, it gathers into one
entirety the action of the verb. It takes the ministry of Timothy and gathers
it into one entirety, regardless of its duration, and Timothy has to “crack
heads,” he has to get tough, he has to use his authority. The active voice:
Timothy produces the action of the verb by commanding, instructing, directing
pastors in Ephesus not to teach false doctrine. The subjunctive mood is used to
state the objective as potential.
“some” is the dative plural of
disadvantage from the indefinite pronoun tij,
it refers to those under the influence of evil, those in reversionism, those
who are legalistic, all of those who are troublemakers, and those who are
positive toward doctrine but troublemakers — “certain ones.”
“that they teach no other doctrine”
— all one verb: the negative plus the present active infinitive of e(terodidaskolew. Didaskw means to teach; e(tero means other of a different kind of doctrine. When
put together it means not to teach heretical doctrine. The descriptive present
tense denotes the teaching of false doctrine in the process of occurrence. The
active voice: evil and reversionistic people are producing the action of the
verb by teaching something wrong. The infinitive of intended result fulfills a
deliberate objective to stop false teaching in the Ephesian church.
Translation: “Since I ordered you to
remain behind at Ephesus, while I went to Macedonia, in order that you might
exercise command over certain ones not to teach heretical doctrine.”
Verse 4 — the second purpose: to
orient to dispensational theology. The Old Testament scriptures can be easily
distorted into legalism. That was one of the problems with the Mosaic law and
one of the problems in Galatia.
“Neither” is a negative disjunctive
particle mhde and should be translated
“Nor”; “give heed” is the present active infinitive of prosexw which means to occupy one’s self with something.
The present tense is a descriptive present, which means to indicate what was
going on at that moment in Ephesus. The active voice: people in the Ephesian
church are under the influence of evil and are producing the action of the verb
under those conditions. The infinitive plus the negative indicates a negative
purpose.
“fable” is muqoj, dative plural of disadvantage, from which we get
the English words “myths” or “stories” — “Nor to become occupied with myths.”
This refers to the pseudo spiritual heritage of the Jews. Not their true
spiritual heritage but their pseudo spiritual heritage; not what is found in
the Old Testament canon but what is found in the Jewish legends, legends which
claimed that Moses had not written down all the mysteries that were revealed by
God, and they claimed to have some extra information that Moses didn’t write.
This is called the Kabbala in which certain legends and myths were accumulated
referring to angels, philosophical concepts, miracles, and the myths of
Gnosticism. The Ephesians had become fascinated by these.
“endless genealogies” — the dative
plural of disadvantage from genealogia, from which we get our
English word “genealogy,” plus the adjective a)perantoj which means ‘limitless,” tiresome enumeration of detail. This is a
reference to Gnostic aeons as a series of emanations from divine unity. It also
refers to the Old Testament genealogies which had been allegorised. They were
interpreted allegorically by Philo and made the basis of a system of
psychology. The genealogies in the scripture are all important, and the Old
Testament genealogies were taken away from their literal interpretation. So
this is what is called a distortion of scripture. The genealogies have a
purpose. For example, from David to Christ is very important. It establishes a
literal purpose, a principle in the Davidic covenant. It is not designed to
teach allegorical truth, it is a literal genealogy. But it can be distorted.
This whole system was used by Judaisers to propagate their legalism and ignore
the fact that the Age of Israel was interrupted and the dispensation of the
royal family was inserted — doctrine of intercalation. Therefore myths and
genealogies describe a failure on the part of Timothy to put a stop to these
things, to take a stand. Myths and genealogies describe a system of false
doctrine which disoriented believers and led them astray from the Church Age.
They ignored the Church Age, so myths and genealogies were used to perpetuate
the Jewish Age when a new dispensation had begun. The significance of the
resurrection, ascension and session of Christ were lost to these false
teachers, these Judaisers, and the suspension of the Age of Israel for the
purpose of calling out the royal family, the postponement of the Jewish Age,
was completely ignored. They went right on with the Jewish Age.
“which minister” — the nominative
plural qualitative relative pronoun o(stij — “which category of things
minister” — plus the present active indicative of parexw
which means to be the cause of something. The present tense is the customary
present, it denotes what habitually occurs. The active voice: categories of
pseudo doctrine produce the action of the verb. The indicative mood is
declarative.
“questions” is literally, “useless
speculations” — e)kzhthsij.
“rather than godly edifying” is
wrong. It should be “rather than the dispensation of God” — o)ikoinomian qeou. There is no “edifying” here. This is a
reference to the Church Age which is being ignored by these false teachers.
Jewish myths and genealogies are seeking to perpetuate the Age of Israel and
cancel out the Church Age. This was a Satanic attack upon Church Age doctrine.
The people and the “sharers” who have succumbed to this heresy and apostasy
have failed to orient to dispensational theology, therefore Timothy must
emphasise dispensational theology. Every pastor in interpreting the Word of God
must emphasise dispensational distinctions.
“which” is a definite article used
as a relative pronoun; “is in faith” — there is no verb here, but there is a
preposition plus the instrumental of pistij,. and it should be translated
“which comes by means of doctrine.”
Translation: “Nor become occupied
with myths and endless genealogies, which category of things [false doctrine]
are the cause of useless speculations, rather than the dispensation of God
[Church Age doctrine] which comes by means of doctrine.
Principles
1. Ephesus and all local churches
will succumb at certain times of false teaching unless there is an emphasis on
dispensational theology. All believers of this dispensation must first be
oriented to the Church Age.
2. No pastor can lead his
congregation to spiritual maturity or fulfill his ministry apart from
dispensational orientation.
3. Therefore it is important to
review dispensational categories of doctrine when they occur in expository
teaching.
Verse 5 — the objective of the
ministry, the purpose for our being here. Everything revolves around doctrine.
The objective of the ministry is to fulfill the objectives of Bible teaching in
the sphere of capacity for love. There are three capacities which are
absolutely necessary in the mature believer: capacity for life, capacity for
happiness, capacity for love. Without these capacities nothing in life is very
meaningful. Of these capacities the capacity for love is foremost, this is the
every key to the spiritual life.
“Now” — a postpositive conjunction de, it is used as a transitional or continuative
participle to make a transition from the negative to the positive side of the
gospel ministry. Since the transition is in the nature of a contrast between
false doctrine in the previous verse and the truth of this verse it becomes
therefore an adversative conjunction and it correctly translated “But.”
“the end” — the noun teloj is used here and it means the end in the sense of a
goal or objective. Therefore we translate, “But the objective.”
“of the commandment” — this is a
descriptive genitive of paraggelia which means “command,
precept, instruction.” Arndt and Ginchgricht contends that it is equal to
preaching; “is” — present active indicative of the verb e)imi, the verb of absolute status quo. The present tense
is a static present, it represents a condition which is assumed as perpetually
existing throughout the Church Age. There never will be a time when the
teaching of doctrine does not produce a true capacity for love.
“charity” — the predicate nominative
of the noun a)gaph which means love. This word
actually implies five different doctrines of scripture: the doctrine of love,
the doctrines of categories 1,2,&3 love, and the doctrine of spirituality.
“But the objective of preaching is love [or capacity for love].”
The doctrine of love
1. Definition:
a) Love is maximum
concentration. Love is so concentrated as to exclude others from the same
consideration. It is maximum concentration, maximum affection and personal
attraction emanating from the soul of mankind, and exercised in the direction
of God, persons, things.
b) Love is a soulish
predilection expressed in admiration, devotion, craving, delight, pleasure,
caresses, passion, show of affection, resulting in intimacy toward God, human
beings, or even things.
c) Love in the
embodiment of soul function and concentration directed toward someone else with
or without intimacy.
d) This means that
sometimes love is not returned.
e) Love is awareness and
tenderness of soul producing emotional sensitivity toward a person or object.
f) Love is devotion,
concentration, dedication to, and consecration of maximum esteem and intense
loyalty to the object of attraction.
g) Attraction in itself
is not love but a preliminary to love or hate.
h) The perpetuation of
love is attachment, affection, stimulation of soul (in the case of category #2
it is also stimulation of body), devotion, consecration, intimacy, passion,
enthusiasm, and adoration.
i) However, passion is
not always love. Passion is like a fuse of a fire cracker, it burns quickly,
explodes, and that is all. In contrast, love is like an old yew log in a fire
place. Sometimes it bursts into flames and sometimes it glows but always with a
steadiness and always with a white-hot heat.
j) There are some
comments on love which are not true, some definitions of love which are
erroneous, anti-scriptural. For example, “love is an egotism of two.” That is
pseudo-love. For example, “love is a long lesson in humility.” Some definitions
are humorous. For example, “she loves so many soldiers it is platoonic.” Some
definitions are catchy. For example, “ a loveless faith is cruel and a
faithless love is sentimental.”
2. There are some interesting words
for love found in Greek literature. However, in all of the realm of the Greek
language the Bible only uses two of these words.
The Attic Greek word e)roj is much more extensive than simply sexual love, it
is love of symmetry, love of beauty, as well as sexual love. It is not used in
the New Testament.
A second Attic Greek word is storgh, used for love of parents, for children, or some
form of family love. This word is never used in the New Testament.
The Koine Greek word a)gaph also has a cognate noun a)gapaw. These two words are a specialised type of love which is strictly
mental. This is love which exists only in the mentality of the soul, therefore
in humanity a thinking type love. In God this would be essence type love. This
love can be summarised quickly as a mental attitude.
The next word found in the Bible is
the verb filew and its cognate filoj. This word has been badly abused. This is a general
type love related to all facets of the soul. Generally in the Bible this type
of love is more mature, it expresses greater capacity for love as in the
indignation of the apostle Peter in John 21:15-17. The passage in the English
doesn’t tell us a thing. In fact, two different Greek words are used
throughout.
John 21:15 — “Simon … lovest thou me
...? The present active indicative of a)gapaw is used in the question. It refers to a relaxed mental attitude, a
mental attitude love free from mental attitude sins. This type of love is basic
to the spiritual life of the believer and is found under the concept of the
filling of the Spirit — Romans 5:5; Galatians 5:22; and the third floor of the
ECS — 1 John 2:5. This is a sense is a great insult to use a)gapaw. A)gapaw is a mere mental attitude. It has the
concept of merely a relaxed mental attitude toward someone. It is not the
highest word for love in the Greek language. Peter answers: “You know that I
love thee.” Now he uses the present active indicative of filew. He answers with indignation: “It is not a)gapaw with me, it is filew.”
Filew is a total rapport love.
Peter’s first answer therefore distinguishes between a)gapaw as a relaxed mental attitude and filew as an advance on this.
There is a bad tendency to slur the
distinctions, to go to John 3:16. Since God is the subject of a)gapaw in John 3:16 it must be the highest type of love,
so this is called divine love and filew is called human love. That
is not only oversimplification but it is failure to recognise the very
distinctions that the Bible itself makes, especially in time where God is the
subject of filew as well as a)gapaw. Therefore to make one divine and one human love is
to ignore the scripture itself. Not only is God the subject of a)gapaw at certain times but He is also the subject of filew. Not only is man the subject of a)gapaw but unbelievers are the subject of a)gapaw — Man loves darkness [a)gapaw].”
A)gapaw is used with God as the subject when it is a relaxed mental attitude
toward some very unlovely people. God loves sinners — John 3:16. This means
that God had a relaxed mental attitude toward the sinner in that He provided
him eternal salvation, but it does not mean the intimacy of love of filew.
Archbishop Richard Trench wrote a
book on Greek synonyms. On page 41 of that book he made a great discovery, one
which philologists have known for many years, that in the time of the Roman
empire at the time when the Bible was written there was a language division.
Everything west of the Adriatic the Roman empire spoke Latin; everything eats
of the Adriatic they spoke Greek, the change in Greek which had come about
through Alexander’s conquest and the Hellenistic empires. By the time that the
New Testament was being written Latin and Greek had become exact equivalent
languages. In other words, there were certain words in the Greek that had been
brought into the Latin, there were certain Latin words that had been brought
into the Greek. So whether you spoke Latin or Greek — and all Roman officials
were bilingual — you could understand and translated exact equivalents. This
was true of a)gapaw and filew, both were used in the Greek of the Roman empire.
So in studying New Testament words we can sometimes pick up some etymology by
going to the Latin. The Latin had two words which were exact equivalents to the
words we have here. One of these was diligo
and the other was amo. Diligo was simply a mental type of love,
a relaxed mental attitude toward someone. The mind was totally free from
hatred, jealousy, vindictiveness, implacability. Amo was a very strong type of love, a more advanced type of love,
it involved not just the mentality but the emotion and all facets of the soul.
Trench demonstrates in his book how in the two literatures these words become
exact equivalents. In that way he helped us to understand that with a)gapaw and filew one was not divine love,
the other human , because it all depends on the subject. If someone says, “I
love you,” that kind of love depends on who “I” is. If it is God, that is
divine love; if it is a human being, that is human love. It is always the subject.
Now we have a command in verse 15.
“Peter, if it really is filoj, if you have a total love,
then do something: Feed my lambs.” The word “feed” is the present active
imperative of the verb boskw. It means to feed as a
shepherd with faithfulness in the true sense of responsibility. So this
emphasizes the importance of the pastor’s self-discipline in studying the Word
and communicating doctrine to the sheep. The present tense is a static present,
it represents a condition which will perpetually exist throughout the Church
Age. In every generation, depending on where positive volition is, God will
provide faithful pastors to study and teach. The active voice: the pastor
teacher produces the action of the verb. The imperative mood: this is a command
to all pastors. “My lambs” is the accusative plural direct object of a)rnion which refers to new believers, ignorant believers,
believers who do not understand what is going on in the Christian life. This
refers to the basic category of believers, the ones who are just saved or the
ones who have been saved for fifty years and have yet to learn a point of
doctrine. “Feed my little lamb.” These are the most helpless in the flock.
Verse 16 — “Do you love me?” He
repeated a)gapaw again. This time it is a
retroactive progressive present to indicate what has occurred in the past and
continues into the present time. Peter’s three denials before the crucifixion
indicate a weak mental attitude and therefore Jesus is reminding him of this.
The second interrogation therefore indicates that no one can love Jesus Christ
apart from Bible doctrine in the soul, and that merely to say that you love
Jesus Christ is not enough. Peter had previously declared his love in words but
the words are no stronger than the person who utters them. Therefore for a
second time Jesus asks exactly the same question, same morphology in the Greek
language. And He received the same answer, “You know I love you.” Again filew is used. Peter is indignant that that Lord would
insult him for a second time, and therefore the Lord gave a second command,
“Feed my sheep,” but He used a different verb — the present active imperative
of poimainw which means to shepherd the
sheep. It connotes to lead, to feed, to protect, to exercise authority over
sheep as a shepherd. “My sheep” indicates the fact of adolescent sheep — probaton. These are the ones who are the most dangerous,
they know a little doctrine, just enough to be dangerous.
Verse 17 — a third time Peter gets
the question. But this time the Lord changed up the verb. Instead of a)gapaw as previously we have this time the verb filew. This time it is to follow Peter’s answers. Peter
has said twice, filew. Is it really true? This is
the great challenge. Peter, instead of realising the challenge, reacted. He did
not respond, he reacted. “Peter was grieved” is the aorist passive indicative
of the verb lupew, and in this verb we have
exasperation of grief. The aorist tense is a culminative aorist, it views
Peter’s exasperation in its entirety but regards it from the viewpoint of its
results. As a result of persistent interrogation Peter had become exasperated.
The passive voice: he receives exasperation. The indicative mood is the reality
of his exasperation. In his third answer he replied as he had before, “You know.”
This, again, is a reference to the omniscience of Jesus Christ as God. “Thou
knowest that I love thee.” He uses o)ida again for the great
omniscience of God. Then he adds to o)ida the word ginwskw which is to know from the experience of
observation. “Lord you know all things; you know from observation that I love
you.” Then the Lord said to him, “Feed my adult sheep.”
In this passage we are dealing with
the distinctions between two biblical words for love. No passage ever
dramatised the difference between these two words more than this one.
4. A summary of distinction between
the two biblical words for love.
a) A)gapaw and a)gaph. This is a mental attitude
love and its basic characteristic is freedom from mental attitude sins. In
other words, it is a mental attitude toward all believers that is commanded. We
are commanded not to be bitter or jealous or vindictive, etc. toward any other
believer. These are mental sins. This love is free from mental sins.
b) The noun filoj is maximum capacity for love. it is capacity for
love which is the objective in 1 Timothy 1:5; to so communicate Bible doctrine
that you will have true capacity for love. All believers are commanded to have
a relaxed mental attitude love. The filling of the Holy Spirit produces this.
But the capacity for love in filoj only comes through
maturity. This, therefore, is the great difference. When you are filled with
the Spirit at that moment all sin is excluded from your mind and therefore you
have a)gaph type love. Then when you
grow up to super-grace you have filoj. In fact, as the ECS is
developed you will first of all have grace orientation. Then the second floor
that will be built up and constructed in your soul, the mastery of the details
of life. This is the construction built up in our soul on the basis of e)pignwsij type doctrine. Then the relaxed mental attitude
where you get a)gaph love. Then you finally go
to the fourth floor where you get filoj or capacity for love. That
takes you to the fifth floor of +H which moves you into the super-grace life.
5. Both types of love are found in
the believer’s balance of residence. One of the great doctrines in the doctrine
of the balance of residency. Actually there is a combination of doctrines. The
first deals with the indwelling of God the Holy Spirit in ever believer at the
point of salvation. He is said to specifically indwell the body of the
believer, He is never said to indwell the soul. But there is an issue. We are
never commanded to be indwelt by the Holy Spirit, it is automatic at the point
of salvation. We are told that we never lose this indwelling, God the Holy
Spirit remains whether we are carnal or spiritual, whether we are in
reversionism under the influence of evil, or whether we are in super-grace
receiving super-grace blessings. But there is a command related to the Holy
Spirit and it has to do with the soul. We are commanded to be filled with the
Holy Spirit and this is accomplished by means of the rebound technique. It has
no manifestation in the early spiritual stages because there is no doctrine. As
long as you are minus doctrine the filling of the Spirit has no manifestation.
It must be remembered that those who were gathered on the Day of Pentecost and
were filled with the Holy Spirit were mostly mature believers and their
maturity had manifestation in certain spiritual gifts and functions. But the
filling of the Spirit does not manifest itself until there is spiritual growth.
The first function of the filling of the Spirit is the function of GAP, and
when that has occurred over a period of time so that the believer is mature
there is manifestation. Both types of love are found in the balance of
residency in the soul.
6. Scholarship in fundamental
circles has declined to a point of being ludicrous and we have to recognise
failure in scholarship occasionally.
7. There are three general
categories of human love. Category #1 is toward God. Category #2 is toward
right man and right woman. Category #3 is human friendship. Category #1 is for
super-grace believers only. Category #2 is for the human race. Category #3 is
for the human race.
8. The problem of divine love toward
man.
a) Because God is
absolute righteousness and justice it is impossible for God to love sinful man
without compromising the holiness of His essence. God cannot love sinful man,
He can only judge him.
b) Therefore when John
3:16 says that God so loved the world it demands that God’s righteousness and
justice remain uncompromised. It is a biblical fact that God loves sinful man
and therefore we must look for some way in which God has resolved the problem.
c) God cannot love on a
sentimental or emotional basis, it would compromise His holiness.
d) God’s love is no
stronger than God’s righteousness. (This is true of human beings as well)
e) The true basis for
love is always righteousness, character, honour, integrity.
f) Therefore Jesus
Christ had to go to the cross not only to bear our sins but to propitiate or
protect the righteousness of God the Father is loving the world. That frees the
Father to love the world and still not compromise His righteousness and His justice.
So for God to love the world cost God the Father a great deal more than we
realise.
g) Because Christ was
perfect in His deity and humanity on the cross the Father is propitiated, His
righteousness uncompromised, and the way is paved for God to love the world.
h) Therefore
propitiation makes it possible for God to save man and love the believer with
maximum love. When you and I come to the cross and believe in Christ we pass
the point of propitiation and God now loves us with maximum love no matter what
kind of a believer we are.
i) At the point of
salvation every believer passes the point of propitiation whereby God loves
that believer with maximum love and without compromising His essence — 1 John
2:2.
j) This was portrayed in
the Old Testament through the ark and the mercy seat in the holy of holies.
k) In addition to
propitiation positional truth for the Church Age believer guarantees that every
member of the royal family of God will be loved with the same amount of love
that God the Father has for God the Son — 1 John 3:2.
l) This means that God
loves the carnal believer as much as the spiritual believer. God loves the
reversionist as much as the super-grace believer. God loves the believer
influenced by evil as much as the believer influenced by doctrine. This is
grace; this is divine love.
In this particular passage there is
an emphasis on category #1 love.
The doctrine of category #1 love
1. Definition. Love comes in three
categories: #1 toward God; #2 right man, right woman; #3 friendship. In
addition there is an obligatory relaxed mental attitude toward all members of
the royal family of God, better known as loving the brethren. Category #1 is
the believer’s capacity to love God and to respond to God’s love based on Bible
doctrine resident in the soul. When the believer reaches maturity — known as
super-grace status — this category #1 love is called occupation with the person
of Jesus Christ. The command to category #1 love is first found in Deuteronomy
6:5 as an expression of worship.
2. The means of category #1 love.
Since God is invisible and since at same the time He is the object of category
#1 love we must see and love God through His Word. In other words, you cannot
see God, therefore the ordinary means of loving is out. It is Bible doctrine
resident in the soul that makes it possible for us to love God. The
reversionistic believer, for example, is incapable of loving God because he
lacks the basic ingredients: doctrine in the soul. The immature believer does
not love God because he lacks doctrine in the soul. And while for different
reasons they do not love God, nevertheless the fact remains. You cannot love
God unless you know God. You cannot know God unless you have Bible doctrine
resident in your soul. You cannot have Bible doctrine resident in your soul
unless you are positive toward doctrine — “Do not forsake the assembling of
yourselves together” and putting yourself under the authority of your right
pastor-teacher. Without this it is impossible to love God. 1 Peter 1:18 — Jesus
Christ is invisible, and to love the invisible God requires more than a lot of
emotional nonsense, it requires doctrine in the soul, Ephesians 3:18,19.
3. Category #1 loves sets up a
standard for grace — Psalm 119:132; 31:32. So the command is to love the Lord
and the basis for doing so is doctrine in the soul.
4. Category #1 love is the basis for
super-grace blessing — 1 Corinthians 2:9; Psalm 37:4,5. “Delight” is making
love to. Making love to the Lord is taking in doctrine, taking in doctrine,
taking in doctrine, and capacity for loving Him develops from that doctrine.
5. Category #1 love is the basis for
personal as well as national blessing — Deuteronomy 30:15-20. So the principle
is that your personal blessing and your national blessing are tied up in your
attitude toward Bible doctrine. Maximum doctrinal in your soul leads to another
principle, the salt principle, whereby you are the preservative of the national
entity.
6. Category #1 love motivates combat
courage and military victory. The believer in a combat situation is in a
maximum pressure type situation, and in this situation doctrine makes the
difference — Joshua 23:10,11. One super-grace believer with maximum category #1
love puts to flight a thousand enemy soldiers. As you are occupied with the
Lord you are able to face maximum pressure in life, whether it is combat or
something else.
7. Category #1 love provides
strength for adversity and pressure — Hebrews 11:27; 12:3.
8. There is a special curse on
believers who fail to become occupied with the person of Christ under category
#1 love — 1 Corinthians 16:22. “Anathema Maranatha” is really not Greek, it is
Aramaic. It means “cursed until our Lord comes.” For the believer who does not
get with doctrine, who does not take in doctrine, he will not be occupied with
Christ, and he will be under a curse. The curse continues until the Rapture.
This curse dramatises the fact that divine discipline is the life of all
believers who neglect Bible doctrine. In other words, the plan of God is
something that all believers are involved in. Both the mature believer and the
reversionist is in the plan of God. The former is going to super-grace, the latter
is under divine discipline. There is no in between. Either the plan of God
carries you to great blessing or the plan of God crushes you, but there is no
in between. Your attitude toward doctrine determines which it will be.
9. Witnessing must be motivated by
category #1 love — 2 Corinthians 5:14.
10. A description of category #1
love — 1 John 4:15-19. When a believer has maximum doctrine in his soul he has
maximum category #1 love, He is occupied with Christ. Therefore the fear factor
is eliminated and love and capacity for love becomes the great factor in his
life.
“out of a pure heart” — the word
“heart” always refers to something that processes the thoughts in your soul. It
refers, therefore, to the mentality of your soul. Heart is used in the Bible
for your mentality. “Out of a pure heart” is a prepositional phrase and it
starts out with the preposition e)k plus and adjective kaqaroj. Kaqaroj is in the ablative — e)k plus the ablative. Then we have the ablative
singular of the noun kardia. Kardia
refers to the thinking part of the soul. “As a man thinketh in his heart, so he
is.” The passage here should read, “From [the source of; e)k plus the ablative] a pure heart.” In other words,
love is from the source of a pure heart.
Love is a characteristic of the soul
with emphasis on what you think in your right lobe. Love is thinking, thinking
about something else. Love has an object and you think about that object in one
of many categories. Love is what you think about someone else. Capacity for
love therefore demands that in your heart or right lobe you have the proper
accouterments. For example, you must have a frame of reference for the object
of your love. You must have a memory centre. All categories of love are related
to memory. And you must have vocabulary. Then there are the norms and
standards; the conscience, a very important part of the function of love. Your
conscience automatically eliminates certain crude types as the object for love.
Then you must have a launching pad where all love goes out, first in thought
and then expressed in action under certain categories.
“Purity” here has the concept of
freedom from evil, freedom from reversionism, freedom for things which are
anti-doctrinal. Love is a mental attitude, it expresses itself in many ways but
it still is a mental attitude.
The adjective kaqaroj, “pure,” indicates that all true lovers have a
certain kind of righteousness, integrity, character, honour, freedom from
mental attitude sins, freedom from evil. A person who is jealous or vindictive
or implacable has no capacity for love in any of the categories. Such a person
is not a lover, nor can such a person respond to true love. So love demands
righteousness, integrity, honour, character, freedom from mental sins, from
reversionism, from evil.
The doctrine of the heart
1. The physiological heart is in the
human body and is a very intricately-woven muscle which by contracting
rhythmically causes circulation of the blood. It is a double pump composed of
two valves and the pumps and valves circulate the blood n much the same manner
as doctrine is circulated in the right lobe of the soul. It is for this reason
that the very close correlation between the mechanical function of the heart
and the mechanical function of our mentality that the heart is a Bible word for
the right lobe or the mentality of the soul.
2. The Bible heart. The word heart
has many connotations in the English language. For example, it is called the
part nearest the centre, like the heart of the earth, the core of something. It
is sometimes used in connection with cards. The heart has a shape, like on
Valentines Day. It is the seat of the spiritual or the consciousness of life,
the soul. So the word “heart” as used for the soul is also found in the English
as well as the Greek and the Hebrew. Sometimes “heart” in the English has an
emotional connotation; the heart has no emotional connotation in the Bible.
Whenever you see a verse with heart in it, it does not refer to emotion. For
emotion we have such words as “bowels” and “kidneys.” The Bible never uses
“heart” for the emotions in a physiological sense. In other words, the Bible
heart is used always for the mentality of the soul. The heart in the Bible is
the organ of thinking — Proverbs 23:7; 1 Samuel 16:7; Genesis 6:5 distinguishes
between imaginations and thoughts of the heart. The heart is the residence of
Bible doctrine in the soul — Proverbs 2:2,10; 3:3; 15:14.
3. The essence of the heart. The
heart is composed of parts. The first part is the frame of reference, the basic
area of the heart where all thought receives its basic training for function in
your own soul. The frame of reference is mentioned as a part of the heart in
Proverbs 4:4, it is a sort of antechamber for understanding life. Secondly, we
have the memory centre which is a pump which circulates doctrine into the
various parts of the right lobe as well as the soul. The memory centre should
be related to the doctrine of memory. The vocabulary storage is a supply place
to develop thought. Your ability to think depends upon your vocabulary. The
greater your vocabulary the greater your capacity for thought. Words are the
vehicle for thinking. Then we have conscience, the norms and the standards
which you develop in life. This is a constantly changing thing. Your norms and
standards will change as you learn about life. If you are an advancing believer
your norms and standards will advance so that they will be doctrinal in their
viewpoint. If you are in reversionism your norms and standards will decline until
the decline of your norms and standards leads to being influenced by evil. Once
all of your norms and standards are evil then you are a candidate for the sin
unto death. This is a very important function in your soul. Then there is the
application of these things to life, so you have a launching pad where you
apply these various concepts in your soul to life.
4. Therefore the doctrinal content
in your soul resides in your heart or your right lobe — Proverbs 2:2,10; Psalm
119;11; 19:14; Proverbs 15:14; Job 38:36; 1 Kings 3:9,12.
5. The facets of heart function. The
heart can reject Bible teaching — Proverbs 5:12,13. The heart is the source of
discord and trouble-making — Proverb 6:14,18. The heart of the prostitute is
said to be subtle is Proverbs 7:10. Hatred is related to the heart in 2 Samuel
6:16. The heart suffers disappointment from promises not kept — Proverbs 13:12.
The heart promotes mental attitude sins — Proverbs 14:10; sorrow and
disappointment — Proverbs 14:13; pride — Proverbs 21:4; Obadiah 3; worry,
Ecclesiastes 2:23. It is said in the Bible that women use the heart to trap men
— Ecclesiastes 7:26. The frantic search for happiness is related to the heart —
Ecclesiastes 1:13. Reversionism is described in terms of the heart — Jeremiah
17:5,9; Zechariah 7:12. Revolution, insubordination is described as being in
the heart — 2 Samuel 15:6; Jeremiah 5:23; Ezekiel 6:9. Hypocrisy is in the
heart — Job 36:13; Psalm 55:21. Now you are to deduce from these various facets
of heart function that the heart can be influenced by evil, that the heart
becomes a major factor in reversionism as well as a major factor in spiritual
growth. The heart can be influenced by doctrine, the heart can be influenced by
evil. Whichever way it goes determines your function in the plan of God. You
can be blessed if your heart is influenced by doctrine, you can be disciplined
and cursed if your heart is influenced by evil
6. The heart is related to the
function of thinking and perception. The heart related to the function of GAP
is thinking and perception — Deuteronomy 29:4. The thinking of a reversionist
is related to the heart — Psalm 10:6,11,13. The atheist also uses his heart for
thinking — Proverbs 14:1. The rationalising of education — Ecclesiastes 1:13-18
is the heart related to thinking. The rationalising of mental attitude sins —
Isaiah 47:10. False teachers communicating deceit from their heart — Jeremiah
14:14. The heart is used for meditation on doctrine — Luke 2:19. Thinking
superiority comes from the heart — Luke 9:46,47.
7. In the analogy of right man and
right woman the heart comes into the picture. The heart is analogous to the
right man even as the emotion is analogous to the right woman in the various
functions of the parts of the soul. Psalm 26:2; Jeremiah 11:20; 17:10; 20:12.
8. The heart is also related to
capacity for life (not your emotion). The capacity for life is in the heart,
not in the emotion. Your capacity for life is in what you think, not in what
you feel. Emotion is a responder to capacity for life but there is no capacity
for life in emotion. All capacity for life resides in your frame of reference,
your memory centre, your vocabulary thinking, categorising, the conscience of
your right lobe. From these areas the heart initiates and the emotion responds.
It is the same way in sex: the man initiates, the woman responds. After she
responds she becomes an initiator. There are positive and negative capacities
for life. On the positive side is love — Deuteronomy 6:5; 11:13; Joshua 22:5.
Happiness — Psalm 19:8; 28:7; dynamics — Job 9:4. On the negative side we have
sorrow — Leviticus 26:16; pressure — Psalm 34:18; cowardice — Joshua 14:8; 1
Samuel 17:32; discouragement — Numbers 32:7,9.
9. Therefore the heart is the basic
area for happiness or unhappiness. The emotion merely reflects what is in the
heart.
10. The heart is an area for cursing
in the soul. Reversionism in the heart results in national disaster —
Deuteronomy 28:47,48. Revenge is a malfunction of the heart — Proverbs 24:1,2;
Ezekiel 25:15-17. The heart is related to psychosis in Isaiah 13:7,8. Mental
sins relate to the old sin nature in the heart. In other words, all mental
attitude sins come from the old sin nature but they are transmitted through the
heart — Psalm 66:18; 101:5: Proverbs 6:18; Matthew 12:35; 15:18,19.
11. The heart is a blessing to the
growing believer because the heart is related to grace function — Proverbs
24:17. The heart is related to grace orientation — Exodus 23:9. Id related top
happiness 1 Samuel 2:1. Is the basis of stability in the crisis — Psalm
112:7,8.
12. The heart is also the motivator
of life: for temporal life — Exodus 35:25,26,35; 36:8; for spiritual life — 2
Corinthians 9:7; 1 Kings 8:17.
13. The heart is related to positive
volition — Romans 10:9,10.
14. The heart is used as an
anthropopathism. In other words, the heart of God becomes an anthropopathism —
1 Samuel 2:35; Psalm 78:72; Jeremiah 23:20; 30:24.
Verse 5c — “and a good conscience.”
We have a connective use of the conjunction kai,
then a prepositional phrase, e)k plus the ablative of suneidhsij. Sun is a preposition meaning “with,” and e)idhsij is taken from o)ida which
means to know. So it means to know along with something. The something with
which we know is simply a norm or a standard we have in the soul and this
becomes the basis for determining certain things in life — determining whether
something is acceptable or not acceptable, good or bad, moral or immoral, and
all of the many other concepts, true or false. The standards in life are
designed for that and also for what we personally like and what we don’t like.
The word for “good” is the ablative
singular of the adjective a)gaqoj which is the word for good
of intrinsic value, and here it refers to absolute good. A good conscience is
one saturated with doctrine forming the norms and standards of life. Obviously
there are various sets of norms and standards. For example, doctrine does not
set up empirical standards. Empirical standards are based upon taste, sight,
smell, hearing. In other words, the sensory systems. So the sensory system sets
up its own standards. There are standards which are not covered in doctrine but
you do have certain doctrinal standards. If there ever is a conflict between a
doctrinal norm and any other standard you have established in your soul the
doctrinal norm supersedes all others.
The doctrine of conscience
1. A conscience is the accumulation
of norms and standards in your right lobe or heart. The conscience is all of
the norms and standards that you possess, whether they are right or wrong, good
or bad. They are your very own norms and standards and they belong to your
conscience. Doctrine and the learning of doctrine will correct many of your
erroneous norms and standards. One of the many advantages in being a mature
believer is to have good norms and standards about everything. A good
conscience, in other words, is a conscience where Bible doctrine establishes
all of your norms and standards. A conscience is that part of the soul’s right
lobe where you have computerised all of your norms and standards.
2. The conscience is located in the
right lobe or the thinking part of the soul — Romans 2:15; Titus 1:15. The
conscience establishes norms for both human and divine relationships — Acts
24:16.
3. The conscience convicts of sin,
evil, and wrong doing. In other words, the conscience is a warning. If you are
in sin were it not for your conscience you would not know what to rebound. It
also warns of evil as your conscience advances in the doctrinal field and as
you mature. And so you are aware of reversionism, you are aware of evil, you
are aware of sin — John 8:9.
4. The conscience establishes norms
for both morality and the laws of establishment — Romans 2:15.
5. False norms and standards in the
conscience produce legalism and self-righteousness — 1 Corinthians 8:7.
Immediately after the fall of man false norms and standards were established in
the conscience resulting in the first act of legalism in the Genesis 3:7 —
operation fig leaves which was a conscience-type sin. A self-righteous
conscience demanded that the man and the woman put on clothes. This was a false
conscience function. Our norm and standard to day is to wear clothes.
6. The law of freedom and certain
superseding laws such as love, expediency, supreme sacrifice, are also related
to the function of the conscience in 1 Corinthians 10:24-29. In other words,
your conscience also develops concepts of superseding laws where you are free
to do something but because of the law of love [directed toward the weak
believer] or the law of expediency [directed toward the unbeliever] or the law
of supreme sacrifice [directed toward God] this means that you will have
established norms which are superseded under the function of these laws. So
your conscience knows when you have a correct, perfectly moral, upright norm or
standard that must be superseded or set aside under these laws.
7. The conscience is the basis for
patriotism — Romans 13:5.
8. Human happiness in the field of
neutral H [legitimate happiness for believers and unbelievers] is based on
compliance on one’s own conscience. When you meet your own standards this
contributes to neutral H — 2 Corinthians 1:12.
9. Norms and standards reside in the
conscience for the communication of doctrine — 2 Corinthians 4:2. This avoids
intellectual dishonesty and intellectual snobbery.
10. The function of GAP builds up
the divine standards in the human conscience — 1 Timothy 1:5,19; 3:9.
11. Conscience can be distorted or
destroyed by negative volition toward doctrine — scar tissue of the soul,
blackout of the soul, being influenced by evil — 1 Timothy 4:1,2.
12. Conscience establishes norms and
standards for serving God — 2 Timothy 1:3; Hebrews 9:14.
13. Conscience containing doctrine
is the basis for enduring suffering, maltreatment, misunderstanding, without
trying to apologise for yourself, defend yourself in some way — 1 Peter 2:19;
3:16. In this sense, by the way, your conscience is a great protection in
avoiding any ego trip. The way to protect from that is to develop firm
standards from doctrine and stick with them. Your conscience is a computer that
is related to your capacity for life, and that is why the conscience is
mentioned so many times in the scriptures.
The good conscience is one saturated
with doctrine forming norms and standards and grace concepts in life.
“and faith unfeigned” — again, a
connective kai, the preposition e)k plus the ablative singular from the adjective a)nupokritoj. Krith is an actor; with u(po it means to act behind a mask. They used wax masks
in the Hellenistic world of drama. The adjective actually means without
hypocrisy. The a means without having on a
mask. The word pistij refers to doctrine. So it
should be, “from doctrine without hypocrisy.” Doctrine without hypocrisy means
learning doctrine without using doctrine as an excuse for sins, for evil, or
for some form of reversionism or rationalisation. The tendency in the adolescent
stage of spiritual life is to start “using” doctrine as an excuse. Some people
use certain grace doctrines to “raise hell,” some as an excuse to do something.
Some people sit in Bible class waiting for some that resembles a biblical
excuse for something they always wanted to do and the knew it was always wrong.
The sophomore stage: the word is made up of two Greek words — sofoj which means wise; morh
which means fool. A “wise fool.” The Greek had a beautiful way of describing
adolescence. So we have the sophomore stage of spiritual life.
Translation: “But the objective of
preaching is love from a pure heart [right lobe], and from a good conscience,
and from doctrine without hypocrisy.”
The objective of communicating
doctrine or preaching is to produce in the soul of the believer a tremendous
categorical development of the soul’s norms and standards so that the
individual recognises his slavery to doctrine and not his “using” of doctrine.
In verses 6 and 7 the purpose of the
ministry: to avoid apostasy, arrogance, and stupidity.
Verse 6 — “From which some.” We have
the ablative plural of the relative pronoun o(j plus
tij, the indefinite relative
pronoun which refers to pastors who have become reversionists who have become
reversionists, which as resulted in arrogance, apostasy or stupidity.
“having swerved” — aorist active
participle of a)stoxew which means to swerve or to
deviate or to go astray. The verb describes pastoral reversionism. It warns of
the areas in which a pastor is hurt in communicating doctrine. The aorist tense
of the participle is a constative aorist, it contemplates the three problems —
arrogance, apostasy, stupidity — in their entirety. The active voice: the
pastor produces these things to fail as a pastor. The participle is a causal
participle. Reversionism causes pastors to swerve, to deviate, to turn aside.
Furthermore, the action of the aorist participle precedes the action of the
main verb, “have turned aside” —
the
aorist passive indicative of e)ktrepw, they have turned aside
from their responsibility. The aorist tense is a culminative aorist, it views the
result. The passive voice has a middle voice sense. It is an indirect middle
emphasising the agent, the failing or reversionistic pastor, as producing the
action of the verb. The indicative mood is indicates the main verb: “they
themselves have turned to.”
“vain jangling” — preposition e)ij plus the accusative from the compound mataiologia. Mataioj is a vacuum. It means
empty. Logia is taken from logoj: “words” or legw,
“to speak.” It comes to mean empty or ineffective teaching, empty talk.
Translation: “From which some
pastors having deviated they themselves have turned to empty talk.” It is a
reference to the teaching of reversionistic pastors who under the influence of
evil cannot communicate doctrine. They are arrogant, stupid, apostate; their teaching
becomes ineffective. It is not accomplishing the objective for which the Holy
Spirit gave them the gift of pastor-teacher.
Verse 7 — the false standard.
“Desiring” is the present active participle of the verb qelw. The present tense is a descriptive present, or
called a pictorial present. It describes the action in progress. The active
voice: the reversionistic pastor produces the action of the verb by trying to
jump back into the dispensation of Israel and become a teacher of the law. This
was the big problem in the first century. They were just a few years removed
from the Age of Israel and as far as they were concerned there was no new
dispensation. To them the big problem was, “There is no dispensation.” A far as
they were concerned they were still in the Age of Israel, and the death,
burial, resurrection and ascension of Christ, and then the calling out of the
royal family of the Church, didn’t exist. They were still living under the old
dispensation. In other words, their stupidity was being anti-dispensational.
This is a stupidity which had bugged
in the last few hundred years of Church history, the fundamentalists. Their
great problem has been that they are anti-dispensational and dispensational
theology has not even been recognised, except in a handful of seminaries. All
denominations are traditionally anti-dispensational. Were it not for the
Plymouth Brethren who have always been very strong for dispensational theology,
and places like Dallas Seminary and one of the independent Presbyterian groups,
there would really be no emphasis on dispensational theology. The traditional
theology is called covenant theology which destroys and blurs all
dispensational theology distinctions.
The active voice: the reversionistic
pastor produces the action of the verb by ignoring dispensational distinctions.
The participle is circumstantial.
“to be” — present active infinitive
of e)imi denotes an intended
purpose, but really they can’t carry it out the way they want to.
“teachers of the law” — predicate
nominative plural of a sort of coined word, nomodidaskoloj which is obviously a teacher of the law — “Desiring to be law
teachers.”
The Judaisers have come to Ephesus.
Many of them are believers but they are very legalistic. They are believers who
are still depending entirely upon the Mosaic law and do not recognise any
change in dispensations. Therefore they come to teach legalism, distorting the
Mosaic law into a system of legalism. They emphasise the Mosaic law as the way
of salvation, keeping the law as a way of spirituality. So keeping the law was
a popular form of reversionism in the early church, a form of reversionism that
belonged to pastors and teachers who did not know of the change of dispensation
or were blanked-out on it. To become a teacher of the law is not only apostasy
but, worse than that, it is dispensational disorientation.
The doctrine of dispensations
1. Definition and description. A
dispensation is a period of human history expressed in terms of divine
revelation. God has divided human history into its proper segments. The
dispensations as a whole become the divine outline of human history, as well as
God’s categories for human history. History is often divided up by historians
based upon certain functions, certain changes in history into periods, based
upon their own interpretation or upon cataclysmic events in history. God also
has the perfect interpretation, the spiritual interpretation of history, and
this is called dispensations. It is God’s plan for man related to time. The
believer’s orientation to time and to history is vitally necessary for
understanding God’s plan and purpose in time. In every dispensation God
administers His plan through specific agencies. That is where we get the word
“dispensation.” It means stewardship. For example, God always has
communicators. In the Age of Israel the communicators were the Levitical
priests, the Levites, and the prophets. In the Church Age bona fide
communicators were apostles — until AD 96 — and now pastor-teachers. Outside
the local church there is a bona fide gift of communication called evangelism.
God administers through specific agencies, He has His stewards in every
dispensation. The progeny of Seth, the patriarchs, the nation Israel, were
administrators in the past. Today the Church is the administrator. Salvation in
each one of these dispensations was always the same, only the manner in which
Jesus Christ was revealed has changed as history has developed. Jesus Christ
was first revealed through animal sacrifices and since that time, right up to
the present time, He has been revealed in different ways. After the cross he is
revealed historically; before the cross He is revealed prophetically, as in the
classical illustration of Isaiah 53.
2. There is a biblical vocabulary
and it is necessarily Greek since dispensational teaching is revealed in the
New Testament. There are quite a few words which refer to dispensations.
Xronoj
is the basic word for time in the Greek language from which we get the word
chronology. it means time as a succession of events. It can be time as a
succession of minutes, as a succession of hours. But Xronoj is often used in the Bible in the New Testament for
time as a succession of events. This is a related dispensational word.
Kairoj
is much more specific in connection with dispensations. It denotes time as an
epoch or an era. it is used for the organisation of historical events into
their dispensational categories in 1 Thessalonians 5:1.
A)ion
refers to dispensations as ages or periods of time. it is a divine category of
human history and therefore it is often translated correctly, “age”, as in
Ephesians 3:2; Colossians 1:25.
Then the word “dispensation” itself:
o)ikonomia. This word refers to
management of an estate, administration of an estate. It also means
dispensation or the divine administration of time. God has an administration in
each one of His periods of time.
3.
The first dispensation is the Age of the Gentiles covering Genesis chapters
1-11. It is divided into three periods: The period of positive volition — Adam
in the garden with the woman; from the fall on we have negative volition; this
is followed by the laws of divine establishment. The characteristics of this
age are one language, one race [Gentiles], the angelic attack is on
establishment — on free will in chapter three, marriage and family in chapter
six, on nationalism in chapter 11. The scope of this dispensation goes from
creation to Babel. There was no written scripture, all of it was revealed by
God or through various agencies, there was no missionary agency but salvation
was by faith in Jesus Christ. People reached super-grace on the basis of the
doctrine they had received. We know this from a study of the eleventh chapter
of Hebrews.
4. In the second dispensation we have
the Age of Israel which is, again, divided into three parts: the period of the
patriarchs, the period of the law which was interrupted by the resurrection,
ascension and session. The interruption is so that Jesus Christ who is alone at
the right hand of the Father might have a royal family. The Church Age is the
calling out of the royal family. Once the royal family is completed then the
Age of Israel resumes with the seven years of the Tribulation. The period of
the patriarchs goes from Abraham to Moses, the law from Moses to Christ, and
then the conclusion of this dispensation, the Tribulation from the Rapture to
the second advent. It is a period of many languages, many races, the
development of Israel from a race to a nation — Abraham at the point of
circumcision became the father of a new race, the latest and newest race. Moses
is the father of the nation. The security of the nation came through its
unconditional covenants and the whole concept of this dispensation is that
there might be a custodianship for the scriptures as they began. This
custodianship was the nation Israel. Everything centres around the Jews.
Technically, when a Jew believes today he is a member of the royal family and
in the royal family there is neither Jew or Gentile but an entire new category
and concept. The national security, prosperity and blessing came through the
delineation of the laws of divine establishment as they were portrayed in the
Mosaic law. National discipline: the five cycles; salvation was by faith in
Jesus Christ; spirituality was through the faith-rest technique, and a number
of believers reached super-grace.
The problem of the Judaisers of
Paul’s day and the great attack upon the Ephesians complex all came because of
ignorance on the part of pastors of the doctrine of intercalation.
The doctrine of intercalation
1. Intercalation means insertion. The Jewish
dispensation was interrupted by the insertion of a new dispensation. The
strategical victory of Jesus Christ, the cross, resurrection, ascension and His
session at the right hand of the Father immediately demanded that the Jewish
Age be interrupted and that a new dispensation be inserted.
2. The new dispensation inserted was
the dispensation of the royal family of God. It generally derives its name from
its classroom. The local church is the classroom for the royal family. It is
the only time they assemble and meet together without portfolio. When the royal
family meets in the local church they have no rights or privileges, only the
opportunity for concentration on the teaching under the ministry of God the
Holy Spirit. One teaches, all learn. That is why it is called the Church Age,
but it is better termed the age of the royal family of God, an absolute unique
age.
3. Intercalation is the intensified
stage of the angelic conflict. The calling out of the royal family immediately
intensified the angelic conflict.
4. The doctrine pertaining to the
Church Age is called “mystery” because it was not known to the Old Testament
writers — Romans 16:25,26; Ephesians 3:1,6; Colossians 1:26,27.
5. Doctrines pertaining to the
Church Age are not found in the Old Testament scriptures. Where Church Age
doctrine would have occurred there is a parenthesis.
6. Doctrine pertinent to the Church
Age is intercalated, inserted, by the New Testament epistles.
7. Illustrations of the great
parenthesis concept in the Old Testament: Daniel 2:40 comes right up to the
Church Age. Between verses 40 and 41 the Church Age would be inserted but it
was not mentioned because it was part of the mystery doctrine. We have the same
thing between Daniel 7:23 and 24, between 8:22 and 23, and Daniel 11:35 and 36,
or Hosea 3:4 and 5.
8. The Old Testament reveals
doctrine up through the session of Christ and then skips the Church Age and
reveals Tribulational information as well as the second advent and the
Millennium. But never once does it say anything about the Church Age. That is why
the baptism of the Holy Spirit was such a surprise on the Day of Pentecost and
no one could understand it, and there is very little way of explaining it which
is why a passage had to be lifted by Peter out of Joel to explain why they
weren’t all drunk but were in something brand new.
The Church Age is the key and the
important factor, and it was being ignored by pastors, and we still have that
brand of pastor today. He is called a covenant theologian and he does not see
the Church Age as being any different from the Old Testament. In the writings
of covenant theology you will find the word “church” used in connection with
the Old Testament.
We have an absolutely unique age.
The baptism of the Holy Spirit made us royal family of God. The demand for our
day is something that never existed before: the balance of residency. The body
of the believer is always indwelt by the Holy Spirit. The soul of the believer
never is indwelt by the Spirit but when the Holy Spirit controls the soul we
call that filling of the Spirit. When the believer is carnal or when the
believer is reversionistic he is either quenching or grieving the Spirit but
the Holy Spirit, either in quenching or grieving, never leaves our bodies.
Therefore there is no such thing as demon possession. There is something worse,
the thing about which our Lord warns us: “Do not be afraid of that which destroys
the body, beware of that which destroys the soul.” Being influenced by evil
destroys the soul. Reversionism and influence of evil meet and that is where
the soul becomes destroyed. Minus doctrine and the filling of the Spirit sets
up an out-of-balance condition and this is balanced out through the daily
function of GAP. The sanctification of the royal family is this balance of
residency. So we have the baptism of the Spirit, the universal priesthood of
the believer, the indwelling of the Holy Spirit, the sealing of the Spirit. We
have a completed canon of scripture. We have all of these things that pertain
to the royal family of God that are absolutely unique. Never in history has
there been such an opportunity for believers as there is in this particular
dispensation.
This is what these pastors do not
understand, this is what Judaism has done.
In the middle of verse 7 we have the
phrase, “understanding neither.” For
“neither” we have the negative mh plus the present active
participle of the verb noew. It should be translated,
“not understanding.” The present tense is the retroactive progressive present
which denotes what has begun in the past with reversionism and continues into
the present under the influence of reversionism and evil. The pastors in the
Ephesus complex had entered into legalistic or Judaistic type reversionism. The
active voice: the Ephesian pastors and those of that area, the Roman province
of Asia, produce the action of the verb by entering into legalistic
reversionism. The participle is causal and should be translated literally,
“since they do not understand.”
Neither” is “either”; “what they
say” — the present active indicative of legw
plus mhte. Mhte
is what is called a negative copula and it should be translated “either.” The
nominative plural neuter of the relative pronoun o(j
is also involved here: “either what they are teaching” is the best translation.
The present tense indicates linear aktionsart, retroactive progressive present.
They have been teaching in the past and they are teaching right now. They are
law teachers, they know nothing of the Church Age, they know nothing of the
royal family of God.
“nor whereof” — whereof is a
preposition, peri plus the genitive of the
indefinite pronoun tij — it is “concerning the things.”
“they affirm” — a fair translation.
It is the present middle indicative of diabebaioomai. The word means to make confident assertions which are untrue. To be
full of hot air and to be dogmatic about it is what it really means. We will
simply translate it, “they make confident assertions.”
Both verbs also are descriptive
presents, they are occurring right now. We have the active voice in the verb legw for teaching here, meaning that the pastors are
producing the action. But we have the deponent middle in the second verb, again
meaning the pastors are producing the action. And we have the indicative mood
for a declarative representing the verbal idea from the viewpoint of reality.
This is a fact, these pastors are arrogant and stupid. When it comes to the
Mosaic law pastors are at their worst, it sneaks up on their blind side. Many
pastors have a trend toward legalism anyway and this merely contributes to it.
So without seeing objectively why the Mosaic law is in the Bible they just
simply set that aside and become subjective about the Mosaic law and make it a
basis for legalism. So you come up with salvation by keeping the law, which is
apostasy; spirituality by keeping the law, which is also apostasy.
Translation: “Desiring to be
teachers of the law; since they do not understand either what they are teaching
or concerning things about which they speak dogmatically.”
1. It is obvious that the
reversionistic and apostate pastors in the Ephesus complex are teaching a
legalism related to the Mosaic law.
2. They are teaching it from
arrogance and dogmatism. They are dogmatically wrong.
There are two doctrines which make
the next paragraph which is the purpose of the Mosaic law.
The doctrine of the covenants to Israel
A. Definition.
1. The Hebrew berith and
the Greek diaqhkh are two words which do not
mean testament. A testament is some kind of official thing whereby you
anticipate your death and you want your will to be superimposed on others after
your death. Therefore you must die before this official document becomes
operational. That is exactly what we do not have. What we really have is a new
covenant and an old covenant. Berith
in the Hebrew and diaqhkh in the Greek refer to a
disposition made by party of the first part in favour of party of the second
part. In other words, party of the first part is God in all these covenants,
and He makes a disposition while God is alive and in fact God is still alive.
Christ was alive and died twice on the cross. These covenants were made prior
to the cross — all of them — so they are not waiting for the death of Christ;
even the cross is not involved here directly. A covenant means party of the
first part makes a favourable disposition to party of the second part, apart
from party of the second part having to do anything. In other words, we are
talking about the principle of grace. Party of the second part is generally
regenerate mankind. The one exception is the Mosaic law which is addressed to
the Jewish nation.
2. Neither of these biblical words
refer to a will or testament, for a will or a testament is activated by the
physical death of the testator.
3. Such is not the case with God.
God lives and cannot die.
4. While the new covenant, for
example, depends upon the spiritual death of Christ on the cross providing
redemption, reconciliation and propitiation, it is not activated because of His
physical death.
5. To the contrary it is guaranteed
by His resurrection, ascension and session; it is guaranteed by His life, not
by His dying.
6. Therefore both diaqhkh and berith
require a compact between two parties with one party favouring the other.
7. All biblical covenants are made
between God and man as the two parties, and always God favouring man on a grace
basis.
8. Each dispensation contains one or
more covenants. For example, the age of the Gentiles: the Adamic covenant, the
Noahic covenant. The Age of Israel: the Abrahamic, Palestinian, Davidic, and
New covenants to Israel. The Church Age: the new covenant to the Church. And to
be fulfilled in the Millennium, the new covenant to Israel.
9. While some covenants to Israel
have been classified as unconditional and others conditional, this is a
misnomer. All covenants to Israel are gracious promises and provisions on the
part of God as party of the first part toward Israel or toward individuals as
undeserving party of the second part.
B. General classification.
There are five individual covenants
to Israel or to individuals in Israel: the Abrahamic, Palestinian, Mosaic,
Davidic, and New covenants.
C. The covenants of the Messianic
line. Some covenants deal with the whole Messianic problem and therefore they
are not confined to the Age of Israel, though Jewish covenants are also related
since Messiah came from Israel. For example, by covenants of the Messianic line
we again refer to five: the Adamic covenant of Genesis 2:15; 3:15, the seed of
the woman, the humanity of Christ will come as Adam’s seed when he is called
the seed of the woman. In the Noahic covenant — Genesis 6:18; 8:21-9:17 — the
seed of the woman or the humanity of Christ wll come through the line of Noah,
specifically through Seth. In the Abrahamic covenant the seed of the woman will
come from the line of Abraham’s descent. In the Davidic covenant the seed of
the woman, the humanity of Christ, will come from the line of David through
Bathsheba and through two sons of Bathsheba — Solomon and Nathan. Then the New
covenant to Israel: the seed of the woman, Jesus Christ, will return to the
earth to reign over Israel and to reign over the world forever. This is the
restoration under the Millennial reign of Christ.
D. The covenant to Abraham. The
unconditional grace covenant in which God as party of the first part makes a
favourable disposition to party of the second part, Abraham. Part of the
disposition of this covenant promises to Abraham both a new race — the Jews —
and a new nation — Israel. The original three-paragraph covenant in found in
Genesis 12:1-3, with amplification which came later. It included the promise of
real estate and so it has the seed for the Palestinian covenant. The
geographical location, is described in the Abrahamic covenant — Genesis
13:14-16; 15:18-21. It includes an eternal city, the heavenly Jerusalem of
Revelation 21:2,10. The covenant pertains to the seed of Abraham, specifically
through Isaac and through Jacob. The covenant is the basis for the Exodus
deliverance and the beginning of the nation in Exodus — Exodus 6:2-8.
E. The covenant to Moses. Unlike all
the other covenants this one as party of the second part is to a group of
people, a nation. It is to the nation Israel. Therefore, since Israel is always
made up of unbelievers and believers it is a slightly different type of
covenant, but it is not a conditional covenant — only in the sense when anyone
observes the laws of divine establishment certain blessings are going to
accrue. So it is different from the other covenants in that its beneficiary is
a nation. So it must be classified as the national heritage covenant because
the national heritage of Israel is spiritual as well as establishment. It is a
beautiful combination of spiritual factors and establishment factors. The
spiritual factors teach grace — the Levitical offerings, the tabernacle, the
Levitical priesthood; the establishment factors always made Israel a great
nation and establishment blesses the unbeliever, gives the unbeliever the same
freedom and opportunities that the believer has. It was definitely not given to
the Gentiles and definitely not given to the Church. It is divided into three
groups: the basic heritage for freedom, the spiritual heritage, and the
establishment heritage.
F. The Palestinian Covenant. God as
party of the first part makes a land grant to party of the second part, the
nation Israel in the Millennium. The nation Israel in the Millennium is going
to be made up of believers and unbelievers, starting out with believers but
ending up with believers and unbelievers. But this goes on forever so that
eventually on the believers will enjoy this covenant forever and ever. The
borders are described in Numbers 34:1-12; Deuteronomy 30:1-9; Joshua 1:3,4. The
beneficiaries will be the nation Israel in eternity as well as the nation
Israel in the Millennium.
G. The covenant to David.
H. The covenant to Jeremiah, called
also the New covenant to Israel. God confirms the fact that He will keep all of
these covenants. There is one covenant during Israel’s dispersion and that is
the New covenant to the Church, the basis for the New Testament which is really
the New Covenant.
The doctrine of the Mosaic covenant
1. The Mosaic covenant is divided
into three categories.
The first part called the ten
commandments is the freedom code. They do not describe morality, the describe
freedom. The fact that morality is mentioned is simply to prove the fact that
freedom is based upon establishment. Establishment functions on morality. You
don’t have many sins mentioned, only those where freedom is violated. These
commandments form the heritage of freedom for the Jewish nation. Human freedom
is described in terms of establishment, it is described in terms of morality,
the basis for human freedom and privacy.
The second part of the Mosaic law
called the ordinances is the spiritual or the theological code. This is the
spiritual heritage of Israel recognising that this nation as well as this race
was born from regeneration. When the race was born Abraham was born again,
Isaac was born again, Jacob was born again. The nation was born from Moses,
Moses was born again, and the Passover commemorates the fact that those
liberated, 20 and over, were also born again or they died. So we have a great
spiritual heritage in codex #2. This heritage includes primarily doctrines of
soteriology and Christology. It emphasises the fact that believers are designed
to function under both the laws of divine establishment as well as doctrine
resident in the soul. It includes such subjects as the tabernacle, the holy
days, Levitical offerings, modus operandi of the Levitical priesthood, and many
other factors connected to the spiritual life.
The third category under the Mosaic
law, called the judgments in the KJV, is really the establishment code. It is
perhaps the most understood of all and the one that is often distorted into
some brand of legalism. It was definitely misunderstood in the days when Paul
wrote to Timothy. It includes political as well as the functional heritage of
the nation Israel. It covers many subjects: freedom, privacy, marriage,
divorce, military service, taxation (tithing), diet, health, sanitation,
quarantine, criminal law. And it delineates free enterprise as the only basis
for national prosperity.
2. The recipients of the law was the
nation Israel — Exodus 19:3; Leviticus 26:46; Romans 3:19; 9:4. It was
definitely not given to the Gentiles — Deuteronomy 4:8; Roman 2:12-14. It was,
furthermore, not given to the Church — Acts 15:5,24; Romans 6:14; Galatians
2:19.
3. Jesus Christ and the law. Jesus
Christ kept the law perfectly during the period of His incarnation. This is a
part of the doctrine of impeccability, it is also a part of His patriotism.
Christ condemned the legalistic distortions of the law and the Pharisees who
sponsored them. Christ fulfilled the law — Matthew 5:17, and Christ is the end
of the law for believers — Romans 10:4.
4. Keeping the law is not a way of
salvation, never was and never will be — Galatians 2:16. While the Mosaic law
reveals the way of salvation it is not the means of being saved. The Mosaic law
teaches the gospel but is not the way of appropriating the gospel. It is the
way of human freedom, the way of human blessing and prosperity under
establishment, but it is not the way of salvation.
5. Keeping the law is also not
spirituality. Believers in the Church Age and/or the royal family of God are
under the higher law of spirituality related to God the Holy Spirit, related to
the function of GAP — Romans 8:2-4; Galatians 5:18,22,23; 1 Corinthians 13.
6. Therefore the Mosaic law is
limited as far as this dispensation is concerned. We are in the intercalated
dispensation and therefore its limitation:
a) It cannot justify —
Galatians 2:16; Romans 3:20,28; Acts 13:39; Philippians 3:9.
b) It cannot give life —
Galatians 3:21.
c) It cannot provide the
Holy Spirit — Galatians 3:2.
d) It cannot solve the
problem of the old sin nature — Romans 8:4.
7. Other nomenclature for the Mosaic
law. It is called the book of the covenant in Exodus 24:7,8; 34:27,28;
Deuteronomy 4:13-16, 23, 31; 8:18; 9:9, 11, 15. In other words, throughout the
Old testament in the Pentateuch you are going to stumble over the phrase “this
book of the covenant.” This is a specific reference to the Mosaic covenant. The
addendum to the Mosaic law found in Deuteronomy 29-32 is definitely a part of
the Mosaic law. Prophecies of breaking the covenant are found in Deuteronomy
31:16, 20; Jeremiah 22:9. The book of the covenant is the subject of Jeremiah
11 but is not to be confused with the new covenant to Israel in Jeremiah
31:31ff.
8. The past purpose of the Mosaic
law in the Age of Israel.
The Mosaic law was the authorising agent for
a specialised priesthood — the Levitical priesthood — Hebrews 7:11,12. It
authorised the tabernacle as a sacred building and training aid for teaching
doctrine — Hebrews 9:1-6. The law authorised Levitical sacrifices — Hebrews
9:12,13. It authorised the blood of animals as a dedication of shadows —
Hebrews 9:18-22 cf. 10:1, and it established the pattern for blessing and
prosperity in the nation for believer and unbeliever under the laws of divine
establishment.
9. The present purpose of the Mosaic
law in the Church Age. It is written for our instruction — Romans 15:4. Our
confidence in certain areas, like free enterprise. It was written for our
example — 1 Corinthians 10:11,12. It also has another purpose, to convince by
divine standards that the unbeliever is a sinner and needs a saviour. In other
words, it is a prelude to gospel presentation — Romans 3:20,28; Galatians 2:16.
So the Mosaic law and its principles
form the pattern of policy for all good national government.
We are now dealing with the purpose
of the Mosaic law which came out of the phrase about desiring to become law
teachers and yet coming up with empty talk.
Verse 8 — the abrogation of the law
does not imply that the law is bad. To the contrary, the law is good. It does
not have the same purpose that it had in the Old Testament in many ways because
Jesus Christ having come in the flesh, having gone to the cross, died for our
sins, was raised again, ascended and seated at the right hand of the Father,
broke into the Age of Israel which came to a halt in order for a royal family
to be formed. We live in the dispensation of the royal family of God. When the
royal family is completed and we are all resurrected, then the dispensation of
Israel will continue throughout the course of the Tribulation and to the point
of the second advent.
The Mosaic covenant was designed to
set up for the nation Israel two things: their spiritual heritage and the basis
of national prosperity in the laws of divine establishment The spiritual
heritage came from codex #2 and was designed to portray who and what Christ is.
The laws of divine establishment set up the principles of prosperity for a
national entity as well as social, sexual, and spiritual blessing in a national
entity.
All of this is fine if you
understand the law in its proper concept, but once we break into the Age of
Israel with the Church Age, immediately these have a different purpose. Now
instead of laws of establishment and instead of the spiritual heritage which
moved with the Age of Israel we come to a stop and we learn that there is a
purpose in teaching the law in this age but entirely apart from the purpose
which the Judaisers have set up. In fact the law as the authorising agent for
the Levitical priesthood and for the modus operandi of Israel is abrogated. The
abrogation of the law does not remove the teaching of the law.
“But we know” — you must understand
doctrine to orient to any factor in the royal priesthood. We have a post positive
conjunctive particle de used as an adversative
conjunction and translated “But.” It sets up a contrast between the distortion
of the law by the Judaisers, previously mentioned in verses 6,7, and the true
perspective of the law for the Church Age. We have with this particle the
perfect o)ida used as a present tense for
knowledge in the frontal lobe — understanding of a doctrinal perspective.
“that” — the conjunction o(ti is used after verbs of thinking, verbs of
conclusion, to show the content of the conclusion or the results of the verb of
thinking.
”the law” — o( nomoj. The law is used for the Old Testament scripture.
It is used for the Pentateuch, it is used for the Mosaic covenant. Here it is
used for the Mosaic covenant.
“is good” — we have a predicate
adjective, kaloj, not a)gaqpj. Kaloj means here “noble.” It is
used here in its qualitative sense of noble, useful, blameless, good.
“if” is a conjunction used to
introduce a third class condition, e)an, and it means maybe yes and
maybe no.
“a man” — the indefinite pronoun tij and it means “anyone.”
“uses it” — present middle
subjunctive of the verb xraomai which means to employ, to
make use of. The present tense is the tendencial present for an action which is
purposed though not actually taking place. The middle voice for a deponent verb
is the same as the active voice. In other words, someone might use the law
properly and lawfully and when they do it still has function. The subjunctive
mood goes with the third class condition for potentiality.
“lawfully” is an adverb, nomimoj, and it means according to the rules or lawfully.
Translation: “But we know that the
law is excellent if anyone uses it lawfully.
Principles
1. The law must be used according to
the principles within its own context. The law itself will determine its usage.
You do not have to go outside of the Word of God for the proper use of the law
in any dispensation.
2. In view of dispensational
teaching, which these pastors do not understand and the Judaisers are not aware
of, this means that certain things that the law advocated in Israel are not
transferred to the Church. This means that tithing as a system of taxation, the
specialised priesthood, the observation of a Sabbath day, and other concepts
which have been distorted in the Church Age, are no longer valid.
3. The law was used in the
dispensation of Israel by the nation Israel within a lawful context of
spiritual heritage and national blessing. Once Christ comes in the flesh and
fulfills certain principles, certain shadows of the law, the law is immediately
abrogated. Once the Church Age began the law was completely and totally
abrogated.
4. Only evil and reversionism
distort the law with an unlawful usage.
The proper teaching of the law
1. The Mosaic law must be taught
under the ICE principle for interpretation. I = isagogics; C= categories; E =
exegesis. Under isagogics this demands that the law be related to the nation
Israel in the dispensation of Israel. You must teach the law in its context.
2. Under categorical teaching the
categories of the law must be delineated in biblical terms. For example, in the
KJV we have “commandments.” That is codex #1. There are ordinances for codex
#2, judgments for codex #3. Then we have to suddenly advance over 300 years of
English and redefine them. Codex #1 is the spiritual heritage of freedom as
well as establishment freedom. Codex #2 is the spiritual; heritage of the
people, and codex #3, the laws of divine establishment which is the basis for
good government in a nation. Under exegesis it is imperative that the
Pentateuch be exegeted in the Hebrew language in analysing the Mosaic law.
The ten commandments in relationship
to human freedom. The only part that is really misunderstood is the ten
commandments. They are designed to determine human freedom in the angelic
conflict. It is not a system to define sin. There are certain prohibitions
against certain sins because there are certain sins that destroy human freedom
and privacy. There are very few sins mentioned in the ten commandments but all
that are are designed to protect freedom and they are delineated as enemies of
freedom. The Levitical offerings are a picture of salvation. Salvation is
historically accomplished and therefore it becomes illustrative material to
understand certain facets of salvation. Doctrinal teaching related to the
tabernacle, like propitiation and the mercy seat, portrayed propitiation in the
Old Testament but it now illustrates propitiation. It is still in the Bible, it
hasn’t changed, but once Christ dies and fulfills propitiation then it becomes
an illustration.
3. The abrogation of the Mosaic law
in the Church Age demands that every believer, sooner or later, understands the
book of Hebrews. No one truly understands the law until he has mastered the
doctrine in the book of Hebrews.
4. However, though abrogated and
rescinded in the Church Age the law continues to be in the scripture to
validate and document certain principles of establishment. The principles of
establishment found in the Mosaic law are as apropos right now as they were in
the Age of Israel. For example, the Mosaic law says that if you want to
maintain freedom you must have universal military training. The law says that
if you want to stimulate your economy you must have free enterprise and you
must have system of taxation that does not in any way hinder those who have
business ability. In other words, a flat ten per cent for all people in the
field of income tax. The law says that if you want to have certain proper functions
in life then you must observe certain establishment principles — based on
marriage, based on the family, based upon good law, and so on. In other words,
the law defines freedom and privacy. The law relates prosperity and national
blessing to establishment. it portrays the principle that man is a sinner and
needs a saviour. The law reveals Christ in His saving work as the only way of
salvation. These principles remain in their status regardless of the change in
dispensation. So even though abrogated and rescinded the doctrinal content of
the law has not changed. It simply had a direct interpretation to Israel and
these things still have an application to any nation wise enough to pick up the
concept.
5. The law must be revealed as a
shadow pointing to the reality. The law is not the reality, so when teaching
the law it must be made very clear that when you get to salvation and things of
this sort we are talking about the shadows of salvation — shadow soteriology,
shadow Christology. The reality is all fulfilled in Christ.
6. Keeping the law must be
disassociated with either salvation or spirituality. The trend of legalism is
to associate these things with the law.
7.
Morality is the basis for the function of establishment and morality belongs to
the human race in general, believer and unbeliever. Morality is the fuel that
makes establishment function.
The law was used in the Age of
Israel as a means of condemnation. The law is also used in our time as a
standard of condemnation. So the correct use of the law in the Church Age is
found in verses 9,10. The law is a means of condemnation, never a means of
salvation.
Verse 9 — “Knowing” — o)ida, the perfect active participle. This is not used as
a present but as a true perfect tense. The intensive perfect indicates
something that happens in the past with the result that it is firmly fixed in
your soul so that you will never have any doubts about the true function of the
law in the day in which you live.
“this” — the accusative direct
object neuter singular of the demonstrative pronoun o(utoj.
You always have to watch out for these demonstrative pronouns. It is translated
“this” but it goes far beyond that in its meaning. The demonstrative always
calls attention with special emphasis to a designated object. The designated
object under review is the Mosaic law and therefore o(utoj
is used to refer to something close at hand, like the law, rather than
something more distant. This what is called an immediate demonstrative pronoun
to designate something in the context and to give it special emphasis in the
context. So we translate it “this.”
“that” — we have that conjunction o(ti after verbs of knowing to express the conclusion of
the thinking of o)ida.
“the law” — nomoj, but this time minus the definite article because
this emphasises the qualitative aspect of the law. The law has high quality.
Here is one of the fundamental differences between the Old Testament and the
New Testament. In the Old Testament under the law blessing was related to
establishment, except in rare cases where the blessing was permanent. In David
is an illustration apart from establishment. David was one of the few people in
the Old Testament who was totally influenced by doctrine. As a result, when he
hit paragraph SG2 he first of all became the wealthiest man in the
world. He not only kept all of that money but he never lost it no matter what
he did because he was always influenced by doctrine and never by evil. In the
Old Testament the law was the basis for prosperity for most people, exceptions
were David and Saul. Most people in the Old Testament had their prosperity from
establishment. There are two kinds of prosperity, establishment and spiritual.
The difference is that spiritual prosperity has capacity; establishment: you have
the prosperity and no capacity.
In the New Testament establishment
prosperity still exists but the emphasis is on the spiritual prosperity of the
super-grace life which includes spiritual, material, and dying blessing.
“is not made” — the present active
indicative of the verb keimai plus the negative o)uk. Keimai means to validate, to apply. But the negative means
“does not apply.”
Then we have to insert something
that is further down in our passage, the dative of reference, dikaioj, which means “a righteous one.” “Knowing this, that
to the righteous one the law does not apply.” This does not mean legalistic
righteousness, this means grace righteousness. In other words, the law is not
validated for the righteous person. The righteous one is establishment
righteousness apart from self-righteousness, or super-grace righteousness which
is free from self-righteousness. Remember that self-righteousness or legalistic
righteousness is never valid to the believer.
What is the purpose of the law? The
purpose of the law is now stated on the other side of the post positive
conjunctive particle de. it is used as an
adversative conjunction setting up a contrast between the righteous one for
whom the law is not validated and the categories of persons to whom the law
applies. These categories are picked by God the Holy Spirit. The first one is
“for the lawless” as a general category. This is a dative plural of
disadvantage from the noun a)nomoj — “lawless ones.” Lawless
ones are antiestablishment types. So it connotes both those who reject the law
and those who violate the law.
Now to get down to specifics we
start with the word “and.” This really sets up a colon, and on the other side
of “and” we have the dative plural of disadvantage from a)nupotaktoj which means rejecters of authority. This is true of
believer and unbeliever. Undisciplined people always have a miserable time in
life. A person who has no self-discipline is going to be a miserable person all
of his life. God has set up systems of authority spiritually, and He has set up
systems of authority from the establishment side. When any type of authority is
rejected then that person is in trouble.
The people who do not accept
authority:
a) Those who are on an ego trip.
Arrogant people do not accept authority, they resent it in any form. They also
are jealous of authority and they set up a barrage of mental sins against
authority that cause them to be jealous, and jealousy leads to them becoming
unstable. Some people cannot stand anyone’s authority but their own and they
are the leas capable of administering authority.
b) Those, for example, who are
against establishment. Those who are using establishment as a cover for crime.
Generally the big problem is always
arrogance. Pride is the basis for rejection of authority.
“for the ungodly” — the dative
plural of disadvantage, a)sebhj which refers to those
influenced by evil — “ungodly ones.”
“for sinners” — dative plural of
disadvantage: “and to sinning ones.” These are the ones influenced by sin in
contrast to those influenced by evil. This time the noun is a(martwloj. Sinning ones are not people who sin. We all sin.
It means to be influenced by sin. To be influenced by sin is to be under the
domination of a sin. If you reject authority, if you reject law, some type of
sin will come around to influence you. For example, a murderer is a person
influenced by sin. He keeps murdering people. That is being under the influence
of a sin.
“for unholy” — dative plural of
disadvantage, a)nosioj, usually translated by such
words as impious, but it means reversionistic believers.
“and profane” — dative plural of
disadvantage from bebhloj meaning reversionistic
unbelievers.
Now we get into something a little
different:
“for murderers of fathers” — this
can be traced all the way through. A child resents the discipline of the
parents, he gets into all kinds of trouble on the outside, resents the teacher
at school, resents the coach, resents the police officer, resents everyone, and
he winds up blowing his cork at some point and murders one of his parents.
“manslayers” — simply a murderer in
general.
We have three words here. We have patrolwaj, someone who murders their father; mhtralwaj, someone who murders their mother; a)ndrofonoj, [onoj means to murder; a)droj means man] which is a murderer in general.
Translation: “Knowing this, that to the righteous one the
law does not apply, but to the lawless one [antiestablishment] and
undisciplined ones [rejecters of authority], to ungodly ones [influenced by
evil] and sinning ones [influenced by sin], to unholy ones [reversionistic
believers] and profane ones [reversionistic unbelievers], to murderers of
fathers to murderers of mothers, to murders.”
The doctrine of murder
1. The devil was said to be a
murderer from the beginning — John 8:44.
2. The devil motivated
reversionistic Cain to commit the first human race murder — 1 John 3:12.
3. Mental attitude sins as reactor
factors motivated the first murder — Genesis 4:5. Cain was jealous.
4. Murder is definitely prohibited
by the Word of God — Exodus 20:13; Deuteronomy 5:17; Matthew 5:21. The problem
with the one in Exodus 20:13 is that it is mistranslated — “Thou shalt not
kill.” The word for “kill” is qatal,
and it is not found in this verse which does not mean “Thou shalt not kill.”
What we have is the qal imperfect of ratsach
which means to murder. It should be translated, “You will not murder.” There is
a difference between qatal and ratsach. Qatal is what you do as a
representative of your country in time of war; ratsach is what you do not do, which is to murder.
5. Capital punishment or the death
penalty is the administration of justice for murder — Genesis 9:6; Numbers
35:30,31; Romans 13:4. Capital punishment is the basis for controlling crime.
6. Murder is listed as one of the
seven worst sin in Proverbs 6:16-19. Furthermore, murder is the only overt sin
in that list.
7. Anger as a mental sin is a
cluster which leads to mental murder — Matthew 5:21,22.
8. Murder always involves certain
mental attitude sins. There are two passages where jealousy precedes murder and
becomes the motivator — Romans 1:29; Galatians 5:21.
9. Murder is a part of crime and
should be punished by death — Matthew 26:52, gar o(i labontej maxairan e)n maxairh
a)polountai:
“For the one taking the sword [the criminal] by the sword shall be destroyed.”
This has nothing to do with military service.
10. While murder is the worst of all
overt sins it still can be committed by a believer out of fellowship or in
reversionism. David is an illustration. Cf 1 Peter 4:15. 1 John 3:15 — “Every
murderer does not have eternal life abiding in him.” The startling thing about
that statement is that those who have eternal life do commit murder.
Verse 10 — “For whoremongers” is the
dative plural of disadvantage, pornoj, simply means fornicators
of all kinds (normal fornicators).
“for them that defile themselves
with mankind” — a)rsenokoithj, it includes homosexuality
of all types.
The doctrine of adultery
1. Definition. This refers to sexual
activity outside of the divine institution of marriage. Sex is designed as an
expression of love between right man and right woman. As an expression of
category #2 love sex is not only legitimate but very beautiful. It expresses
the coalescence of soul and body. Adultery may be categories as fornication,
seduction of a member of the opposite sex.
2. The prohibition of adultery or
fornication. The prohibition of the decalogue refers to freedom — Exodus 20:14;
Deuteronomy 5:18. In the New Testament it is also prohibited — 1 Corinthians
6:18; Colossians 3:5; 1 Thessalonians 4:3. Mental adultery is prohibited —
Matthew 5:27,28. Incest is also forbidden — Leviticus 18:6-17; 20:14; 1
Corinthians 5:1-7. Homosexuality is forbidden — Leviticus 18:22. It is never
called a disease — “You will not have sex with a male as with a female, it is
an abomination [not a disease].” Leviticus 20:13 — “a detestable act; they
shall surely be put to death.” Cf. Romans 1:26 — “degenerate passions.”
3. Phallic reversionism is
destructive to the soul — Proverbs 6:32; Ephesians 4:18,19.
4. Fornication and the frantic
search for happiness — Ephesians 5:3.
5. The destructive force of
promiscuity is found in 1 Corinthians 6:13-18.
6. Adultery is a bona fide basis for
divorce — Matthew 5:32; 19:9; Luke 16:18. The various stages of phallic
reversionism destroy rapport between a husband and a wife. Deuteronomy 24:4 —
if a marriage breaks up and there is interim sex they should never be
reconciled.
7. Adultery or fornication is often
used in a spiritual sense to describe reversionism and apostasy — Jeremiah
3:8-10; Ezekiel 16:23-43; 23:24-28; Revelation 17:1-5; Hebrews 11:16.
8. The sanctification of category #2
love is said to be marriage — 1 Thessalonians 4:3,4.
9. The glory of category #2 love is
described in the spiritual analogy of Ephesians 5:28-31.
10. The biblical application of
category #2 love for the single person:
a) The right man and
right woman were designed by God in eternity past. Therefore you must assume
that there is a opposite number for you of divine design, or that God will
provide something better.
b) The exception is the
rare case of celibacy or function under the law of supreme sacrifice, where the
apostle Paul is the perfect illustration — 1 Corinthians 9:5.
c) Every believer under
the principle of grace and the plan of God will eventually meet his opposite
number. At the right time and circumstances God will bring together right man
and right woman. However, if you are in reversionism or under the influence of
evil you may not identify.
d) However, there is no
benefit in meeting your opposite number unless you have waited on the Lord in
faithfulness to that principle. This means from the negative viewpoint the
avoidance of fornication or adultery. This means from the positive standpoint
the capacity for category #2 love, for maximum doctrine in the soul.
e) Consequently, the
thought and life pattern must be based on the doctrinal principle that there
exists on this earth your right man or your right woman designed by God, and no
other person will do. It is not a case of cheap substitutes, it is a case of no
substitutes.
f) Fornication or
adultery is accepting a cheap substitute in order to gratify and emotional or
biological passion. Fornication or adultery is a part of the frantic search for
happiness, the second stage of reversionism.
g) The antidote to
temptation in the area of fornication is found in spiritual growth, super-grace
life, the erection of the ECS, the establishment of a command post in the soul.
h) Under phallic
reversionism fornication builds scar tissue on the soul while destroying the
physical abilities and capabilities in the field of sex.
i) Maximum doctrine
resident in the soul plus abstinence from sex become the basis for maximum
pleasure from sex in category #2 love. The persistence and daily function of
GAP translates the principle of doctrine into the pleasures and realities of a
great capacity for life and a great capacity for happiness.
j) Therefore the
preparation for life is a persistent and daily function of GAP as a member of
the royal family of God. In this way part of the super-grace blessing is this
wonderful blessing of sexual prosperity.
Verse 10b — “for menstealers,” a)ndrapodisthj which means kidnapper. The law is very much
against kidnapping and the abuse of children in any way. Children are to be
disciplined but they are to be protected and never to be abused. They are not
to be abused by kidnapping or stealing, they are not to be abused sexually,
they are not to be abused by lack of discipline. Here the law is very strong
against kidnappers.
“liars” — the dative plural of
disadvantage yeusthj which means liars and
deceivers. This is the habitual sin of lying and deceiving as over against an
occasional sin. We really have the case of a psychopathic liar here.
“for perjured persons” — the dative
plural of disadvantage e)piorkoj — e)pi means over; orkoj
means oath. So over your oath means to violate your oath or perjury: “to
perjurers”, those who lie under oath.
We have enough categories here to
see one of the great thrusts of the Mosaic law as a part of the Word of God,
and one that jumps over the boundaries of dispensational teaching. However,
this is not the type of teaching they were getting in Ephesus. They were
getting teaching that you must keep the law to be saved; you must keep the law
to be spiritual. In other words, they were getting legalism, not this
particular thrust.
“and if” — the continuative use of
the conjunction kai plus the conjunction e)i. E)i introduces a first class condition and it can be
translated, “and whatever [else].”
“there be” is not in the original,
but we do have “any other things,” the nominative neuter singular of the
indefinite pronoun tij. Also with that is the
nominative neuter singular of e(teroj. These words really mean
“whatever else.”
“that is contrary” — the present
active subjunctive from the compound verb a)ntikeimai which means to be hostile or opposed to. The present tense is the
present of duration or the retroactive progressive present, something that has
begun in the past and continues to the present time. The active voice: we have
a middle in form but active in meaning, a deponent verb. The indicative mood is
declarative representing the verbal idea from the viewpoint of reality,
certainty and fact. This is the mood of unqualified assertion, this is a state
of simple fact.
“to sound doctrine” — the dative of
advantage of the definite article plus the dative singular present active
participle of the verb u(giainw. This is a participle which
means to be healthy, to be pure, to be correct. Since we have the ascriptive
use of the participle here, the participle used as an adjective, the participle
simply means “correct.” Then we have the dative of advantage didaskolia which means teaching or doctrine.
Verse 11 — the law is not the means
of salvation. Instead the gospel is said to be the means of salvation, not
condemnation, whereas the law is the means of condemnation, not salvation.
“According to the glorious gospel” —
kata plus the accusative
singular of the definite article plus the accusative singular of the noun e)uaggelion. We also have with that an ablative singular of
source from doca. Altogether it is,
“According to the gospel from the glory.” “The glory” represents the essence of
God. “All have sinned and come short of the glory of God.” The essence of God
is the source of the good news of the gospel. All facets of the gospel,
including redemption, reconciliation, propitiation, are all related to the
essence of God.
The doctrine of the gospel
1. Definition. To define the gospel
you must look at the Greek word — e)uaggelia. It is compounded: e)u means good; a)ggeloj means message or news. The gospel, then, by definition is some kind of
good news: the communication of doctrines pertaining to salvation. Gospel or
good news pertains to the message and communication of doctrines pertaining to
the work of Christ on the cross.
2. The boundaries of the gospel — 1
Corinthians 15:1-4. The first boundary is the fact that Christ died for our
sins, and “according to the scriptures” refers to the Old Testament. It is
taught in the Old Testament as well as in the New. “He was buried” is to
indicate that after He died for our sins He died physically. So we have
spiritual death; physical death. “That he was raised in the third day,
according to the scripture.” So the gospel ends with resurrection. There are
the boundaries. If you go away from the cross you are out of bounds; if you go
away from the physical death you are out of bounds; if you deny the
resurrection you are out of bounds. The playing field with boundaries is from
death to resurrection.
Note that the gospel the fact of sin
or the penalty of sin. These are true doctrines but they are out of the
boundary. In other words, when you give the gospel the doctrine of hamartiology
is true but it is not the gospel. The good news is that Christ did something
about it on the cross. Preaching the gospel is the explanation of salvation in
terms of redemption, reconciliation, and propitiation. The boundaries of the
gospel run from the death of Christ for our sins to the resurrection of Christ.
Those are boundaries.
3. The enemy of the gospel — 2
Corinthians 4:3,4. Satan is the enemy of the gospel.
4. Usage of the word “gospel.”
Gospel is often used with other words. It is used with adjectives, participles,
with all kinds of words. Therefore there are words with most contexts which
describe certain emphases of the gospel. For example:
a) We have “the gospel
of Christ” in Romans 1:16,17. This is emphasis on the person of the gospel.
b) We have the “gospel
from the glory” in 1 Timothy 1:11. This gives us the source of the gospel which
is the essence of God.
c) We have “my gospel”
or “our gospel” as in 2 Timothy 2:8; 2 Corinthians 4:3,4. This emphasises the
fact that the gospel is the same but it belongs to us as believers. We possess
it, therefore we propagate it.
d) We have in Ephesians
6:15 “the gospel of peace.” This is not a different gospel but the emphasis in
this passage is on doctrine and the doctrine is reconciliation.
e) We have “the gospel
of the Kingdom,” the same gospel exactly, found in Matthew 24:14. It emphasises
the fact that the unconditional covenants to Israel are only fulfilled to those
Jews who believe in Christ or appropriate the gospel. That is why it is called
the gospel of the kingdom.
f) In Revelation 14:6 we
have “everlasting gospel,” which is the same gospel but the emphasis is on the
preparation for eternity.
All of these have the word “gospel”
but they have defining words, emphasising words. The content of the gospel
never changes but the emphasis of the gospel changes with the defining words in
context.
5. The attitude toward the gospel is
found in Romans 1:16.
6. The emphasis of the gospel — 1
Corinthians 1:17. Salvation is not by baptism even as salvation is not by
keeping the law. “Not in cleverness of speech.” When you get clever about the
gospel you void the power of the cross.
7. The place for the gospel — Romans
15:20. Proselytising is not preaching the gospel.
8. The gospel without charge — 2
Corinthians 11:7,8.
9. There is a false gospel —
Galatians 1:8.
10. The gospel belongs to the Old
Testament — Galatians 3:8, “preached to Abraham, saying ...”
11. The gospel is revealed by the
Holy Spirit — 1 Peter 1:12.
Verse 11b — ”of the blessed God” —
ablative of source from makarioj. God is the source of
blessing. When makarioj is mentioned it also
indicates something else. It indicates that is His objective where the believer
is concerned. It is God’s objective to bless the believer in the devil’s world.
he can bless you in heaven, he can also bless you in the devil’s world. He can
bless us at any time but He has chosen to bless us on the basis that glorifies
Himself. That is the whole principle of moving toward maturity or the
super-grace life.
Translation: “According to the
gospel from the glory of the God, the source of blessing [or happiness].” The
objective of God is to bless the believer. He is glorified when He can bless
us.
“which” — the accusative neuter
singular from the relative pronoun o(j, and it refers back to the
gospel. It should be translated “with which [gospel]” in the accusative.
“was committed to my trust” should
be translated, “I have been entrusted” — it includes the personal pronoun e)gw in the proleptic position. It indicates great
stress on the apostle Paul as one who responded to his trust. The aorist
passive indicative of pisteuw: we generally translate
this verb “to believe.” However, it is in the passive voice. The aorist tense
is a constative aorist, it contemplates the action of the verb in its entirety.
It contemplates the fact that from the time that Paul was saved until the time
that he died, as one with the spiritual gift of communication, God entrusted
him with doctrine. God has not entrusted anyone except the pastor-teacher. The
pastor-teacher is like the congregation’s trust fund for growing up
spiritually. The passive voice: Paul receives the action of the verb. He is
entrusted with doctrine. The indicative mood is the declarative indicative
viewing the action of the verb from the viewpoint of dogmatic reality.
The passive voice again: doctrine is
entrusted to the pastor-teacher and he must communicate it. That is his
responsibility.
Translation: “According to the
gospel from the glory of the God, source of blessing with which I have been
entrusted.”
Beginning with verse 12 we have a
new paragraph: the purpose of grace — 12-17.
Verse 12 — Paul is going to use
himself as the illustration. “And I thank” — there is no verb here for
thanksgiving. We have Xarin
e)xw, a
noun and a verb. Xarin in the accusative singular
direct object of the noun xarij;
e)xw is the
present active indicative. So it simply says, “I have grace.” But it is
stronger than that and probably is best translated, “I keep having grace.”
There is no conjunction here, so we can cross out the word “and.” The present
tense is the present of duration, sometimes called retroactive progressive
present, denoting what has begun in the past and continues into the present
time. The active voice: Paul produces the action of the verb. The indicative
mood is declarative representing the verbal idea from the viewpoint of reality,
certainty, and absolute unqualified statement. This phrase is an idiom for
gratitude but it is more than that. This is a paragraph of the dynamics of
God’s grace.
The next phrase is the basis for all
of this, it is the dative singular of reference “Christ Jesus our Lord.” It is
also the dative of indirect object, that is, the one for whom the act of grace
is performed. “I keep on having grace toward Christ Jesus our Lord.”
“who hath enabled me” — the
articular dative singular aorist active participle of the verb e)ndunamow. E)n is the preposition; dunomow is power. It means to invigorate, to empower, to
pour power into. The dative singular definite article is used as a
demonstrative pronoun for someone near at hand in the context, namely the Lord
Jesus. It is not used as a relative pronoun as in the KJV translation. The
aorist tense of the participle is constative, it contemplates the action of the
verb in its entirety. In other words, from the time that you believe in the
Lord Jesus Christ to the time that you depart from this earth and live forever
with God in eternity, there never will be a time when He ceases to turn away
grace from you. The active voice: Jesus Christ pours the power into the apostle
Paul who in turn teaches the Word, pours it out. The participle is
circumstantial. This means it also has antecedent action to the main verb.
“I keep on having grace to the one
having poured the power into me to Christ Jesus our Lord.”
The power poured into Paul was Bible
doctrine resident in his soul; he became one of the great writers of the
scripture. The source of the written Word is the living Word, the Lord Jesus
Christ. The pastor must be occupied with the living Word to communicate the
written Word. And so it must be with the congregation. They must be so occupied
with the written Word so as to be occupied with the living Word.
“for that” is the conjunction o(ti used in a causal sense for a subordinate clause. It
should be translated simply, “because.” The cause for doctrine resident in the
soul is the faithfulness and consistency of the apostle Paul as a student of
doctrine and the faithfulness and consistency of God as the provider of
doctrine.
“he counted me” — aorist active
indicative of the verb e(geomai. The word means to think, to
guide, to consider, to be an expert. A guide is an expert, because he knows
something he can direct you to the right spot and explain it all to you, and so
on. This should be translated, “he had considered.” God is the expert, and in
eternity past God looked down the course of history considered and took the
worst human creature who ever lived and made him the greatest man of the Church
Age. That is exactly what grace does. This aorist tense is an occurrence in
eternity, looking at Saul of Tarsus. The active voice: God produced the action
of the verb. The indicative mood is declarative viewing the action of the verb
from the viewpoint in reality. There is something that happened in eternity
before time began.
“me” — the accusative singular
direct object from the pronoun e)gw. E)gw is not pride, it is
self-consciousness. He uses the personal pronoun for himself, and that isn’t
pride. Use of the personal pronoun is just good English/Greek and
self-consciousness.
“faithful” — the accusative singular
direct object from pistoj. Pistoj as an adjective means faithful. It is sometimes
used as a substantive to mean dependable. Whichever is used — dependable,
faithful, or trustworthy — it was the one thing that always characterised Paul
that was totally non-meritorious. Dependability is really the key. You could
always depend on Paul to follow a certain pattern — “he had considered me
dependable.”
“putting me” is erroneous. This is
the aorist middle participle of the verb tiqhmi.
In the middle voice it means to establish. The constative aorist gathers the
action of the verb into one entirety — the establishing of the apostle Paul. He
was established in his lifetime and he is still established to day as the
greatest believer of the Church Age. The indirect middle emphasises the fact
that God in His grace as the agent produced the action, and the action is total
establishment. The participle is circumstantial. We would simply translate it,
“having established me.”
“into the ministry” should be “with
reference to the ministry” — e)ij plus the accusative diakonia.
Translation: “I keep on having grace
to the one having poured the power into me. to Christ Jesus our Lord, because
he considered me faithful [in the function of GAP], having established me with
reference to the ministry.”
Principles
1. Note that this verse is not
referring to the bestowal of the spiritual gift of apostleship which Paul did
receive at the point of salvation. It is referring to something that happened
after salvation, the establishing of Paul as a minister, the establishment of
his ministry. So it is not the gift in view here but the ministry that resulted
from that gift. It is the ministry which is established on the basis of Bible
doctrine in the soul.
2. We must learn to distinguish
between appointment and establishment of the ministry. All pastor-teachers
today receive their appointment at salvation. The spiritual gift of the
pastor-teacher is a communication gift. That is appointment. The establishing
comes with spiritual growth, preparation, faithfulness to the Word. The
establishing is the super-grace status of the pastor-teacher.
3. The appointment occurs at the
moment of salvation. This appointment is the sovereign decision of God the Holy
Spirit who provided for Paul the gift of apostleship and provides for certain
men the gift of pastor-teacher.
4. The establishment of the ministry
comes through the consistent intake of doctrine over a period of time.
5. The inculcation of doctrine
through the daily function of GAP not only results in super-grace status but
establishes the ministry.
6. Note that for all believers the
principle remains the same: Doctrine in the soul must precede service for the
Lord.
7. Doctrine in the soul is the basis
for service and doctrine in the soul establishes the ministry.
Verse 13 — the power of grace. We
start out with the definite article, not the relative pronoun. The definite
article goes with an articular participle here, it is used as a demonstrative
pronoun. The phrase “was before” is a neuter singular from proteroj meaning formerly. Next we have the present active
participle of e)imi, the absolute status quo
verb. Proteroj plus e)imi and the present tense of the participle being a
historic present which views the past event with the vividness of a present
occurrence. The active voice: Paul as an unbeliever produces the action of the
verb. The participle is concessive and you always translate a concessive
participle with the English word “though.” We have to translate this, “Though I
was formerly.”
“a blasphemer” — the accusative of
general reference singular from blasfhmoj. This word means that Paul
was once a slanderous critic of God. The accusative case matches the accusative
case in the participle. So it is not a direct object, it is a predicate
nominative type of thing.
“and a persecutor” — the accusative
singular of reference from diwkthj which means a vigorous
persecutor of the Church.
“and injurious” — another accusative
singular of reference u(bristhj which means “arrogant,
insolent, violent.” But the violence comes from arrogance. U(bristhj means a violent, insolent man.
“Though I was formerly blasphemous
[a slanderous persecutor of God], and a persecutor, and a violent, insolent
man.” This takes us back to some of Paul’s testimony in the book of Acts. For,
example, in Acts 22:3,4; 26:9-11.
“but” is an adversative conjunction a)lla. It sets up a contrast between Paul’s unsaved state
as Saul of Tarsus and his saved state as Paul the apostle.
“I obtained mercy” — the aorist
passive indicative of h)leeo. This means to find mercy.
In the passive voice it means to receive mercy, and to receive mercy means to
be graced out — “but I have been graced out.” The aorist tense is a dramatic
aorist, it states a present reality with the certainty of a past event. This is
an idiomatic device for grace emphasis. This is also a constative aorist which
contemplates the action of the verb in its entirety all the way from saving
grace to living grace, super-grace, dying grace, and surpassing grace. The
indicative mood is declarative for a dogmatic unqualified statement of reality.
“because” — the causal use of the
conjunction o(ti; “I did it” — the aorist
active indicative of the verb poiew which means here to produce
or to cause, rather than to do — “because I produced these things.” The aorist
tense is a constative aorist gathering all of Paul’s arrogant blasphemy, all of
his murders, all of his persecutions of the Church, into one entirety. The
active voice: Saul of Tarsus, the unbeliever, produced the action of the verb.
The indicative mood is for historical reality where Paul was the worst person
who ever lived before his salvation.
“ignorantly” is translated like an
adverb in the KJV, but actually it is a present active participle of the verb a)gnoew. The present tense of the participle is descriptive
or pictorial describing Paul’s continual status as an unbeliever. The active
voice: Paul the unbeliever, a zealous, legalistic Pharisee, produced the action
in ignorance. The participle is a causal participle which should be translated
here, “since being ignorant.”
“I acted in unbelief” is the correct
translation — e)n plus the locative of a)pistia. “Because since being ignorant I acted in
unbelief.”
Unbelief is not only the status of
being unsaved but it is the condition of being totally ignorant of God.
Translation: “Though I was formerly blasphemous [a slanderous critic of God],
and a persecutor, and a violent, insolent person: nevertheless I have been
graced out, because since I was ignorant I acted in unbelief.”
Summary
1. The transformation of Saul of
Tarsus into the apostle Paul was one of the greatest demonstrations of the
power of God’s grace in human history.
2. God’s grace took the worst sinner
and the most evil man in history and transformed him into the greatest member
of the royal family of God. It is strictly a grace function.
3. Only grace could take such a
person and not only save him but continue to mould him into the quintessence of
spiritual greatness.
4. Saul of Tarsus not only took the
road to Damascus but that was the road to saving grace, living grace,
super-grace, dying grace, and surpassing grace.
5. His purpose in taking the road to
Damascus was to extent his ministry of blasphemy, arrogance, violence,
persecution, to all the Church everywhere.
6. But the grace of God changed all
that. Grace found Saul at his lowest and raised Paul to the highest level of
spiritual life.
7. Therefore Paul is the historical
demonstration of the power of God’s grace.
The doctrine of grace
1. Definition:
Grace is all that God is free to do for man
on the basis of the work of Christ on the cross. Grace is the genius of God
directed toward man. Grace is God’s freedom and consistency to express His love
toward mankind without the compromise of His essence. Grace is God finding a
way to bless believers without putting His essence in jeopardy. God gives out
of total freedom because of the cross. God had to be free to give and that
means His essence was not put in jeopardy by giving to sinners. Consequently
grace is the plan of God on behalf of man beginning at the cross. Grace is both
God’s plan and God’s policy regarding mankind. Grace, therefore, is the plan ,
the policy, the function, the mechanics of divine modus operandi in blessing
man. Grace is the genius of God and doctrine is the revelation of that grace
genius. Satan’s genius is evil; God’s genius is grace. Under grace God does all
the work, all the providing; man does all of the receiving, all of the
benefiting , and receives all of the happiness.
2. The concept:
Grace depends on the
essence or character of God. Therefore grace always depends on who and what God
is. Grace is what God can do for man and be consistent with His own essence.
And there is no limit to what God can do for man under the principle of grace.
The issue then: The great enemy of grace is evil. Evil
includes many different types of concepts, everything but sin. Sin and evil
often cross but sin and evil are not the same. Sometimes evil is motivated by
sin but evil and sin must be kept separate.
3. Grace and the new contract for
the Church.
a) The glorification of
Christ by His resurrection, ascension, and session, is the strategic victory in
the angelic conflict. This dramatic victory interrupts the Jewish Age in order
that the royal family of God might be formed to commemorate that victory.
Christ is seated at the right hand of the Father alone. He is the only person
in heaven with a resurrection body. When He sat down He was sitting in His
resurrection body. The only royalty in heaven right now is Jesus Christ, the
King of kings and Lord of lords. So in the future the Rapture of the Church
will occur and at that moment all of the believers of the Church Age will
receive their resurrection bodies and Christ will no longer be alone. Therefore
the Age of Israel was interrupted, it was not finished, the Tribulation will
finish it up. At the point of the interruption God begins to call out the royal
family, the Church Age, which is really the dispensation of the royal family.
When the royal family is completed the Rapture will occur. Then when it is all
over the royal family comes back with Jesus Christ at the end of the Age of
Israel.
The royal family of God is formed by
the baptism of the Holy Spirit and at the same time we are put under the New
Covenant to the Church or the new contract to the royal family. The new
contract is a grace contract, and under all grace contracts party of the first
part is the members of the Godhead; party of the second part: believers, royal
family of God. The royal family receives; doesn’t earn, deserve, but simply
receives by grace.
One of the great aspects of the new
contract is sanctification. For example, positional sanctification. Never
before in history did God take any believer and enter him into union with
Christ. But God the Holy Spirit does it in the Church Age and it is called
baptism of the Holy Spirit. In other words, baptism means to be entered into
union/identification with Christ. At the point at which we believe God the Holy
Spirit enters us into union with the person of Christ. This is called
positional sanctification.
b) The second paragraph
in the new covenant provides for the tactical victory of the angelic conflict
and basically this is the doctrine of the balance of residency.
c) The third paragraph
is ultimate sanctification, it deals with eternity. Again, we have been graced
out forever. The royal family of God receives a resurrection body exactly like
that of Jesus Christ, minus the old sin nature, minus human good, minus evil,
minus the lake of fire.
5. There are five stages in the
function of grace.
a) Stage one is saving
grace, that is what Paul is discussing in this paragraph of our chapter. Every
believer has tasted the grace of God at least once in his life. That once was
the day he personally believed in Jesus Christ. Salvation is called tasting
both in Hebrews 6:4 and in 1 Peter 2:3. We have all tasted grace. The point is,
once you have tasted grace the amazing this is when you don’t want more of it.
Once you have tasted grace you should never, never think of anything else but
how wonderful grace is and want to know more about it. So the moment of
salvation brings the believer to that first taste of grace. In that first sip
of grace by which we are saved we just simply say, “Father I believe in
Christ.” The moment we do we receive from God at least 36 things which are
irrevocable and they cannot be canceled by anything that we can ever do.
because of propitiation every believer is also under maximum love from God, and
maximum love from God frees God to pour out maximum grace. The pattern remains
the same. We are saved by grace therefore we can only be blessed by grace. All
of our blessing is related to the same principle by which we were saved. Therefore,
of course, we move into the next stage of grace.
Grace can only benefit where there
is capacity for grace. All capacity for grace is based on Bible doctrine in the
soul. Capacity for grace, like capacity for life, is always based upon the
amount of doctrine in your soul and to what extent you are influenced by
doctrine in your life.
So the point is obvious. The
believer is saved by grace, all of the Trinity are involved in this. The Father
planned it, the Son executed it on the cross, the Holy Spirit reveals it.
b) The next stage is
living grace. Living grace is all that God is free to do for the believer on
the basis of Bible doctrine. God does something totally apart from any merit,
like keeping us alive on this earth. God provides for everything. He provides for
spiritual growth by means of a right pastor-teacher, a classroom called the
local church, a textbook called the Word of God. He provides every thing
necessary through the Holy Spirit instinctive good manners, concentration,
poise, academic discipline. For the negative believer God also provides
something, and that is divine discipline. So He provides two kinds of academic
training: classroom academic training or disciplinary training.
c) The third stage of
grace is super-grace which is synonymous with maturity. in 1 Timothy 1:14
super-grace is described as abundance. Super-grace is the adult stage of
spiritual growth attendant by maximum blessing from God which glorifies God.
Super-grace is the ultimate is spiritual growth in time, it is the basis for
the normal function of the royal priesthood. It is the way in which God can
provide maximum blessing which glorifies Himself.
d) The fourth stage is
dying grace. This is the transfer from time to eternity by way of dying
blessing. Dying grace is the experience of physical death under special grace
provision. However, it is not always accomplished by death. There are some
cases where dying grace is walking over the high golden bridge while you are
still alive, like Enoch and Elijah, and like super-grace believers at the time
of the Rapture. But it is better than anything in life. Dying grace is better,
surpassing grace is better than the best (super-grace is best).
e) The next stage is
surpassing grace. This is the final stage of special blessing and reward for
all eternity.
4. The modus vivendi of grace. Grace
is the means of growth — 2 Peter 3:18. This is the basis for stability —
Hebrews 13:9. Your stability comes through grace. It is grace stability that
keeps you consistent in the intake of doctrine. 1 Peter 5:12 — “stand fast in
it.”
5. Grace is also then basis for
production — 1 Corinthians 15:10. The failure to utilise grace — Galatians 5:4.
6. Grace in suffering — 2
Corinthians 12:7-10.
7. The axioms of grace.
a) God is perfect, His
plan is perfect.
b) A perfect plan can
only originate and function from the source of perfect God.
c) If mankind can do
even one meritorious thing in the plan of God that plan is no longer perfect
because man is imperfect, he cannot contribute to a perfect plan. Imperfection
cannot contribute to perfection.
d) A plan is not
stronger than its weakest link. There are no weak links in God’s plan.
e) Grace excludes all
human merit and ability, all human good and legalism, all self-righteousness
and arrogance, all evil.
f) Legalism is the
special enemy of grace, there is no place for legalism and human good in the
plan of God.
g) All legalism and
human good is associated with the great mental attitude sin of pride. Arrogance
is where evil and sin cross. Arrogance is the motivator of most types of evil.
Arrogance was the motivator of evil in the Satanic revolution against God and
arrogance was the motivation of evil in man’s fall.
8. Four areas in which pride or
arrogance rejects grace:
a) The pride of the
believer who rejects the doctrine of eternal security. The believer who rejects
eternal security thinks that his sins are greater than the plan of God. He is
the kind of person who thinks that he must do something to contribute to the
plan and his failure to contribute is his sin, therefore he assumes that his
failure to contribute cancels the plan. In other words, the old idea “it all
depends on me.” Nothing depends on me, it all depends on God.
b) The pride of the
believer who succumbs to pressure or adversity. He thinks that his sufferings
and adversity are greater than the provision of God, mentioned in 2 Corinthians
12:7-10.
c) The pride of evil
which is also the pride of reversionism. The pride of evil is to assume that your
thoughts are more important than Bible doctrine, that your opinions are more
important than Bible doctrine, that what you think is more important than what
the Word of God says. That is the pride of evil.
d) The pride of
pseudo-spirituality. This is the believer who thinks that his system of energy
of the flesh spirituality is greater than the true function of the Holy Spirit
in his life. In his arrogance he becomes a holy roller, or he enters into some
form of taboos or, some form of asceticism, or some point program which
impresses him or others and therefore he assumes it impresses God.
Verse 14 — the perpetuation of
grace. It begins with the conjunctive particle de
used as a transitional particle. it is used under the translation, “Moreover
the grace of our Lord.”
“was exceeding abundant” — the
aorist active indicative from u(perpleonazw. This is a compound made up
of the word u(per, the preposition “over,”
and the verb pleonazw which means to increase or
to abound. The entire word means to “superabound.” The aorist tense is a
culminative aorist, it views the action of the verb in its entirety but regards
it from the viewpoint of its existing results, i.e. super-grace status. The
aorist denotes the process of GAP, resulting in taking the high ground and
holding it. The active voice: grace produces the action of the verb: saving
grace, living grace, GAP. The indicative mood is declarative for absolute
dogmatic reality. It should be translated, “Moreover the grace of our had
superabounded.”
“with faith” — meta plus the genitive singular of pistij, and it should be translated “with doctrine [what
is believed].”
“and love” — the genitive singular
of a)gaph which is the object of the
preposition meta.
Meta with
the genitive has one meaning, with the accusative it means something entirely
different. It should be translated “with love” or “associated with love.” The
principle here is category #1 love, our great objective. When we reach that
category and fulfill it we then have the capacity for living; we have the
capacity for love, capacity for happiness, the capacity for every blessing that
God could ever give us. Blessing is wasted on those who do not have the
capacity for the blessing.
Category #1 love
1. Definition. Love comes in three
categories for the royal family of God. Category #1 is directed toward God;
Category #2, right man or right woman; Category #3, friendship. In addition to
that are obligatory type loves: relaxed mental attitude toward all members of
the royal family of God, commonly called “loving the brethren.”
Category #1 love is the believer’s
capacity to love God, and the believer’s capacity to respond to God’s love
based on Bible doctrine. “We love him because He first loved us.” This category
is perhaps the most difficult because it demands that we have Bible doctrine in
the soul. Category #2 love does not call for Bible doctrine. The unbeliever
actually has the opportunity of enjoying category #2 love. He experiences
category #2 love and doctrine is not necessarily the issue. Also, category #3
love or friendship is open to unbelievers. But category #1 love is unique. In
this dispensation it belongs to the royal family of God only and it requires
maximum doctrine in the soul. While love does not make the world go around love
makes our world function., and especially category #1. When the believer
reaches maturity, known as the super-grace status, this category #1 is called
also occupation with Christ. The command for it is found in Deuteronomy 6:5 —
“power” simply refers to doctrine resident in the soul.
2. The means of category #1 love.
The means is expressed under the principle that God is invisible. Not only is
God invisible but God is unknowable by human systems of perception. The
invisibility of God also has a corollary. God is His essence is sovereignty,
absolute righteousness, justice, love, eternal life, omnipotence, omniscience,
omnipresence, immutability, veracity. We know these things because of pertinent
doctrine, but God is unknowable and invisible. Rationalism cannot know God. The
same thing is true of empiricism. Neither empiricism nor rationalism are
capable of understanding God in any way. Nor is faith in the unbeliever. The
unbeliever also has faith, everyone has faith, it is the basic system of
perception. But unbeliever faith definitely cannot understand God. None of
these systems can even give us the beginning of an understanding of God. God
must reveal Himself, and one of the sovereign decisions of God was to reveal
Himself to the believer. The unbeliever cannot understand the things of the
Spirit of God, they are foolishness unto him; neither can he know them because
they are learned by the Spirit. But God has revealed Himself to the believer
and in our dispensation we have the completed canon of scripture as the means
by which He does. No one can understand God, and therefore no one can know God,
apart from Bible doctrine in the soul. And, by the way, you can’t love someone
until you know them and have some understanding of them. You do not love God
because you’re saved. The day that we received Christ as saviour we didn’t know
God at all, we just knew that Christ was our saviour and we believed in Him. We
knew absolutely nothing., and our capacity to love God was exactly the same as
a baby’s capacity to love its parents. That is the way we are, we are spiritual
babies, and when we are born again we do not have any capacity, we do not have
any love for God. Since God is invisible and since at the same time God is the
object of category #1 love we must see and love Him through the Word and/or
Bible doctrine resident in the soul. You cannot love God unless you know God;
you cannot know God unless you have maximum doctrine resident in your soul. You
cannot have doctrine resident in your soul apart from the daily function of
GAP. So coming to love God is not an easy thing, it requires many, many hours
of Bible study. 1 Peter 1:8; Ephesians 3:18,19 — “the surpassing knowledge-love
of Christ.” The principle is also found in Hebrews 6:10; 2 Timothy 1:13,14.
3. Category #1 love sets up the
standard for grace — Psalm 119:132; 31:23 [the “arrogant-doers” are
reversionists].
4. Category #1 love is the basis for
super-grace blessing — 1 Corinthians 2:9 [Isaiah 64:4; 65:17]. Blessings come
from maximum love of Him. If you are influenced by doctrine it is inevitable
that you are going to be blessed by God, and that you will not only be blessed
but have the capacity for it. If you are influenced by evil it is also
inevitable that your life is going to be miserable and that your life will wind
up under maximum discipline, your life is going to be one of a constant curse —
constant misery and constant discipline — and you are minus category #1 because
evil is also a minus doctrine situation. So the principle is that your occupation
with Christ, maximum category #1 love, also is related to maximum blessing, all
that God has prepared for those who love Him. Psalm 37:4,5 uses the background
of right man, right woman. When it says “Delight thyself also in the Lord” it
is incorrect. It is the hithpael imperative of anag and in the hithpael stem it means to make love. It is actually
used for the category #2 amorous behaviour. It also means to take an exquisite
delight in someone. “And he will give you the desires of your right lobe has to
do with the super-grace blessings that come from maximum category #1 love.
“Commit your way to the Lord [daily function of GAP], trust also in Him, He
will do the work.” He works to provide you blessing.
5. Category #1 is also the basis for
both personal and national blessing, as in several verses in Deuteronomy 30.
For example, verse 15 which gives alternatives. Attitude toward doctrine
determines whether we are influenced by doctrine or influenced by evil. Evil is
the genius of Satan; doctrine is the way in which the genius of our Lord is
revealed — grace. Verse 16 — category #1 love. Verse 20 — by loving the Lord,
by obeying His doctrine, by holding fast to Him in category #1 love, this is
your life. “your length of days, in order that may live in the land which the
Lord has promised to you and your ancestors ...”
6. Category #1 love motivates combat
courage as well as military victory — Joshua 23:10,11. One super-grace believer
puts to flight a thousand enemy soldiers.
7. Category #1 love provides
strength for adversity and pressure — Hebrews 11:27.
8. There is a special curse on
believers who fail category #1 love — 1 Corinthians 16:22. In other words, if
you don’t love the Lord you are going to be influenced by evil. If you’re
influenced by evil your life is under a curse. This dramatises the divine
discipline to the believer who neglects Bible doctrine and falls into
reversionism.
9. Witnessing must be motivated by
category #1 love, not by the boys or the girls of some rah, rah, rah
organisation — 2 Corinthians 5:14, “the love of Christ controls us.” This is
what is wrong with witnessing today. The believer is encouraged and bullied
into witnessing as a means of spirituality when he is totally ignorant of
doctrine and has never been encouraged to GAP it. We must be motivated by love
to witness for the Lord. You can’t love the Lord Jesus Christ unless you have
doctrine in your soul.
10. The description of category #1
love is found in 1 John 4:15-19. Verse 16 — “we have come to know.”
“love” here in verse 14 is category
#1 love, occupation with Christ. Love must have two things. No matter what
category it is it must have security and privacy.
“which is” — there is no verse here,
it is used to smooth out the translation and is legitimate in that sense. We
have the definite article used as a relative pronoun.
“in Christ Jesus” — there is love in
its best concept of security and privacy. Each one of us is in Christ Jesus, e)n plus the locative. There are two principles that
come out of this: the doctrine of positional truth and the doctrine of the
royal family of God. Being in Christ is also security, every security
imaginable.
Translation: “Moreover the grace of
our Lord had superabounded with doctrine and love which is in Christ Jesus.”
This verse tells what happened after
salvation. The key is the verb u(perpleonazw which means to superabound.
Through the faithful intake of doctrine saving grace is parlayed into
super-grace. In the status of spiritual maturity grace superabounds. This is
accomplished with doctrine resident in the soul plus resultant occupation with
the person of Jesus Christ.
Verse 15 — this is a very poor
translation in the KJV. It starts pistoj o(
logoj, this
is the name of a hymn here. It means “faithful is the word.” This was Paul’s
favourite hymn. This phrase or title of the hymn occurs five times in the
pastoral epistles: 1 Timothy 1:15; 3:1; 4:9; Titus 3:8; 2 Timothy 2:11. It is
interesting to note that the literal title of the hymn id “Faithful is the
doctrine.” In each of these five references some aspect of the faithfulness of
doctrine is discussed. Here is the faithfulness of doctrine related to saving
grace. Remember that is simply a title and a reference to the hymn.
“and worthy of all acceptation” — kai pashj a)podoxhj a)cioj, “and worthy of unqualified
acceptance.” We have the genitive of paj and a)podoxh. With it we also have a)cioj
used in describing things in relationship to things. The word “all” here is not
all, paj is usually translated “all”
but it here with a)podxh which means “acceptance” it
means “unqualified.” The word a)cioj is “worthy.”
Now he goes back to the hymn. Title
of the hymn: “Faithful is the word/doctrine.” Paul adds “worthy of [your]
unqualified acceptance.” Now he goes to the word which starts the quotation of
the hymn. The word “that” is the conjunction o(ti
used as quotation marks or to show the content of the hymn. This indicates the
content of what is worthy of unqualified acceptance on the part of all members
of the royal family of God.
Xristoj I)hsouj {Christ Jesus], emphasising the hypostatic union,. Christ as the
God-Man.
“came” — aorist active indicative of
the verb e)rxomai which means to come or to
go. The aorist tense is a culminative aorist, it views the action of the verb
in its entirety all the way from the incarnation and going all the way to the
end of the cross, resurrection, ascension and session — Christ coming into the
world — all of the way through the first advent but regarding it from the
viewpoint of existing results. The entire first advent had results, so this is
a culminative aorist tense emphasising the results of the first advent —
eternal salvation on the cross emphasised here. The active voice: Christ
produced the action. The indicative mood is declarative representing the verbal
idea from the viewpoint of unqualified reality.
“into the world” — the preposition e)ij plus the accusative of kosmoj.
This is the devil’s world, the devil’s kingdom. Satan is the ruler of this
world. The other side of the coin is found in Hebrews 10:1-10. And Christ
finally came into the cosmos as a member of the human race and He came to save.
“to save” — aorist active infinitive
of swzw used here for eternal
salvation. The aorist tense is also a culminative aorist viewing the work of
Christ on the cross in its entirety but regarding it from the viewpoint of
actual result. We have two aorists in this verse. One starts from the
incarnation and goes down to the cross, and this second one simply covers the
cross. We are now picking up the cross here and moving it into a second
culminative aorist. A culmination of two culminative aorists is very unusual
and wouldn’t be possible except that one is in the indicative and one is in the
infinitive. The active voice: again Christ produces the action, on the cross
this time. In the other one it was simply the incarnation in general. Now we
have the infinitive and this is a result infinitive. The problem is there are
three kinds of result infinitives. There is the conceived result {not here],
the intended result when the result is represented as fulfilling a very
deliberate aim or goal. This blends purpose and result, but it isn’t used here.
This is an actual result. The infinitive related to the indicative mood of two
culminative aorists always gives us an actual result. Christ came into the
world to save, that is an actual result.
“sinners” — the accusative plural
direct object of the infinitive, a(martwloj which means “sinning ones”
or “sinful ones.” A(martwloj, if it is taken as an
adjective, simply means sinners, but here it is taken as a substantive and it
means “sinning ones.” The adjective applies to the entire human race. The human
race is sinful because of Adam’s sin which is imputed to each one of us at the
point of our physical birth. The human race is sinful because each one receives
the old sin nature at the point of human birth. And the human race is sinful
because each one of us commits personal sins, and this is dealing with the
personal sins from which Christ saved us. The whole thing is involved but the
personal sins were the judgment of the Christ, the principle that Christ bore
our sins in His own body on the tree.
“of whom” is the genitive plural of
reference from the relative pronoun o(j. The relative pronoun here refers
to the sinful ones — “with reference to which sinful ones.” It is a genitive of
reference.
“I am” — present active indicative
of the absolute status quo verb e)imi, the verb to be. This is
without equivocation. This is a static present., it represents a condition as
perpetually existing. Paul will always be the worst sinner who ever lived. He
becomes a trophy of grace, the monument of saving grace in human history has
already been saved. Paul produces the action of the verb as the worst sinner in
history. The indicative mood is declarative, this is an unqualified assertion
of face. There never was anyone as bad as Paul.
Now we have the predicate adjective prwtoj, translated “chief.” It connotes “foremost.”
The word “chief”
1. The predicate adjective prwtoj connotes foremost or most prominent in rank and
degree.
2. By degree is meant above all,
first place, or record-holder.
3. Paul therefore is the worst
sinner in all of human history.
4. Paul was the chief or foremost
sinner because he was more saturated with religion than anyone who ever lived.
5. Since religion is the devil’s ace
trump and one of the worst forms of evil it is religion that makes Paul the
worst of sinners.
6. Saul of Tarsus, then, was the
most religious, therefore the most evil, therefore the record-holder in the
field of sinning ones. Paul isn’t bragging, he is simply stating fact in order
to illustrate how great is grace.
7. God took the worst man who ever
lived and made him the greatest believer.
8. This is the illustration of the
transforming power of God’s grace, and therefore the transforming power of
doctrine. The principle is grace, the mechanics doctrine.
9. If God can save the worst sinner
who ever lived, God can save anyone. If He transforms by grace the foremost of
sinners in the human race He can through grace transform anyone of us.
Translation; “Faithful is the
doctrine, and worthy of unqualified acceptance, that Christ Jesus has come into
the world to save sinful ones; with reference to which [sinful ones] I keep on
being the record-holder.”
Verse 16 — the prototype of grace.
“Howbeit” — the adversative conjunctive particle a)lla,
it always is used to set up a contrast or a transition. In this case we have
the transitional use and it should be “Nevertheless.”
“for this cause” — the preposition dia plus the neuter singular accusative of the
demonstrative pronoun o(utoj. Literally, it means
“because of this,” but the preposition is idiomatic and it actually means “for
this reason.”
“I obtained mercy” — the aorist
passive indicative of the verb e)leew. In the active voice this
word means to show mercy or to express grace, but in the passive voice it means
to receive or find mercy. We would say to be graced out. The aorist tense is a
dramatic aorist, it states a present reality with the certitude of a past
event, and it is an idiom or a device for grace emphasis. This is also a
constative aorist which contemplates the action of the verb in its entirety,
including saving grace, living grace, and all of the other factors of Paul’s
blessing in time. The passive voice: Paul received the action of the verb. So
the constative aorist contemplates the first three stages of the grace plan —
saving grace, living grace, super-grace. The indicative mood is declarative
representing the verbal idea from the viewpoint of grace reality.
“Nevertheless, for this reason I have been graced out.”
“that” is the conjunction i(na introducing a purpose clause. I(na plus the subjunctive in the verb is what is called
a final clause expressing aim, purpose, goal, or objective.
“in me first” — the preposition e)n plus the locative of e)gw
plus the locative of prwtoj.
Prwtoj is a
technical word in Timothy, in this passage it means record-holder. It should be
translated, “in me, the record-holder.” Paul was the worst sinner in the record
books and he is the great trophy of God’s grace. God took the worst person who
ever lived and made him the greatest of believers. This was accomplished
through the principle of grace and the mechanics of Bible doctrine in his soul.
So Paul is the product of what grace can do. He is the prototype, the eternal
illustration of the transforming power of Bible doctrine resident in the soul.
More than anyone who ever lived Paul was a man of doctrine, doctrine was truly
his life.
“Jesus Christ might show forth” —
the subject is I)hsouj
Xristoj. I)hsouj emphasises the first advent and the objective of providing salvation
for the human race. It is taken from the Hebrew “Joshua”; it means saviour in
the Greek even as Joshua means saviour in the Hebrew. Xristoj emphasises the second advent. It means anointed
one. When Christ came the fist time He came as saviour; when He comes again the
second time He comes as the anointed one. He is the son of David. Just as David
was anointed king so Jesus Christ was anointed, and Xristoj means Messiah, anointed one. The Davidic covenant is fulfilled in the
word Xristoj. He is the Messiah, the son
of David, the one anointed in the line of David to reign over Israel during the
Millennium and then for all eternity.
In addition to this we have a verb —
“might show forth,” the aorist middle subjunctive of the verb e)ndeiknumi which means to demonstrate something by means of
someone. Christ demonstrated grace by means of Paul. That is what this passage
is about in the prototype of grace. Jesus Christ demonstrated grace by means of
Saul of Tarsus who became Paul the apostle. The aorist tense of e)ndeiknumi is constative, it contemplates the action of the
verb in its entirety. This demonstration of grace covers the span of time and
eternity and is gathered up into a single whole by the constative aorist. The
middle voice is permissive in which Jesus Christ secures the results of the
action in His own interest. He uses Paul to demonstrate grace but it is in the
interest of Jesus Christ that we have this great prototype. The subjunctive
mood is a part of the purpose clause in which the divine objective or purpose
is delineated.
“all longsuffering” — the word “all”
is the accusative singular direct object from a(paj meaning
“entire,” plus the accusative singular direct object of the definite article
used as a possessive pronoun: “his entire,” plus the accusative singular direct
object from the noun makroqumia, meaning patience,
steadfastness, endurance. It should be translated, “his perfect patience.”
“for a pattern” — now we come to the
prototype, proj plus the accusative of u(potupwsij. The word means a delineation, a pattern, a model,
an example, or a prototype. The best translation here is prototype since it
includes an original or model after which everything else is copied.
Principles
1. Being the record-holder or the
worst of sinners Paul becomes an example, model, pattern, prototype of God’s
perfect patience. If God did not run out of patience with Saul of Tarsus He
won’t run out of patience with you.
2. If God can save Paul through the
blood of Christ God can save anyone through the blood of Christ. The worst
sinner in history has already been saved.
3. The prototype of worst sinner in
history has come and gone.
4. He made his record as the worst
sinner, then believed in Christ, and broke a new record and became the greatest
believer for saturation of doctrine.
5. Like all who believe in Christ
for salvation he, the worst, was saved.
6. The prototype has been saved by
grace through faith, the pattern of God’s grace has been established.
7. There will never be a worse
person than Paul. If the worst person can be saved by the cross then all of us
inferior types can also be saved — inferior in the sense that he was the worst,
we cannot be the worst.
8. The greatest challenge of grace,
therefore, was the foremost sinner Saul of Tarsus.
9. The challenge was met and
overcome on the road to Damascus.
10. But the prototype of grace
continues with the fact that the foremost sinner, the record-holder, became the
greatest believer of the Church Age and one of the all-time great believers.
11. For Paul converted, living grace
is parlayed into super-grace through the establishing of the command post of
his soul. This command post was composed of maximum resident doctrine,
including more about the doctrine of the mystery than anyone who has ever
lived.
“to them which should hereafter
believe” — this includes the articular present active participle of the verb mellw which means to be about to be. It is often
translated “about to.” With it we have the definite article, a genitive plural
of reference of the definite article used as a demonstrative pronoun. It is the
remote type for that which is relatively distant, like the 20th century
believer. So, “to them who are about to.” The futuristic present denotes an
event which has not yet occurred but is regarded as so certain that in thought
it is contemplated as already existing. The active voice: all Church Age
believers produce the action of the verb when they understand this passage.
This is a circumstantial participle connoting predestination or foreordination.
With this is the present active infinitive of pisteuw which means to believe — “to them who are about to” means “to them who
are destined to believe.” Paul didn’t know us personally but God knew in
eternity past that we would believe.
“on him” — the preposition e)pi plus the locative of the intensive pronoun autoj. E)pi is an interesting
preposition. Certain little things must be remembered. E)pi with the genitive emphasises contact; with the
locative case emphasises position; with the accusative case emphasises motion
or direction. Here we have e)pi plus the locative case which
emphasises position. The function of the intensive pronoun is to emphasise the
identity of the one and only saviour, the Lord Jesus Christ. It should be
translated “in him.”
“to life everlasting” — another
prepositional phrase, e)ij plus the accusative of zwh — “for life”; and with that an adjective, a)iwnioj which means eternal — “for eternal life.”
Translation: “Nevertheless for this
reason I have been graced out in order that in me the record-holder, the
foremost sinner, Jesus Christ might have demonstrated his perfect patience, as
a prototype to them who are destined to believe in him for eternal life.”
Note that in this verse both the
divine side of salvation, which is predestination, and the human side of
salvation, faith in Christ, are mentioned.
The human side of salvation
1. Clearly stated in this verse the
human side of salvation is faith in Jesus Christ: the verb pisteuw, to believe.
2. Faith is a non-meritorious system
of perception in contrast to rationalism and empiricism.
3. The present active infinitive of pisteuw is a transitive verb. This means that the pisteuw has a subject and an object stated or implied. All
transitive verbs have a subject and an object.
4. The subject of pisteuw in salvation is any member of the human race. The
object is always the same, the Lord Jesus Christ the only saviour.
5. All the believing in the world
provides nothing but condemnation from God. You can believe in anything you
want to and all you have is condemnation from God. We all believe, we all have
objects of faith from time to time. Believing is the most common type of
perception, it is the normal system of perception for all of us in the learning
process.
6. However, the tiniest faith in
Jesus Christ secures eternal salvation. In other words, all you have to do is
have is as much faith as you would find in the nucleus of an atom, just a
little more than no faith.
7. The efficacy of faith lies in the
object of faith, Jesus Christ.
8. Since Christ accomplished all the
work of salvation on the cross the only way of salvation is to believe in Jesus
Christ.
9. Therefore faith is not something
we do but the channel by which we appropriate what God has done for us. E.g.
John 3:16-18; 6:47.
The divine side of salvation
In eternity past the omniscience of
God had the good sense to know that certain members of the human race would
believe in Jesus Christ — Ephesians 1:3-9.
Verse 17 — the doxology. “Now unto
the King” starts out with the post positive conjunction de used as a transitional
particle to introduce Paul’s burst of praise for the fact that, he, the worst
unbeliever who ever lived was not too sinful for the grace of God.
We have also the dative of the
indirect object of the noun basileuj, indicating the Father as
the member of the trinity for whom the praise is given. He is called “King”
here which is not quite what it means. Basileuj also means sovereign, and it is the sovereignty of God the Father
which is in focus at this point: “Now to the sovereign.”
“eternal” is the descriptive
genitive plural a)iwn — “sovereign of the ages.”
God the Father is the King or the sovereign of dispensations. In the
dispensation in which we find ourselves we have the record-holder of all time
in two areas — the worst sinner and the one who knew more doctrine than any other
believer in history. Satan is the ruler of the world but God the Father is the
sovereign of the ages, and Jesus Christ controls history.
“immortal” — dative of indirect
object from the noun a)fqartoj
which means
immortal or incorruptible. It means here “incorruptible one.” The Koine Greek
took its adjectives and often used them as a substantive, and that is exactly
what we have here. As the sovereign of the dispensations God the Father cannot
be corrupted by evil, He is totally free from evil, it is impossible for Him to
be corrupted by any creature, and the greatest of all creatures is Satan, the
father of evil. God can exercise His sovereignty without jeopardising or
compromising His essence. This He does throughout human history.
“invisible” — dative of indirect
object from a)oratoj. It means “the invisible
one.” God the Father has never been seen.
“the only wise God” — dative of
indirect object from the adjective monoj, meaning here “unique.” But
the adjective here is used as a substantive. This only happens in the Koine
Greek. Therefore it is translated “the unique one” or “the unique God.” God is
unique in every sense.
This is, of course, a burst of
praise directed to God the Father. His uniqueness comes from His volition. His
volition is always in existence, there never was a time when the sovereignty of
God did not exist. “honour and glory” — timh kai doca, predicate nominatives.
Translation: “Now to the sovereign
of the ages, incorruptible, invisible, unique God, be honour and glory forever
and ever. Amen [I believe it].”
This is written as a result of
grace. Grace is the genius of God, just as evil is the genius of Satan. Grace
is manifest through doctrine; evil is manifest through everything from socialism,
welfare, etc.
This is really the end of the
introduction. The rest of this epistle is a series of orders to a weak-sistered
wimp by the name of Timothy, a person who was brilliant academically but a
person who had a hard time applying what he knew. He was afraid of people.
Verse 18 — “This charge” is the
accusative singular from the demonstrative pronoun o(utoj. O(utoj means near at hand; plus the accusative singular of paraggelia which means command, a very strong command. It is
to be obeyed without question, it demands instant obedience. Everything in
Timothy demands instant obedience.
“I commit” — the present middle
indicative of paratiqhmi. This is a banking term
which means to deposit. He is making a deposit. Notice that the demonstrative
pronoun o(utoj is in the accusative, it is
not the subject. Also, paraggelia is the accusative. They are
the direct objects of the verb paratiqhmi, and so it should be
translated “I am depositing this order.” The present tense is the aoristic
present, punctiliar action in present time. The middle voice is the indirect
middle, stressing the agent Paul as producing the action. He is using his rank.
The indicative mood is declarative for unqualified dogmatic assertion from a
direct order, a series of direct orders in written command form.
“unto thee” is not correct. This is
the dative case, indirect object, of the personal pronoun su and it should be translated “with you.”
“son Timothy” — teknon means “son” all right but it also has another
meaning, a student. Teaching is a job for the pastor-teacher. Teknon means a student without portfolio. Timothy is
Paul’s student. Paul is using his academic authority to deposit a series of
commands with Timothy, and at the same time with us.
“according to the prophecies” —
there were no prophecies out on Timothy. This is the preposition kata plus the accusative plural of the present active
participle proagw. The participle is
sometimes used as an adjective, and so it is here. It should be “with reference
to previous.” The final word is the noun that goes with the participial use of
the adjective — profhteia which refers to the Old
Testament doctrinal class. Paul taught Timothy Old Testament doctrine. So,
“with reference to previous prophecy.”
“which went before on thee” should
be “communicated to you.” It is the preposition e)pi
plus the accusative of the personal pronoun su.
E)pi plus the accusative
emphasises direction. He was taught these things. They aren’t about him, they
are taught to him. It is a reference to Paul’s academic teaching of Timothy.
Timothy had been Paul’s theological student. Paul now commands Timothy to apply
what he has learned. Timothy must be influenced by doctrine rather than by
evil. Doctrine must become Timothy’s life, it must become more important than
anything else in life, and that has not occurred just yet. He is ahead
academically, he is behind in application.
“in order that” — the conjunction i(na introduces a purpose clause, a final clause which
denotes purpose, goal, objective.
“by them mightest war” — e)n plus the instrumental plural of the intensive
pronoun a)utoj. This means by the same
inculcated doctrine. With this is the present middle subjunctive of strateuw. It means to enter combat, to serve, and so on. The
present tense is customary present to denote what may be reasonably expected to
occur when you have doctrine in the soul. The middle voice is the indirect
middle emphasising Timothy as producing the action as the agent rather than by
participating in the results of the action. The subjunctive mood is used for
part of the purpose clause with i(na. Then there is the cognate
accusative strateia which means combat or
campaign, and with it is an adjective also in the accusative, kaloj, which means “honourable” here. It does not mean to
fight a good fight, this is an idiom for honourable combat experience. That is
the problem at this point, he does not have honourable combat experience
because he has not learned to apply doctrine.
Translation: “I am depositing this
order with you, student Timothy, on the basis of previous prophecies [Old
Testament doctrines] taught to you, in order that by these same inculcated
doctrines you might have honourable combat experience.”
Summary
1. This first order deposited with
Timothy embraces the entire epistle. Every command from now on in 1 Timothy is
a new paragraph in this field order from headquarters.
2. The epistle is written like a
postgraduate correspondence course.
3. Paul the human author is the
professor and Timothy is the teknon, the student under strict
academic discipline.
4. The combat experience is a
reference to Timothy’s ministry in Ephesus and the whole surrounding area
related to the angelic conflict.
5. Honourable combat experience
reduces itself to the believer in phase two/time being influenced by doctrine
rather than by evil.
6. The believer influenced by
doctrine receives blessing which glorifies God.
7. The believer influenced by evil
receives cursing and discipline in the plan of God.
8. The believer influenced by
doctrine reaches super-grace or spiritual maturity.
9. The believer influenced by evil
passes through the various stages of reversionism and divine discipline
culminating in the sin unto death.
10. The believer influenced by
doctrine has both dying grace and eternal reward in phase three. The believer
influenced by evil has painful disciplinary death and no reward in eternity.
The doctrine of evil
Introduction
1. Evil is a factor the believer
must face which was not judged on the cross — Hebrews 5:13,14. The mature or
super-grace believer can distinguish between honourable and evil things. He is
influenced by doctrine rather than being influenced by evil. This gives him the
ability to make the greatest distinction of the Church Age, the distinction
between honour and evil.
2. The mature believer rightly
divides the Word of truth so that he correctly distinguishes between sin and
evil which both have their sources in Satan but have different sources in the
human soul. In the human soul sin comes from the old sin nature, evil comes
from the heart or the right lobe of the mentality of the soul.
3. This verse suggests that the
mature believer distinguishes between doctrine as the manifestation of God’s
grace and evil as the manifestation of Satan’s genius.
4. God’s grace, therefore, is the
manifestation of God’s genius while evil is the manifestation of Satan’s
genius.
5. The balance residence in the
believer’s soul avoids thinking evil — 1 Corinthians 13:5. The body is balanced
out at the point of salvation by the indwelling of the Holy Spirit. There is a
problem in the soul. The problem is in the balance of residency. Whenever a
believer is in fellowship he is filled with the Holy Spirit. When he is out of
fellowship he is said to be quenching or grieving the Spirit which indicates
that the Holy Spirit has no control of the soul. You cannot lose the indwelling
of the Holy Spirit but you can lose the Spirit’s control of the soul through
sin or the influence of evil, or a combination of both. So that immediately we
have a soul out of trim, and in order to trim it up there must be a balance. So
we have a minus doctrine as we begin our spiritual life and that minus doctrine
must become plus. The filling of the Spirit plus maximum doctrine in the soul
equals the balance of residency of the soul and/or experiential sanctification.
6. Sincere do-gooders impress people
at Easter, Christmas, and at other times. Sincere do-gooders practice evil —
Romans 7:19, 21. Sincere do-gooders have no roots of the soul, no content of
the soul whereby they can avoid evil; so in doing good it comes out evil. Being
under the influence of evil their good always turns out evil or the policy of
Satan.
7. Therefore the believer is warned
to beware of evil practitioners — Philippians 3:2. Evil practitioners are those
believers or unbelievers who through evil thinking are under the influence of
evil.
8. Those under the influence of evil
always have a price — 1 Timothy 6:10. The love of money is the root of all
kinds of evil, which means that people under the influence of evil can be
bribed.
9. Believers are specifically warned
never to be influenced by evil but by doctrine — 3 John 11.
10. Influence by evil explains the
basic reason why believers’ prayers are not answered — Job 35:9-13.
11. Submission to the authority of
establishment prevents evil and the influence of evil — Ecclesiastes 8:2-5.
12. False doctrine is both evil and
insanity — Ecclesiastes 9:3. To say that there is one faith for all men and
that all roads go to the same place is declared to be an evil. To be under the
influence of evil as a believer means to be negative towards doctrine. Doctrine
insulates the believer from evil. To be under the influence of evil means loss
of blessing in life, loss of dying grace, loss of reward in eternity.
Definition of evil
1. Evil is the policy of Satan as
the ruler of this world.
2. Just as grace and doctrine
represent the genius of God in relationship to the human race so evil
represents the genius of Satan in relationship to the human race. Doctrine is a
series of thoughts; evil is a series of thoughts. Doctrine are God’s thoughts
for the human race; evil, Satan’s thoughts for the human race. It is thought
versus thought and the struggle is for your soul. Which type of thinking will
control your soul?
3. Evil is the distortion of
doctrine and establishment. Doctrine and establishment came first so evil
always tries to distort. Evil is not only a Satanic system but it is also a
distortion. Since the truth came before the false obviously one part of evil
must be to distort the truth into the false. Add something to truth to make it
false.
4. Evil, therefore, comes in many
forms. Some of the forms of evil include religion, legalism, reversionism,
socialism, welfare, political internationalism, religious practice of brotherly
love, the attempt to abolish all human problems apart from doctrine and
establishment. You can’t abolish problems by passing laws against problems.
That is evil.
5. Evil includes such practices as
social security, governmental welfare, governmental abuse of power,
governmental interference with industry and free enterprise, governmental
policy of curtailing the military, gun legislation, catering to minorities
(There are citizens but there are no minorities).
6. Evil includes all systems of
Christian function outside of and apart from the local church which was
ordained and authorised by God as the only means of spiritual growth in the
dispensation of the Church.
7. This means that not only are
denominations evil but all organisations are likewise evil. They have distorted
Christian service into growth. You cannot distort service into growth since
spiritual growth only comes through doctrine resident in the soul. Spiritual
growth, therefore, only comes through GAP and the only bona fide function of
GAP is in the local church.
8. The worst and most detrimental
thing that can happen to any believer is to be influenced by evil. Remember
that evil is a system of thinking that captures your mind.
Evil is the modus operandi of Satan
as the ruler of this world. Evil includes many, many things besides sin
(occasionally sin is included). It includes human good, the attempt to solve
the problems of life apart from God and doctrine. Evil includes anthropocentric
altruism, humanitarianism, philanthropy, socialism, sociology, public welfare.
It includes the social gospel, social action, the restriction of human freedom
for the greater good, the distortion of law, the distortion of any system of
establishment in order to solve social and economic problems. Evil is
religionism, legalism, reversionism, apostasy, every deviation from Bible
doctrine and the laws of divine establishment.
The super-grace believer is
protected from evil — Psalm 21:11; Proverbs 12:12,20,21. Obviously the
super-grace believer has doctrine in his soul. Having doctrine in the soul is
insulation against evil. The doctrinal thoughts of the soul come through the daily
function of GAP. Bible doctrine is communicated and this doctrine goes into the
left lobe. There it becomes objective reality called gnwsij. It is understood by means of God the Holy Spirit
who controls the soul at the time that the information is presented. God the
Holy Spirit then makes it gnwsij or objective reality, but
having it in the left lobe it is not useable, it is not practical as yet, it is
strictly academic. At this point the human volition must go into operation.
Positive volition toward gnwsij type information results in
it being transferred to the human spirit where it becomes e)pignwsij. Now it is usable. E)pignwsij is cycled into the right lobe, the frame of reference or the heart.
There it resides to become the basis of understanding and orientation to life
and insulation against evil.
Genesis 5:20 — the
concept that evil is eliminated by the principle of Romans 8:28.
Genesis 48:16 — all
blessing, all happiness is based upon being free from evil.
Psalm 37:16-19 — if you
have abundance but have an evil soul then the abundance will make you
miserable. Whatever it is that you attain it brings misery instead of
happiness.
Psalm 97:10 — you come
to love the Lord by maximum doctrine in the soul. The more doctrine that you
have in your soul the more that you are going to love the Lord. The greater
your capacity for loving the Lord the more that you will despise evil. The thinking
of evil will therefore have no effect in your soul. Thinking is using your soul
as a battleground and all thoughts in life are actually fighting over your
soul. When you take in doctrine this repels all of the thoughts which are
related to Satan’s policy known as evil.
Psalm 119:101 —
restraint which guards doctrine.
Psalm 121:7 — the Lord
protects from evil, guards the soul. This is accomplished through Bible
doctrine.
Proverbs 1:33 — security
and ease from the dread of evil.
Proverbs 2:10-14 —
application of doctrine delivers from the way of evil. Everywhere you turn in
the Bible it is doctrine which protects from evil. Doctrine is divine thinking;
evil is Satanic thinking.
Proverbs 19:23 — never
touched by evil. Doctrine in the soul is the only protection against evil.
9. Negative volition toward doctrine
causes the believer to be changed by evil. When you reject doctrine you reject
your only protection against evil.
Proverbs 5:13,14 — “I
have not listened to the voice of my teachers … I was immediately in all evil.”
He did not listen to Bible teaching.
Doctrine is our only
protection, and therefore we are warned in Proverbs 3:7 — “Do not be wise in
your own eyes, become occupied with the Lord so that you can turn away from
evil.” You cannot turn away from evil unless you become occupied with the Lord.
10. The issue to the royal family of
God: Are you influenced by doctrine or are you influenced by evil?
Proverbs 11:18,19 — “The
reversionist earns wages of deception, but he who sows super-grace has a true
reward … he who pursues evil pursues his own sin unto death.”
Proverbs 14:22 — “Will
they not go astray who devise evil? But grace and doctrine to doctrine to those
who devise the absolute good.”
Proverbs 15:3 — “The
eyes of the Lord are in every place, watching the evil and the good.” Divine
omnipresence is a factor in providing discipline for the reversionistic
believer, the believer who is influenced by evil, and at the same time
providing blessing for the super-grace believer who is under the influence of
doctrine.
Proverbs 16:6 — “By
grace and doctrine one recovers from reversionism, and by occupation with the
Lord one is insulated from evil.”
Proverbs 22:3 — “The
wise (super-grace believer) sees the evil, and he hides himself; but the stupid
one (negative toward doctrine) goes on into the evil and is punished by it.”
Proverbs 24:1-4 — the
warning never to be influenced by evil. It has a pseudo stimulation which is
destructive.
Ephesians 5:16 — “…
redeeming the time because the days are evil.” Time is redeemed through the
establishment of a command post in the soul, through the consistent intake of
Bible doctrine.
2 Thessalonians 3:2,3 — “And
that he may be delivered from perverse and evil men, for all men do not have
doctrine; but the Lord is faithful, and he will strengthen you and protect you
from evil. ”
11. Doctrine neutralises evil. The
is the basic concept of the recovery from the influence of evil. Psalm 54:5 —
“The evil will return for those who lie in wait for me; put them in silence
with your doctrine.” The concept of doctrine neutralising evil means that once
you have come under the influence of evil the only possible recovery demands
that you take in necessary doctrine in order to eliminate the erroneous human
viewpoint thought, or the Satanic policy which lies within your soul. For that
reason Romans 12:21 says, “Be not overcome with evil, but overcome evil with
the absolute good [Bible doctrine].”
12. On the other hand evil distorts
grace. In this distortion we have the concept of how one little evil thought,
one Satanic viewpoint, can cause the infiltration of evil into the soul. Psalm
38:19,20. The concept is that any time a person follows the absolute good, any
time a person begins to realise the importance of doctrine, he immediately is
subjected to many subtle and many obvious attacks. The attacks of evil are
subtle and they distort to the point where the person goes negative toward
doctrine.
Psalm 52:1 — “Why do you
boast in evil O mighty man? The grace of God endures all day long.” The fact
that the grace of God endures in spite of evil indicates that in spite of the
fact that evil attacks by distorting grace, grace is the factor that brings us
back around.
1 Corinthians 15:33 —
“Be not deceived, evil company corrupts good morals.” Evil company refers to
some of the nicest people, some attractive people, successful people, people in
whom you enjoy their company. But in social intercourse it is inevitable that
they will throw out thoughts, concepts that are evil, and when you accept these
concepts because you accept the person, then you have been corrupted in the
soul. It is the concept of corruption of soul that is found in this stage of 1
Corinthians 15.
13. Evil also distorts establishment
— Psalm 50:16-21. Evil is related in this passage to the sins of the tongue.
14. Reversionists are influenced by
evil — Psalm 36:1-4. In this passage we have the principle that evil begins at
certain stages of reversionism. For example, in the opening stages of
reversionism which is the reaction stage you generally have reactor factors
such as self-pity, loneliness, and so on. But once you start the frantic search
for happiness it is inevitable that you will contact evil, and while it is
still in a stage where it isn’t dangerous by the time that you get into
operation boomerang, the intensification of reaction, you’re off to a flying
start. Then with emotional revolt, when the emotion revolts against the right
lobe you are in trouble and once your negative volition is consolidated and the
vacuum is opened up, through that vacuum go all the doctrines of demons or evil
thoughts. This leads to blackout of the soul which leads to scar tissue of the
soul, which leads to reverse process reversionism. And from emotional revolt on
there is evil in every stage of reversionism so that evil and reversionism
become the same thing at that point. In fact, evil becomes the thinking of
reversionism.
Psalm 36:1 — it is an
arrogant thing that you relate yourself to people when the demand is that you
relate yourself to God. Your job is to relate your life to God, not to people.
When you relate your life to God you’re safe from evil but the very moment that
you start relating your life to people you become arrogant.
John 3:19 — “And this is
the judgment, that the light has come into the world, and men loved darkness
rather than light, because their deeds were evil.” The reason why people like
certain forms and activities in life is simply because it matches what they are
doing. What they are doing is evil, therefore they like to have it match up
with what is in their souls, especially in the conscience of the soul.
15. Evil rationalises. One of the
things that evil must do is to avoid any guilt reaction, and to do so evil
therefore has its own system of rationalisation. In order to rationalise you
must distort the conscience, and so the conscience ignores the norms and
standards of the scripture and sets up its own human norms or standards. With
these human norms and standards then you can go out and do anything you want to
because the reality of what you are doing is lined up with the reality of the
norms and standards in your soul. Therefore the Bible says, “Woe to them who
call evil good, and good evil.” Once you set up a series of norms and standards
in your soul you call those good.
16. Conspiracy and revolution is
also evil — Psalm 64:4,5. Verse 4 describes assassination as murder, verse 5
describes it as evil. When you have sin plus evil you have the worst possible
combination.
Proverbs 17:11 — “A
rebellious man seeks only evil.” Revolution and evil are synonymous terms.
17. Evil is obviously
self-destructive.
Psalm 34:21— “Evil shall
slay the wicked, and they who hate the righteous will be condemned.” Evil
people are always trying to solve the world’s problems by violence.
Proverbs 24:19,20 — “Do
not fret yourself because of evildoers, or be jealous of the ones who are evil;
for there will be no future for the evil one; the lamp of the wicked will be
put out.” The lamp of the wicked will be put out at the second advent of Jesus
Christ. In the meantime, the lamp of the wicked is dimmed and put out in any
generation by the saturation of Bible doctrine. This is the answer.
18. Evil seeks to build happiness on
someone else’s unhappiness.
Psalm 35:12 — “They
repay me evil for good to the bereavement of my soul.” So when evil is repaid
for good it always hurts the soul of the one who did the good.
19. The laws of divine establishment
protect the human [believer and unbeliever] race from evil. We are all born
unbelievers. How can we be protected until we get to the point of
evangelisation? How can we be free to hear the Word? How can the gospel come to
us under conditions of freedom? There must be freedom for evangelisation. The
answer is found in the laws of divine establishment. That is why Bible
Christianity is always pro-establishment.
Romans 13:3,4 — “For rulers are not
a cause of fear for good behaviour [establishment], but for evil. Do you want
to have no fear of authority? Do what is good [stay with establishment], and
you will have praise of the same; for it [the laws of divine establishment] is
a minister of God to you for absolute good. But if you do what is evil, then be
afraid; for it does not bear the sword for nothing; for it is a minister of
God, an avenger who brings judgment on the one who practices evil.” This time
crime produces certain types of sin, and crime is not only sin but crime is
evil. The evil in crime is antiestablishment. The sin in crime plus the evil in
crime mean that you must have capital punishment to control crime because those
who are involved in crime are also involved in evil. They must be extracted and
removed from the human race, and capital punishment is the basic system for
controlling crime, says the Bible. The reason why capital punishment is so
important is because it eliminates from society those who are influenced both
by sin and evil at the same time.
20. There is no evil in God.
Psalm 5:4 — “Thou art
not a God who takes pleasure in wickedness; no evil dwells in you.”
James 1:13 — “Let no man
say when he is tempted, I have been tempted by God; for God cannot be tempted
by evil, he himself does not tempt anyone.”
21. God judges evil.
Psalm 34:16 — “The face
of the Lord is against evildoers.” The face of the Lord is His essence. Every
part of divine essence is opposed to evil.
22. In spite of evil Jesus Christ
continues to control history.
Proverbs 16:3,4 —
“Commit your works to the Lord, and your plans will be established. The Lord
has made everything for his own purpose; even the wicked for the day of evil.”
Isaiah 45:7 — “I form
the light, and create darkness; I make peace, and create evil; I, the Lord, do
all these things.”
The verbs for creation: a) bara, which means to create out of
nothing. It was used in the creation of man’s soul; b) asah, means to manufacture something out of something, out of
existing materials. It is used for the creating of man’s soul resulting in
man’s personality. Man’s personality is related to his soul. Our soul is bara, [Ex nihilo] and from this comes a
personality. Secondly, we have asah
which is the personality which emerges from the soul. The soul was created out
of nothing, the personality is derived from the soul — asah; c) Jatsar, has to
do with the body in the human race. The man’s body is said to be moulded; d) bana, the woman’s body taken from the
man’s body, means to build.
Three of these words are used in
Isaiah 45:7. “I form the light” — the qal active participle of jatsar. Not only was the body of man
formed but light [Heb. or] was also
moulded. This is an excellent way to describe light. Light generally represents
truth and the wonderful things we see in colour, and so on, but the reason that
it is said to be moulded is because light comes in waves. The waves of light
are actually moulded and in light are all of the colours that we see.
The previous verse, verse 6, said,
“I am the Lord, there is no other.” Verse 7 — “Forming light.” This is the
beginning of a structurised concept. A structurised concept in the Hebrew
generally has four phrases. They are all qal active participles, so they are
parallel and they all relate. Then we have the word bara, a qal participle. The qal participle sets up a structurised
system in the Hebrew. The object of bara
is different, it is choshek,
“darkness.” Darkness is caused by the fall of Satan, according to Genesis
1:3-5. It is used, therefore, in connection with Satan. So we have an
antithesis in the beginning of our structure, we have light formed and darkness
created. Then fact that darkness comes from bara
and light from jatsar is extremely
important in this passage because there will be something set up to relate to
this. Bara will be repeated. Darkness
is not created directly by God, but God created the creature who brought
darkness into the world. This is not darkness as we understand it when we walk
outside at night but this actually refers to Satan as the author of darkness.
God created Satan as Lucifer the angel of light. When God created him he was
absolutely perfect, but in his volition were certain negative elements which
were contrary to doctrine and contrary to God. And from those negative elements
came darkness. So while God created Satan and gave him a free will, what did
Satan do with it? He created darkness, the antithesis of the light formed by
God. Since yatsar is used here we are
to think of light not in terms of colour right now but in terms of wave length.
Light travels in waves and darkness breaks the waves. So the point is, God
created the creature, gave him a free will, and the first thing the creature did
when he finally got oriented in heaven was to make sure that he broke the
waves, the vibrations as it were, that God had set up. He went against them.
Darkness is the creation of Satan, it was caused by the fall of Satan and by
the angelic revolution. In preparing earth for man’s habitation God corrected
the situation with light when He restored the earth. Light would provide heat
energy which would melt off the ice pack and make it possible for man to live
on the earth, for man was created to resolve the angelic conflict. But in this
verse it declares that God created the darkness and bara is used because God created Satan who is called the prince of
darkness as the ruler of this world. Satan is a creature; God is the creator.
The whole blessing we are to derive from this structurised system is the fact
that the creator continues to control even though the creature from his own
free will went away from what God had formed. The point is, “Greater is he that
is in you than he that is in the world.” What this actually says so far is that
Jesus Christ controls history even though the greatest genius that ever came
from the hand of God was Lucifer the son of the morning, and even though
Lucifer the son of the morning is the author of darkness.
Now we go back to asah — “I make prosperity [not peace].”
God is the manufacturer. He manufactures shalom
which means “prosperity.” God manufactures prosperity, but asah says you do it out of something. God manufactures prosperity
for us out of doctrine — paragraph SG2. Our shalom glorifies God.
What doesn’t glorify God? What is
the antithesis of the believer reaching SG2? Evil. Therefore in the
antithetical structure of the second phrase , “and create evil,” we have the
qal active participle of bara — to
create out of nothing. Bara is used
again because we are dealing with that same creature who was the author of
darkness. Satan is the author of darkness, God is the one who created Lucifer
son of the morning. Now you would think we would have the most common word for
evil ra’a, but you can’t have this
one because ra’a is a woman, feminine
gender. Satan by sex is male. So instead of ra’a
we have the masculine form, “the evil one.” Ra
is an adjective used as a substantive just as in the Koine Greek we have the
same concept of kakoj used as an adjective as
well as a substantive. When it is kakoj or ra, as here, it is “evil one” referring to Satan — “the one
creating the evil one.” Darkness is used in scripture not only for literal
darkness but for the policy of Satan. Evil is the policy of Satan in action. So
darkness and evil are synonymous terms for Satanic policy. What is in contrast
to darkness and evil? Light [doctrine] and prosperity [result of doctrine].
“I, Jehovah, am the one
manufacturing all these things.” This time He uses asah to indicate” All right, creatures have free will. Angels have
it, man has it, but I still asah
history; I manufacture out of history my plan and I am the sinner!
Literal translation: “I am Jehovah,
and there is no other. Forming light and creating darkness; the one
manufacturing prosperity, and the one creating the evil one; I, Jehovah, am the
one manufacturing all of these things.”
23. The saturation of evil means
national destruction or the fifth cycle of discipline. Nothing is more
destructive to a national entity than to become saturated with evil. People sin
in a country but the country continues on. Vigorous nations have vigorous
sinners but the nation goes right on. Sin is not the issue in the survival of a
nation, it is evil that is the issue. This does not condone or excuse sin but
it does make clear that sin in itself is not the cause of a nation’s downfall.
It is evil that is the cause of downfall of a national entity. This is
portrayed in Isaiah 47:10,11.
Verse 10 — this is talking to the
empire of Chaldea which has had a great spiritual revival after
Nebuchadnezzar’s conversion. Men like Daniel, Shadrach, Meshach and Abednigo
were not only great administrators in the Chaldean empire but at the same time they
were a great spiritual influence. They were the salt of the empire. They had
the privilege of leading many to the Lord, of dissemination of doctrine. Daniel
himself was a communicator of Bible doctrine. Therefore the empire flourished.
But in the time of Nebuchanezzar’s grandson the empire has reverted to the
saturation of evil which existed in the early days of Nebuchanezzar’s reign.
Therefore this warning prophecy to the Chaldean empire from the pen of Isaiah:
“For thou hast trusted” is the qal
imperfect of batach. This word is
often used for the believer trusting but it is also used for anything in which
anyone trusts. Here the trust is misdirected because it is said to be “in thy
wickedness.” This is wrong, it should be “in your evil.” Altogether it should
be translated, “Because you have trusted in your evil.” In other words, nations
not influenced by doctrine, nations minus any kind of a spiritual life,
inevitably are going to be taken over by evil because eventually the very
structure of establishment is undermined. There are three protections from
evil. The first is a spiritual vigour from evangelism — commonly called
revival. Evangelism, however, does not mean spiritual growth. There is no
spiritual growth in evangelising. Evangelism has a very simple objective, to
lead the individual to the understanding of the issue of the gospel and to lead
him to the place where he personally believes in the Lord Jesus Christ as his
saviour. Evangelism and the perpetuation of missionary activity in a country is
a protection against evil. The second and most obvious protection against evil
is in the field of spiritual growth. Spiritual growth can only be accomplished
inside of the local church. The only possible way to ever grow up is to be
under your pastor-teacher, under his authority, under his teaching
consistently, so that you can fulfill the function of GAP as recorded in the
Word of God and grow up. This is the basis of the salt function. Salt is the
preservative of the nation, and inevitably as in the time of the Chaldean
empire, the time of this passage, the nation was preserved in the time of
Nebuchadnezzar because men like Daniel communicated Bible doctrine. There is a
third protection of a national entity against being overtaken by evil and that
is in the field of establishment. The laws of divine establishment are for the
entire human race. They are designed to perpetuate the human race during the
course of the angelic conflict. Satan is a genius and he knows that the
simplest way to win the victory is to destroy the human race or corrupt the
human race. These are through principles of evil but establishment stands as a
bulwark against the destruction and the corruption of the human race. When
establishment goes in a national entity the national entity is overtaken by
evil and the result is the destruction of the nation.
Therefore we conclude that there are
three things that a nation must have for survival: evangelism, the local church
and the pastor-teacher communicating doctrine for the spiritual growth of those
who are evangelised, and it must have the laws of divine establishment functioning
within the framework of its government. These are absolute necessities without
which no nation can be protected from evil. So nations not influenced by
doctrine and nations not influenced by the laws of divine establishment have a
tendency to be influenced, infiltrated, inculcated, and eventually destroyed by
the principle of evil.
Remember that evil is the policy of
Satan as the ruler of this world. While both evil and sin originate from Satan,
and both have the same source in that super angel, they have different sources
in your life. The source of sin in your life and in the life of each one of us
is the old sin nature. The source of evil is the heart or the right lobe in the
mentality of the soul. And while both sin and evil originate from Satan they do
have these two different sources in mankind.
Evil includes human good, social and
economic panaceas, trying to solve the problems of life through legislation,
social gospel, social action, or through psychology, through some system of
counseling, through socialism. Evil includes any form of anthropocentric
altruism, humanitarianism, religion, legalism, reversionism. It includes
victorious life panaceas, any system of pseudo spirituality of which
fundamentalism is loaded down today. Sin was solved at the point of salvation,
sin is solved in the work of Christ on the cross; evil was not even dealt with
at the cross. Evil was, as it were, ignored at the cross so that evil could
continue to be the issue in the angelic conflict all of the way to the second
advent of Christ. The sins of humanity were judged on the cross but evil was
not dealt with at all. The problem of evil will not be solved until Satan is
removed as the ruler of this world, and that occurs at the second advent. Evil,
therefore, can only be handled in each generation by those in a generation who
are influenced by Bible doctrine.
Sin can be solved in your life as
quickly as you can rebound or cite the sins since it was judged on the cross.
Anytime, however, a believer becomes legalistic that believer becomes
influenced by evil. To be influenced by evil is the be under the direct policy
and therefore the control of Satan himself. If you do not stay with Bible
doctrine, if you do not get with Bible doctrine, if you do not grow up with Bible
doctrine, if you do not GAP it daily, then you will eventually come under the
influence of evil. So only the daily function of GAP can protect the believer
from evil.
And here in Isaiah 47 we find a
nation which has trusted in evil. In other words, the Chaldean empire has
become a Satanic stronghold, a place of national apostasy and reversionism, a
place under the influence of many kinds of evil. The manifestation of Old
Testament evil often takes the turn toward idolatry and this will be included
in the context.
“thou hast said” — the qal perfect
of amar represents the concept of the
people. In other words, this is public opinion at the time of Nebuchadnezzar’s
grandson.
“None seeth me. Thy wisdom and they
knowledge, it hath perverted thee.” So when public opinion says, Well no one is
really checking on me, this means that establishment has gone. “None seeth me”
means that establishment is no longer hindering or restraining people from
evil. There is no system of establishment that is impressive enough to stop
them. This is what happens when establishment itself is eroded away by bribery,
or when it is administered by those who are evil themselves.
“Thy wisdom and they knowledge, it
hath perverted thee” is incorrect. The pilel perfect of shub. The pilel stem of this particular verb means to seduce —
“Your wisdom and your knowledge have seduced you.” Both wisdom and knowledge
here refer to a saturation of evil in the souls of the Chaldean people.
Anthropocentric knowledge becomes evil. Evil is a thought; evil is
humanitarianism in its thinking; evil is a thought in the right lobe that can
make or break you, and it always breaks. What you think, therefore, influences
you. And what the Chaldeans thought has influenced them and they are therefore
about to be completely destroyed.
“and hast said in thine heart” is
“Therefore you have said in your right lobe” — and here it comes now. The word
for arrogance in this case is ani —
“I am.” Then to make sure you understand that this is not simply
self-consciousness the next phrase is “there is no one else beside me.” This is
the phrase of arrogance. Arrogance is a sin that always links up with evil.
Arrogance and reversionism meet at the point of evil. In some stage of
reversionism where arrogance exists evil is the result. Satan’s original sin
was arrogance or pride from which Satan’s policy of evil originated.
So this first verse says, “Because
you trusted in your evil; you have said, No one sees me. Your wisdom and your
knowledge has seduced you; therefore you have said in your right lobe, I am,
and there is no one else beside me.”
This is the point at which sin and
evil cross. Arrogance or pride meet reversionism and the result is evil.
Verse 11 — “Therefore evil shall
come upon thee.” “Shall come” is the qal perfect of bo and it is translated, “Therefore evil shall come upon you.”
“thou shalt no know” — the qal
perfect of jada plus the negative,
and it means “you won’t understand its origin.” You won’t know what hit you!
“mischief” is not quite correct. It
is the feminine singular noun howah
which actually means “disaster.” It is a reference to the destruction of the
Chaldean empire because of the evil engendered within it. Evil is the source of
national destruction; evil brings on the fifth cycle of discipline.
“thou shalt not be able” — the
hophal imperfect of the verb jakal
plus the negative. Helplessness is the only thing that can occur when the fifth
cycle of discipline is in the process.
“thou shalt not be able to put it
off” — the piel infinitive of kaphar
means to avert it.
“and suddenly destruction [5th cycle
of discipline] shall come on you, and you will not understand.” Evil people
cannot interpret history.
Translation: “Therefore evil shall
come upon you; you will not understand its origin. Consequently disaster
[national] shall fall on you; you will not be able to avert it, and suddenly
destruction [5th cycle of discipline] shall come on you, and you will not
understand it.”
There is no way that you will
understand any disaster in history if you are under the influence of evil. This
tells us something on the side. If you are under the influence of evil there is
no way of coping with disaster. Your only hope in coping with disaster is to
add disaster to disaster. This is why people get into narcotics and become drug
users and use stimulants on which to lean. This is because they do not know how
to cope with evil. They have no understanding of the problem and therefore they
seek some easy way out which merely compounds the problem.
24. Evil never understands grace
function.
25. Evil is distinguished from other
categories in the scripture. There are three basic distinctions in the realm of
evil.
a) Evil is distinguished from war
and disease — Jeremiah 28:8, “The prophets who were before me and before you
from ancient times prophesied against many lands and against great kingdoms, of
war and of evil and of disease.” Under the Hebrew language structure here war,
evil, and disease are distinguished. Evil is distinguished from war and disease.
In other words, war is not evil and disease is not evil. Evil is separated from
war and disease. This passage is saying that evil must be distinguished from
war, that warfare is not classified as evil; neither is disease. Warfare is the
means of maintaining national freedom. It is a means of suffering as well as
pressure but it is not evil. It is possible to take this separate entity and
insert evil into warfare, or to insert sin into warfare; but warfare is not a
bad thing, it is a good thing. Warfare is a part of the function of
establishment whereby a national entity maintains its freedom. The infiltration
of sin or sinful things done, or evil things accomplished during warfare, does
not change the principle. The principle of warfare remains the same; it is a
good principle, not a bad principle. The same thing is true of disease. Disease
is not evil. People may have disease because of sin or because of evil but in
principle disease in itself is not an evil thing at all. Both sinful and evil
things may be done in war but war in itself is not evil. Sinful and evil things
may be done and as a result there may be disease, but disease in itself is not
evil. It may be punishment but in itself it is not evil.
b) Evil must be distinguished from
sin. 1 Chronicles 21:17 — “And David said to God, ‘Is it not I who ordered the
census of the people? Indeed, I am the one who has sinned ...” David said, “I
have sinned” — That is the qal perfect of chata
— “and done evil.” Now we have the hiphil infinitive absolute and a hiphil
perfect of the verb ra’a, which is
different from chata. So David
distinguishes between his sin and his evil, and he puts great emphasis on his
evil because he doubles the verb. There are two hiphils. The hiphil is
causative active voice. And we have the infinitive plus the perfect tense of
the hiphil. It is very strong. “I myself have personally cause the evil.”
“but these sheep, what have they
done?” All of us are going to commit sins until the day we die because we have
an old sin nature. And on the cross Christ died for every sin we will ever
commit. Therefore we simply cite or name that sin and we are forgiven
immediately. But evil was not judged on the cross. Evil is not judged until the
second advent. At the second advent Jesus Christ will judge evil by the removal
of Satan from the world. Remember that evil is not only the genius of Satan but
evil is the policy of Satan. Everything related to evil is Satanic and Satan’s
genius expresses itself through evil the way God’s genius expresses itself
through grace, and grace is expressed in doctrine. So the great issue is always
doctrine versus evil. David was a man of doctrine and avoided evil, but when he
did not avoid evil he knew what he had done and he expressed it beautifully and
distinguishes between sin and evil. He confesses his sin and he declares that
he is the cause of the evil, but he makes the distinction between them. The
sin, of course, is forgiven. Recovery from evil is something else and takes a
little more time. But it brings up an issue. Satan himself, when he was Lucifer
son of the morning, originated both sin and evil; he is the author of both. He
is the evangelist of evil throughout all of human history.
Since sin and evil have a common
origin we often confuse them, but when it comes to man sin and evil are
separated in man’s soul. The old sin nature is the source of sin but the heart
or the right lobe of the soul is the source of evil. Evil is a thought, a
Satanic policy, a Satanic viewpoint. Sin is a violation of the laws, the
standards of God. They are separate and distinct in the human race even though
they had a common origin in Satan himself. David knows all of this, so in the
first half of this verse, 1 Chron. 20:17, teaches that sin and evil are not the
same though both were involved in David’s numbering of the people. The sin of
David was arrogance or pride of prosperity; the evil of David was in checking
up on God. As it says in the same chapter, verse 1, “Then Satan stood up
against Israel and motivated David to number the people.” Both sin and evil are
involved here and are distinguished as separate categories of failure.
c) Evil is distinguished from evil.
Many times the Word of God talks about evil and evil, and makes a distinction.
There are two kinds of evil found in the scripture. There is evil in a national
entity when they reject (go negative) the laws of divine establishment, or when
the believers reject doctrine and go into reversionism. This, when it reaches a
saturation point, results in the fifth cycle of discipline. The fifth cycle of
discipline is from the Lord, but when it is used to destroy a nation which is
under the influence of evil it is called an evil to an evil nation. In other
words, God matches the punishment and the crime and therefore we have the
double use of evil.
A good illustration of this is found
in Jonah 3:10 — “When God saw their deeds, that they turned from their way of
evil; then God repented of the evil which he declared that he would do to them,
and therefore he did not do it.” This is what made Jonah so mad. He was an
unwilling missionary, not very much in favour of being a missionary to the
Assyrians. It says God repented of the evil. The evil is the administration of
the fifth cycle of discipline. Evil destroys evil. God calls it fighting fire
with fire or fighting evil with evil. He was about to destroy Assyria but He
did not do so. They “turned away from their evil”; they actually made a
recovery. So the distinction becomes obvious. The Assyrians practiced evil in
the sense of following the Satanic policies; they were about to be overtaken by
evil, God makes the punishment fit the crime. This is a manifestation of His
perfect justice. Jonah’s great mission saved the day.
This brings us to the concept that
rightly dividing the Word of truth not only means recognising dispensational
differences but it would mean recognising other differences when the Bible
makes a distinction. These distinctions become the basis of great wisdom.
26. It is obvious, then, that evil
is often mistaken for good. Micah 1:12 tells us about a little suburb of
Samaria. Samaria became the final capital of the northern kingdom. The northern
kingdom had many capitals after it broke away from the southern kingdom and
from the house of David, but the city of Samaria finally became the capital and
was the last capital. It was the Assyrians who besieged this capital and
finally took it. One of the problems in the northern kingdom was the
infiltration of evil. The only insulation against evil is Bible doctrine in the
soul. The only protection against evil is the function of the laws of divine
establishment. In the northern kingdom there was a dearth of both.
“For the citizens of Maroth” — a
little suburb of Samaria. Maroth means ‘bitterness’ — “waited anxiously for
good.” In other words, they were waiting for something good to happen. Just
like to day everyone thinks that something good is going to happen, someone is
going to get in and change things. But the system is anti-doctrine and
antiestablishment and has to be destroyed. No person can change things. Yet
people are going to go right on “waiting for good,” and while people are
standing around waiting for good, evil overtakes them. That is what this
passage is all about. The citizens of Maroth had the same attitude, they became
weak while waiting for good. While we wait for good we become weak.
“but evil came down from the Lord to
the gate of Jerusalem” — notice the evil came from the Lord. This means the
administration of the fifth cycle of discipline. While they are waiting around
for good to come the fifth cycle of discipline takes them. What were they
doing? They weren’t just waiting around by sitting down and looking heavenward,
they were bucking the tiger for their own system. In 20th century terms they
would be saying: “We’ve got to get more welfare; we’ve got to have more labour
unions; let’s abolish war by abolishing our military; let’s solve crime by gun
legislation.” This is what is called waiting for good. Everyone has an angle
how it is all going to be solved and worked out. “Let’s put more taxes on
industry, let’s nationalise industry.” This is called waiting for good. It
means taking some solution other than Bible doctrine. The people of the
northern kingdom thought that evil was good.
When it says the citizens of Maroth
became weak waiting for good we have an interesting verb in the Hebrew — chalah, which does not mean to be weak
in muscle, it means to be weak in the soul, to be weak in the mind. It is what
happens when you sit around and watch television too long, you get weak in the
mind.
27. Evil provides false security for
reversionism — Micah 3:11. “Her leaders pronounce judgment for a bribe.” Here
are the judges in the northern kingdom and they are determining cases on the
basis of who gives them the most money.
“her priests instruct for a price” —
the priests taught the written Word of God as it existed at this time — “her
prophets divine for money” — the prophets taught the spoken Word of God. Both
are doing it for money. This is evil. No one has the right to sell the truth.
“yet will they lean on the Lord, and
say, Is not the Lord in our midst?” — they try to justify the fact that they
are charging for it by saying that it is the Lord’s truth. “No evil can come
upon us.” They are involved in evil. Evil rationalises the existence of
security from the Lord. Evil uses the Lord as a front for the false security.
Verse 12 — “Therefore [on account of
you evil types] Zion will be plowed as a field, Jerusalem will become a heap of
ruins.” When you start selling doctrine the next thing is the destruction of a
nation. Doctrine is free, it is not for sale. All doctrine is related to grace.
Grace is not for sale. It is an evil policy for any Christian institution of
any kind to ask for money. The truth is free; it is evil to charge for
doctrine.
28. Evil national leadership is
always opposed to God — Nahum 1:11, “From you has advanced one who plots evil
against the Lord.” He is described as “a wicked counselor.” That is a
mistranslation. We have the qal active participle of ja’atz which means to counsel or to decree, that much is all right;
but the rest of it is beilial, and it
means maximum evil. So it should be translated, “From you has advanced one who
plots evil against the Lord, a counselor of maximum evil.” This is a
description of the leadership in the land at this time. Nahum as a prophet is
warning that the leadership of the land is evil and their policy is evil.
Translation: “From you has advanced
one who plots evil against the Lord, a policy-maker of maximum evil.”
29. Evil will be eliminated in the
Millennial reign of Christ — Zephaniah 3:14,15. The two great issues that Satan
brought up in the angelic conflict are sin and evil. They are separate issues.
Sin was covered in the first advent at the cross. Christ was judged for our
sins. At the second advent evil is handled.
Verse 14 — “Shout for joy, O
daughter of Zion; shout O Israel; rejoice and be happy with all your right
lobe, O daughter of Jerusalem.
Verse 15 — “The Lord has removed his
judgments [fifth cycle of discipline], he has mopped up your enemy; the Lord is
the King of Israel, he is in your midst, you will not see evil any more.” Evil
is eliminated by Jesus Christ superseding Satan as the ruler of this world.
30. When Satan succeeds in
inculcating evil, that evil is located in the soul of the individual whether he
is a believer or an unbeliever — Matthew 6:23. The eye being evil is evil
resident in the soul. Or, as it says in Matthew 15:19, “For out of the heart come
evil thoughts.”
31. Remember that evil is
altruistic. Luke 11:13 — “If you then, being evil, know how to give good gifts
to your children, how much more shall your heavenly Father give the Holy Spirit
to those who ask him?” This has to do with the previous dispensation when it
was necessary to ask for the Holy Spirit to receive the Spirit; and this was on
a limited basis, not like we have it in the Church Age. The point is that
parents, even though they are evil, know how to give good gifts to their children.
Evil knows how to give and the whole system of altruism comes out of that first
phrase.
32. Evil is related to Satan in many
ways. For example:
a) Satan’s angels are
called “evil spirits” in Luke 7:21; 8:2; Acts 19:12-16.
b) Satan’s domain is called
an evil world — Galatians 1:4.
c) Satan’s policy is
called evil — 1 Thessalonians 5:22; 2 Thessalonians 3:3.
d) Those under Satan’s
policy and influence are called evil men — 2 Timothy 3:13; Job 35:12; Matthew
12:35; “evil workers” in Philippians 3:2.
e) Satan’s
administrators are called inventors of evil things — Romans 1:30.
1 Timothy 1:19 —
“Holding” is the present active participle of e)xw
which means to have and to hold. Here is means to be having and holding since
the participle takes the place of an imperative. This is an imperative
participle The present tense is the present of duration, sometimes called the
retroactive progressive present denoting what has begun in the past and
continues to the present time. Timothy is still positive toward doctrine, his
problem is not reversionism, his problem is the failure to apply it under the
authority of his own spiritual gift. The active voice: Timothy produces the
action of the verb.
“faith” — the accusative singular
direct object from the noun pistij.
Pistij has
three meanings. The first of these is that which causes trust or faith. In
other words, faithfulness, reliability, pledge, proof, or solemn promise. This
is perhaps the least used meaning of pistij in the New Testament but it
does actually occur. Faith is the active sense is the second meaning of pistij, therefore it is translated in the active sense as
faith, trust, or confidence. This also includes faith as recognition and
acceptance of Christian doctrine. The third use is the one which is found most
frequently in Hebrews and in the pastoral epistles: that which is believed, the
passive sense of the noun, the body of belief or doctrine. Here we translate it
simply “doctrine.” “Be having and holding doctrine.”
“good” — a)gaqoj, the accusative singular direct object. It means good of intrinsic
value and refers to doctrinal standards in the conscience; “conscience” — suneidhsij. O)ida means to know; sun
means with: to know with. It means a norm or standard in the right lobe of the
soul. Nearly all of the problems we will face in all of the commands Timothy
will receive have to do with gaps or problems in his conscience where this
fantastic amount of Bible doctrine resident in his soul has not filtered down
into his conscience.
“which” is the accusative feminine
singular from the relative pronoun o(j. The antecedent is the good
conscience.
“some” is the nominative masculine
plural of the indefinite pronoun tij [no accent on the Greek
pronoun] and it means “certain ones.” He veers away from Timothy for the
moment. There are others who need the attention of the apostle, real
recalcitrants who are bothering the local assemblies and they need to be dealt
with. Since Timothy has not had the temerity to deal with it then Paul himself
will step in and do so. In other words, here is a weakness of Timothy again.
There are a couple of men who are completely out of line and who need to be
removed. Timothy is just too nice. A weak conscience is a conscience which is
missing certain norms and standards for certain situations. Here we have a good
conscience required, a good conscience as in norms and standards for every
situation.
“having put away” — the aorist
middle participle of a)poqew which means to push aside,
to reject, to repudiate, to cast off, to thrust away. All of these meanings are
pertinent because all of them deal with reversionism and the influence of evil.
The aorist tense is a constative aorist which takes the occurrence of
reversionism and regardless of its extent or duration gathers it up into a
single whole. Therefore it contemplates the action of the verb in its entirety,
namely the various stages of reversionism. The middle voice is indirect middle,
it emphasises the agents, the reversionistic believers, the bad conscience types,
as producing the action of the verb. The participle is circumstantial for
reversionism. It also has antecedent action to the main verb.
“concerning faith” — peri plus the accusative definite article used as a
possessive pronoun plus the accusative singular of pistij,
used again for doctrine. It should be “concerning their doctrine.”
“have made shipwreck” — the aorist
active indicative of the compound verb nauagew. This is taken from two words, the Greek noun nauj, a word which means a ship. With it is the verb a)gnumi which means to break up, and both words together
mean shipwreck. The aorist tense is a culminative aorist, it views the event of
reversionism in its entirety but it emphasises the results of reversionism:
shipwreck of doctrine, the influence of evil, resulting in bad norms and
standards. The active voice: certain reversionists produce the action of the
verb by being reversionistic, coming under the influence of evil. The
declarative indicative views the action of the verb from the viewpoint of
reality. The indicative mood also indicates the main verb and now we have a
setup between the aorist participle whose action is antecedent to the main
verb. The mood declares reversionism a fact. The prepositional phrase should
follow this verb.
Translation: “Be having and holding
doctrine, and a good conscience [freedom from evil]; which certain ones
[reversionists] having rejected have suffered shipwreck concerning their
doctrine.”
Verse 20 — the result of being
influenced by evil and reversionism. This came out of the last phrase, “some
have suffered shipwreck concerning their doctrine.” Shipwreck means not only
being influenced by evil but it means the whole realm of reversionism. Now, two
of these are mentioned specifically.
“Of whom” is the genitive plural
from the relative pronoun o(j, and should be translated
“among whom.”
“is” — the present active indicative
of e)imi. The present tense is a
static present, they keep on being in this condition. Even though they will
make one recovery attempt they will still fall back into it. This is not only
what we have in the context here but there are other passages on these two men.
The first of them is a man by the
name of Hymenaeus. He is a reversionistic believer living in Ephesus. He is
mentioned twice, here and in 2 Timothy 2:17. Hymenaeus is guilty of having a
loose, fat mouth. He is a gossip, a maligner, a woman in his soul, is filled
with all kinds of the influence of evil and reversionism. He is more or less a
hopeless case because of in-built blind arrogance. The other man is Alexander,
a reversionistic believer mentioned also in 2 Timothy 4:14 where he is called
Alexander the coppersmith. He is the one who will eventually be responsible for
the death of Paul. He is the one who betrayed Paul to Roman authorities so that
he was apprehended, brought to trial a second time and executed. It was
Alexander who brought in lying, perjured evidence against him. These two men
are declared here to be reversionists, they are under the influence of evil,
and their end is now described.
“whom” is the accusative plural
direct object from the relative pronoun o(j.
Timothy is a wimpy type and has the
tendency to procrastinate, to put off a strong decision of any kind hoping that
the Lord will work it all out for him, or that if you ignore the problem the
problem will go away. He allowed Hymenaeus and Alexander to run loose through
the congregation, never challenged them, never did a thing about them in any
possible way. As a result the apostle Paul had to lower the boom.
To be turned over to Satan is one of
the most horrible things that could ever happen to a believer in dying. It is
not only the sin unto death but it is the administration of the sin unto death
under maximum pain and disaster. This is exactly what happened to these two
men. Paul turned them over to Satan for the administration of the sin unto
death. “Whom” is a relative pronoun referring specifically to Hymenaeus and
Alexander whose reversionistic and evil activities have gone unchallenged in
the Ephesian complex.
“I have delivered” — the aorist
active indicative of the verb paradidomi which means to deliver
over, when it was used of Judas Iscariot it meant to betray; “delivered over”
is a good translation. The constative aorist contemplates the action of the
verb in its entirety. In other words, the constative aorist gathers up into one
entirety paradidomi. It could be just a few
seconds or a long period of time, but here it was the elapse of a very short
time. Apparently this was accomplished through prayer. The apostolic authority
included a great power of turning a reversionistic believer over to Satan for
the administration of dying discipline. This was possible for apostles, it is
not possible today for pastor-teachers. Paul did the same thing to the
incestuous reversionist in 1 Corinthians 5:5. The active voice: Paul as an
apostle produces the action of the verb which is maximum use of his apostolic
authority. The indicative mood is declarative representing the action of the
verb from the viewpoint of historical reality.
“unto Satan” is a dative of
disadvantage. Dying discipline administered by Satan has no advantage to the
believer involved, it is misery all the way. The phrase implies intensive and
dying discipline as the last two punitive stages of reversionistic discipline.
“that” is the conjunction i(na used as a final clause. It is used with the
subjunctive mood to denote a final clause which has aim, purpose, goal, or
objective.
“they may learn” — learning it the
hard way. The aorist passive subjunctive of paideuw. Paidoj means child; paideuw means to train children
with pain. It means to tell them not to touch a hot stove and let them touch a
hot stove. It means they have to learn by being hurt. It finally came to mean
training anyone by means of discipline. It should be translated, “in order that
they may be taught by discipline.” The aorist tense is a culminative aorist, it
views intensive and dying discipline in its entirety but it regards them from
the viewpoint of the existing result. The results are potential, says the
subjunctive, namely the recovery of those involved. This is the last great
warning. Sometimes people realise what they have done and what they are
involved in and they recover. Hezekiah is an illustration from the Old
Testament, the incestuous Corinthian is an illustration in the New Testament.
The passive voice: Hymenaeus and Alexander received the action of the verb,
learning the hard way. The subjunctive mood indicates the fact that that this
is last call to straighten out or die miserably.
“not” — the particle mh is what is called qualified negation. It is in
contrast to the particle o)uk which is very strong
negation. When you have mh plus the subjunctive it
implies uncertainty. Therefore the negative mh
only denies hypothetically like o)uk would do. In other words,
it is questionable whether they will straighten out or not. In the meantime
they are blaspheming.
“to blaspheme” — present active
infinitive of blasfhmew which means here to slander
God. It means to malign the character and the grace of God. The descriptive
present indicates events in the process of occurrence which should not occur.
The active voice: Hymenaeus and Alexander as reversionists are under the
influence of evil and they produce the action of the verb which is maligning
God’s essence and plan. The infinitive is the intended result. The result
indicates the fulfilling of a deliberate aim or goal or objective. This is
intended though not actually taking place.
Translation: “Among whom is
Hymenaeus and Alexander; whom I have delivered over to Satan in order that they
might be taught by discipline not to blaspheme.”
The doctrine of reversionism
1. By definition reversionism is
negative attitudes toward doctrine on the part of the believer. Reversionism is
characterised by two principles: negative volition toward Bible doctrine
resulting in failure to function under GAP, and a system of perpetual carnality
in the life which results in perpetual discipline. This is called being influenced
by sin. There are two factors, then, in reversionism. It is one thing to sin,
it is another thing to be influenced by sin. But reversionism has two factors:
to be influenced by evil which means negative volition toward doctrine; to be
influenced by sin, which results in perpetual carnality. All of us sin but that
does not mean that we are influenced by sin. To be influenced by sin you have
to be in a pattern of sin that excludes taking in Bible doctrine on a regular
basis. So we have negative volition toward doctrine and/or influence by evil,
perpetual carnality in the life resulting in perpetual discipline in the life,
as in Hebrews 12:4-15.
Reversionism is recession from any
stage of spiritual growth, whether it is partial spiritual growth or the completed
spiritual growth of super-grace and/or maturity. Reversionism, therefore, is
lack of spiritual growth, it is neglect of Bible doctrine. It crosses a point
with evil and becomes the principle of being influenced by evil. Reversionism
crosses a pattern of sin at certain times and results in being influenced by
sin. While the super-grace believer is in a progressive state in time the
reversionistic believer is in a retrogressive state in time. Reversionism in
the believer is analogous to apostasy. Reversionism in the unbeliever is
rejection of and departure from the laws of divine establishment — 2 Peter
2:17-22.
Reversionism must be distinguished
from carnality in the same way that spirituality must be distinguished from
super-grace. Spirituality is an absolute whereby God the Holy Spirit controls
the soul of the believer. Super-grace is a relative status of maximum spiritual
growth whereby the believer is under maximum influence of resident doctrine.
Carnality is also an absolute state, the absolute state of being out of
fellowship through sin. Reversionism is a relative status of varying degrees of
spiritual failure. The carnal believer can be positive toward doctrine and
recover through rebound; the reversionistic believer under the influence of sin
can rebound but he is far from recovery. So reversionism becomes a technical
theological synonym for being under the influence of evil, being under the
influence of sin, being negative toward doctrine. God blesses the believer
influenced by doctrine, He curses the believer under the influence of evil.
Therefore reversionism can apply to apostasy, to influence of evil, to
influence of sin or all of them, or part of them.
2. The mechanics of reversionism are
divided into eight stages:
a) The reaction stage
means instability and includes discouragement, boredom, disillusion, inability
to cope with loneliness, being overcome by self-pity, being in some stage of
frustration. It includes also rejection of authority of one’s right pastor, personality
hang-ups with members of the congregation or the pastor, hypersensitivity and
lack of objectivity under rebuke or under normal conditions of life. It
includes mental attitude sins such as jealousy, bitterness, vindictiveness,
implacability, arrogance, guilt complex, operation vengeance, seeking to build
you happiness on someone else’s unhappiness. It includes such things as
distractions which lure you from Bible doctrine. Part of the reaction stage,
but not quite as common, is drug addiction, mental illness, academic or mental
incompetence which distract from one’s consistency and ability to take in the
Word of God, even under GAP.
b) The frantic search
for happiness. This is how you try to assuage the reaction. The function of the
reactor factors in the life of the believer result in the frantic search for
happiness. This becomes the alternative to the daily function of GAP and is the
accepted solution for the frustrations in the first stage called reaction. The
frantic search for happiness follows the trend of the old sin nature. As a rule
it follows your trend toward asceticism or your trend toward lasciviousness.
Both exist in the old sin nature and everyone at some time or another will have
one or both of these trends. The trend toward asceticism leads to the false
emphasis on experience, construing Christian service as both spirituality and
maturity. So-called victorious life gimmicks, emotional stimulation [the
tongues movement is a part of this], legalism, the get-involved-in-works
programs, spirituality by self-denial [fundamentalism flagellation],
discipleship, throwing a fagot on the fire type of panacea — in other words,
one shot decisions and everything is all right again., tabooism, getting
involved, social action, the social gospel, loving everyone, trusting everyone
[naive stupidity]. All of these are in the ascetic trend. Some of these are the
beginning of evil and this is where evil often begins for some in reversionism.
Then there is also a trend toward
lasciviousness that hardly need amplification. Debauchery, drunkenness,
chasing, seduction, becoming users of narcotics and drugs apart from medicinal
purposes, female nymphomania, homosexual-lesbian activity.
c) Operation boomerang.
This means the frantic search for happiness intensifies the reaction stage.
Frustration becomes intensified. In other words, greater frustration. Whatever
the problem, whatever the search for happiness, it will only make the individual
more miserable rather than solving anything.
d) The emotional revolt
of the soul. The emotion is a responder of the soul and it was designed to
respond to the heart or the right lobe. Emotion is equivalent to the right
woman whereas the heart is equivalent to the right man. The soul has male and
female parts even as the body has male and female hormones. So the emotion is
the female part of the soul designed to respond to the right lobe or the heart
which is the male part. The heart or the right lobe of the soul is equivalent
to the right man.
Emotion has no doctrinal content, no
mentality, no character, and it can only respond to what is found in the right
lobe. It is designed in the spiritual life to respond to doctrine. Once emotion
revolts it becomes the aggressor, it loses all capacity for life, it becomes
distorted, it becomes the tool for the old sin nature, it becomes the basis for
launching into many types of evil.
The emotions of the reversionists
resist Bible doctrine and resist Bible teaching. They do not find it pleasant,
entertaining, or conducive to any type of blessing that they are interested in
— 2 Corinthians 6:11,12. We are warned to stay away from people who are going
in this direction — Romans 16:17,18. The emotional revolt of the soul causes
the emotion to respond to the old sin nature instead of responding to the heart
or the right lobe. The emotion, therefore, takes over the dictatorship of the
soul, becomes aggressive, neutralises doctrine in the right lobe. The emotion
becomes a tyrant, a nagging bitch, shutting out doctrine, short-circuiting
grace in any form, causing malfunction of every normal function of the soul.
Believers who live by their emotions or use their emotions as a criterion are
invariably apostate, disoriented, flaky, degenerate, mentally ill and many
other factors.
e) Negative volition
toward doctrine. This is characterised by many types: 1. Indifference or apathy
to doctrine; 2. Too busy for Bible teaching; 3. Antagonism or personality
hang-ups regarding the pastor; 4. Antagonism or personality conflict with other
members of the congregation; 5. Failure to utilise grace provision for GAP,
including assembly at the local church, failure to rebound, lack of respect for
authority, poor manners, lack of concentration, no poise, no objectivity in the
function of the local church in the intake of the Word of God; 6. Inability to
handle prosperity; 7. Disorientation to the factors of living grace. Under
living grace God keeps us alive in the devil’s world. He provides food,
shelter, clothing, transportation. Disorientation is failure to appreciate
these factors and utilise them in the assimilation of doctrine; 8. An active
campaign to discredit, remove or destroy the ministry of one’s own pastor.
f) The blackout of the
soul. This is the opening up of mataiothj, the vacuum through which
doctrine of demons comes. These doctrines of demons include religionism,
liberalism, every form of evil and therefore being influenced by evil. This
stage always find anyone totally under the influence of evil. The infiltration
of Satanic doctrine leads to demon influence, the blackout of the soul, and
coming under the control of evil — Ephesians 4:17,18.
g) Scar tissue of the
soul whereby the valves of the soul are frozen, the right lobe’s frame of
reference, memory centre, vocabulary, categorical storage, conscience and
launching pad malfunction and doctrine is no longer applied. Doctrine is
eventually destroyed by misuse or no use. It is also known as hardness of the
heart. Proverbs 21:29-31. Scar tissue is also a state of revolt against the
Lord — Jeremiah 9:16,17. Hardness of the neck is a synonym and it means
insubordination to the point of revolution. Scar tissue of the soul, then, is
related to negative volition toward doctrine — Jeremiah 7:25-27.
h) The final stage is
reverse process reversionism. This is the stage where all of the values are
destroyed and one becomes occupied with the things that are the antithesis of
spiritual values. In category #1, blind arrogance. In stead of occupation with
then person of Christ, having the vocabulary [”Oh how I love Jesus”, etc.!] and
on an ego trip. Common sense, judgment, poise, goes in a different direction.
In category #2 love there are false lovers. In category #3 love, false friends.
3. The discipline of reversionism —
1 Timothy 1:20. There are three stages:
a) The warning stage —
Revelation 3:20. This is designed by God to give believers warning that they
are going in the wrong direction. Disciplinary warning is designed to remind
them that they are in the first stages of reversionism. Therefore these various
types of things are brought about by God to hurt, to awaken, to make one
realise that he is moving in the wrong direction. James 5:9.
b) The intensive stage.
For those who reject God’s knocking on the door of the life by discipline
prosperity of every type begins to shrink away, is removed, and life becomes
very miserable. This category of discipline is generally found in the last four
stages of reversionism. It is best described by Psalm 38:1-14. It is also found
under the category of strong delusion in 2 Thessalonians 2:11. This is getting
very close to the next stage, the final stage, which is dying.
c)
The dying stage. This is equivalent to the sin unto death and generally this is
exercised by Satan himself. God often permits Satan to take believers slowly
out of the world in this manner.
4. The principle of reversionism is
found in Galatians 5:4 — “You reversionists have become a casualty
[ineffective, neutralised] from Christ, whoever are being vindicated by means
of the law; you have drifted off course from grace.” Drifting off course from
grace perfectly describes the principle of reversionism.
5. There are a number of categories
of reversionism. a) Phallic reversionism — 2 Corinthians 12:21; Ephesians 4:19;
5:5; Colossians 3:5; Revelation 2:14. b) Legalistic reversionism — Galatians
5:4; Colossians 2:16-18; Hebrews 5:11-6:16. c) Monetary reversionism —
Ecclesiastes 5:10-16; James 4:13,14; 5:1-6; Revelation 3:14-20. d) Alcoholic
and narcotic reversionism — Isaiah 28:1-9; Galatians 5:20. e)
Anti-establishment reversionism — Romans 1:18-32; Hosea 4:1-7. e) Mental
attitude reversionism. f) Verbal reversionism — James 5:9,12. g) Psychotic
reversionism — 2 Peter 2:15-19.
6. The biblical nomenclature for
reversionism is quite varied. Galatians 5:4 — drifting of the course from
grace; Philippians 3:18 — being the enemy of the cross; Jeremiah 9:25,26 —
being uncircumcised of heart. In other words, the evil has not been cut away
from the heart; Hebrews 12:15 — failing from the grace of God; 2 Peter 2:7,8 —
being a tortured soul; 2 Peter 2:14 — being an unstable soul; Revelation 2:4 —
leaving your first love. Revelation 2:5 — fallen; Revelation 3:15,16 —
lukewarm; 1 Timothy 1:19 — suffering shipwreck from doctrine.
7. A profile of a reversionist is
given in Psalm 7:14-16.
8. The contamination of reversionism
is found in Hebrews 12:15.
9. The psychosis of reversionism is
found in 2 Peter 2:15-19.
10. Reversionism eliminates special
blessing paragraphs for time and eternity — Hebrews 3:10-12.
11. Hebrew reversionism. Hebrews
5:11-14 — the recipients of Hebrews were involved in reversionism. As a result
it says in verse 14, “But solid food [doctrine] belongs to the super-grace
believer; because of self-discipline they keep having their perceptive
faculties well-trained with reference to being able to distinguish between what
is honourable and what is evil.” Hebrews 6:1-3, reversion recovery is
impossible apart from the daily function of GAP in the field of doctrine.
Hebrews 6:4-6, reversion recovery is impossible when religious reversionism is
perpetuated. The blond arrogance factor takes over.
12. Reversion often leads to
perversion — Romans 1:26,27 — and produces national disintegration — Romans
1:29, 32; Hosea 4:1-6.
13. Reversionism intensifies
suffering — Psalm 77:1-10.
14. The doctrine of reverse process
reversionism.
Chapter 1 via Matthew 19:27-20:34
Principles
1. God’s standards for maturity and
qualifications for blessing are the same for every believer.
2. It therefore becomes blind
arrogance for any believer to imply that he has achieved what no other believer
ever has, or that he has some unique experience or that his life is more
important than anyone else’s.
3. Blind arrogance comes in many
forms. Legalism is a manifestation of blind arrogance — legalism in three
categories: salvation by works, spirituality by works, maturity by works.
4. Emotional arrogance of the Holy
rollers who associate spiritual advance with an obsolete spiritual gift known
as tongues is blind arrogance. Everyone involved in the holy-roller movement is
a victim of blind arrogance.
5. The self-centred arrogance of
that believer who assumes that his life, his activities, his opinions, are more
important than those of anyone else is in blind arrogance.
6. The person who assumes that the
plan of God stands or falls on the basis of his behaviour is in blind
arrogance.
7. It is arrogance to assume that
the plan of God depends on any believer. It is obvious that the plan of God
depends on God, that’s grace.
8. The arrogance of the person who
sets up false standards and then complies with these false standards, and by
his compliance concludes that he is a great believer, is blind arrogance.
9. The person who assumes that any
form of kindness or friendliness from the opposite sex means that the person is
madly in love with him is in a state of blind arrogance.
10. The arrogance of assuming that a
few dates is a declaration of love or a silent agreement of marriage is blind
arrogance.
11. The arrogance of perpetuating
your enthusiasms on others who are not interested, and judging them with harsh
criticism because they are not interested, is blind arrogance.
Matthew 19:27-20:34. In this passage
we meet the blind arrogance of Peter the apostle, the blind arrogance of labour
unions, the arrogance of the wife of Zebedee and Salome, the mother of James
and John. We meet the arrogance of James and John, in fact the twelve
disciples. We meet the arrogance of the mob of Jericho. Only three people in
this entire concentration of the Word of God come up smelling like a rose —
grace orientation.
First of all a capitalist and two
blind men from Jericho. We are going to see the principle reiterated twice,
“the first shall be last and the last shall be first.” The first refers to
blind arrogant types under the influence of evil, and they are last in God’s
economy of things. The last refers to super-grace humility from the influence
of doctrine in the soul, and they are first for blessing in time, first for rewards
in eternity. The occupational hazard of blind arrogance is obviously the
subject of this area. While arrogance or pride is a sin it combines with
reversionism to form a concentrated system of evil. Pride and evil meet to form
the occupational hazard for believers, which we will call simply blind
arrogance. Blind arrogance is the hindrance to and the frustration of spiritual
advance to the high ground of the super-grace life.
The outline of the passage is very
simple. There are four paragraphs.
Paragraph one is the case of the
arrogant apostle — Matthew 19:27-30.
Paragraph two is the grace
illustration — Matthew 20:1-16.
Paragraph three is the arrogant
mother — Matthew 20:17-28.
Paragraph four is the grace
illustration — Matthew 20:29-34.
Matthew 19:27 — Peter the arrogant
apostle. There is a parenthesis beginning in verse 28 after the words, “ye
which have followed me in regeneration.” The parenthesis is closed in verse 29
after the words “for my name’s sake.” The text within this parenthesis has nothing
to do with the sentence which begins in verse 28. Remove the parenthesis and we
have, “Ye which have followed me in regeneration also shall inherit everlasting
life.”
We begin in verse 27 with a
correlative adverb tote. “then.” “Then answers” —
the aorist passive participle from the verb a)pokrinomai, which means a reply as a result of a lot of questions which are not
shown in this context. “Then Peter having replied said to him” — the aorist
passive participle has antecedent action to the main verb, the main verb is the
aorist active indicative of legw which is translated “and
said.” All of the way through this passage extra “ands” are thrown in which are
not found in the original.
“we have forsaken” — the first
statement of blind arrogance, the aorist active indicative of the verb a)fihmi which means to leave, to abandon, to give up. The
aorist tense is a constative aorist, it contemplates the action of the verb in
its entirety. Peter implies that they had given up everything to follow the
Lord. This is not true, this is blind arrogance. The active voice: Peter
alleges to produce the action of the verb. The indicative mood is declarative
for implied reality, not actual reality.
“all” — the accusative neuter plural
of paj is the direct object. The
neuter would imply more things than people.
“and followed you” — the aorist
active indicative of a)kolouqew. The word occurs twice in
this context. Actually the chapter should have begun at verse 27 of chapter 19,
and the chapter should end where it does in chapter 20:34, “and they followed
him.” Our dissertation on blind arrogance starts with a)kolouqew in verse 27 of chapter 19 and goes to a)kolouqew in verse 34 of chapter 20. This time when the word
is used it is a case of blind arrogance. As it is used at the end of chapter 20
it is a case of grace orientation and grace dynamics.
Please notice that blind arrogance
always emphasises the person. Notice that Peter emphasises himself. He puts it
in “we” because he and the disciples have discussed this thing and they are all
guilty of the same thing, they are carried away with pride, they are filled
with their own self-importance, they have assumed that because Jesus has given
them a little authority that somehow what they think and what they do is more
important than anything in the world. Peter is trying to emphasise to the Lord
just how important Peter is. So here is arrogance of legalism, reversionism and
evil all tied up in the pride package. Here is what cause the fall of both
Satan and the woman.
“What shall we have therefore?” Here
is the arrogance again. He is interested in what he is going to have by way of
reward.
The verse says literally, “Then
Peter, having answered, said to him. We have given up all things and have
followed you. What therefore shall we have?”
In this passage we have a future
active indicative of e)imi — “What shall we have?” —
indicating Peter’s very arrogant confidence in future reward. Peter has lost
the perspective of grace by emphasising what he has done for the Lord, rather
than what Christ has done for him. So far all that Peter has done that counts
is that he has followed the Lord in regeneration. So verses 27-30 gives us the
picture. Note: When you come to the point of regeneration be sure to put in a
parenthesis, for what is found in the parenthesis is dealing with the subject
of reward in eternity and is not a part of the sentence which answers the
question. The rest of the question is answered at the end of verse 29 with the
adjunctive use of kai and is translated “also” —
“also you shall inherit eternal life.”
Within the parenthesis it says,
“When the Son of man shall sit on the throne of his glory, you also [and this
includes the apostle Paul] shall sit upon twelve thrones, judging the twelve
tribes of Israel. And everyone who has given up” — now He mentions things in
the future that are rewardable but have no basis for reward now because they
have not given up any of these things because of Bible doctrine. They have
given up nothing for doctrine. Bible doctrine in the soul often displaces
certain things in the life. They have made no doctrinal decisions and therefore
they have no basis for reward at this moment.
Verse 30 — “But many first shall be
last [in blessing and reward]; and many last shall be first [in blessing and
reward].”
The word “first”
1. The first are those guilty of
blind arrogance. They are last in blessing in time and last in reward for
eternity. In other words, the word for “first” here refers to blind arrogance.
There are minus their paragraph SG2, they will be minus dying grace
if they persist and will be minus SG3 in eternity. That is what last
means.
2. The last are those who through
doctrine resident in the soul have grace humility, grace orientation. They are
moving toward the high ground. They will be plus SG2, plus SG3.
In other words, they will keep advancing and follow the colours to the high
ground.
Matthew 20:1-16, the grace
illustration. Jesus illustrates by setting up a parallel between God’s policy
of grace and the policy of a capitalist in the agricultural economy of the
ancient world. One of the great things about the Roman empire was its free
enterprise.
In this passage are found two kinds
of labour. One is “union” labour. They are the first who are going to be last.
They illustrate blind arrogance. Then we have “scab” labour. That means free
labour, non-union. “Scab” labour illustrates grace orientation humility, and
they will be first. The first will be last; the last will be first. Jesus
advocated free enterprise.
“For the kingdom of heaven is like
unto a man that is an householder” is wrong. The word o)ikodespothj means a capitalist, a man who is the lord of an
empire. A capitalist is a man who invests money into business. He is the one
who declares the policy. It is his money that is invested in the business. He
is the one who creates jobs for labour.
Verse 2 — he starts out with union
labour. “And when he had bargained with the labourers for a denarius for the
day, he sent them into his vineyard.” He went out at 6am and picked up the
first group. These men are union men, they bargained for the day’s labour. They
are the only bargainers in the whole setup.
Verse 3 — the third hour is 9am.
Verse 4 — “whatever is right I will
give you. And they went their way.” No bargaining.
Verse 5 — “the sixth and ninth hour”
is twelve noon and 3pm.
Verse 6 — “the eleventh hour” is
5pm.
In all but the first group there is
no bargaining, they trust management to do the right thing. The union crowd are
the first, the last are the “scab labour,” non-union, who have no contract.
Only the 6am union crowd have a contract.
Note that in verse 2 we have labour
union workers. They have bargained with the capitalist for a day’s wages, a
denarius, and they have a union contract for that day. They were under contract
to management. The capitalist needed more labour so he went out and hired
non-union labour. Management invests the money, management makes the policy.
Labour does not dictate to management under establishment, only under a
principle of evil does labour ever dictate to management. It was the policy of
this management to hire all of the non-union labour he could find and to treat
them right. Under the laws of divine establishment capitalists, those who put
up the money and management, have the sole right to make policy for their
business. Neither the government nor labour have a right to make policy in free
enterprise. Note that the non-union labour did not bargain with management but
left it up to the discretion and policy of management what they should receive
for that day’s work or part of a day’s work. In this way a parallelism is set
up between labour unions and legalism on the one hand, and on the other hand
grace orientation and non-union labour. In this way the labour union represents
blind arrogance and the non-union labour represents grace humility.
Verse 8 — “And when evening [6pm]
was come.” The non-union labour was divided into four groups. Each group had
worked a different number of hours. This management has a policy, it is going
to pay them all the same. He could pay them anything he wanted to. He chose to
pay those who didn’t bargain with him the same, even though they didn’t work
twelve hours. That’s grace. And if that is the policy, that is the law for that
day.
“beginning with the last to the
first” — Verse 9 — and when the 5pm group came each one received a denarius, a
full day’s wages. They had no contract, they depended upon the policy of the
capitalist.
Verse 10 — the labour union crowd
came “they supposed that they would receive more.” They assumed it. It was
blind arrogance on their part, they had a firm contract which they had
bargained for. They assumed wrong, they held the capitalist to one denarius and
he is going to stay with that contract.
The non-union crowd made no bargain
for labour but they trusted management to do what was fair. Their faith was met
by grace. They did not earn or deserve by the bargaining standards, they
received it anyway and that is grace. The union labourers who worked for twelve
hours had contracted for a specific amount. The management was fair and just in
giving them what they had bargained for. Not only does the parable advocate
free enterprise in business but it emphasises the importance of God deciding
the eternal rewards on the basis of His policy. Peter is trying to contract
with the Lord for his reward in advance. You don’t bargain with the Lord for
reward, for blessing, that is blind arrogance.
Verse 11 — they began to complain
against the capitalist.
Verse 12 — “These last have worked
only one hour.” Union doesn’t like it!
Verse 13 — “I am doing you no wrong:
did you not bargain with me for a denarius?”
Verses 14,15 — the capitalist has a
right to do what he will with his own money. Blind arrogance does not
understand grace, it maligns and judges grace. Blind arrogance has not
doctrinal standard on which to appreciate grace. The evil eye is the evil thinking
of the labour union. They are anti-establishment and condemned by our Lord.
Like Peter, the labour union crowd suffered from their own blind arrogance.
Blind arrogance keeps the believer from yielding to the superior standard of
God’s matchless and perfect grace. Grace is related to doctrine, never to
works.
Verse 16 — “Thus the last shall be
first, and the first shall be last.
Principle
1. Rewards for believers in eternity
depend on the policy of God, not the arrogant, legalistic, anthropocentric
standards of evil and blind fundamentalism.
2. God does not bless the believer
in time nor reward the believer in eternity on the basis of the arrogant
standards of evil. Nor does He reward on the basis of any form of legalism.
3. Arrogance is always critical of
grace. When arrogance becomes critical of grace this becomes evil.
4. The first, those under the
influence of evil, have blind arrogance. They have the evil eye — arrogant
thinking.
5. The last are those who through
doctrine resident in the soul have true grace orientation, therefore true grace
humility.
6. The last are those super-grace
believers who avoided the influence of evil in time. They will be first in
heaven, first in reward, first in paragraph SG3.
The last half of verse 16, “for many
be called, but few chosen,” is not found in the original.
Verses 17-19, the Jericho discourse
(verse 29). Here is there answer to blind arrogance. Jesus is going to tell
them what is about to happen. This is a week before the cross. They have been
with Him for three years and still the only thing they understand is salvation.
They are full of blind arrogance. “And the third day he shall be raised up.”
This is the future passive indicative of the verb e)geirw and it refers to resurrection. This is the predictive future, He is
announcing the fact that He is going to rise again. The disciples didn’t even
start to grow until the resurrection.
Verse 20 — “the mother of Zebedee’s
children”, i.e. Salome, the sister of Mary. She is the mother of James and
John. Salome is guilty of the same blind arrogance as Peter. Like Peter she
wants to bypass the objective of the first advent, the cross, and take the
crown which is the objective of the second advent. She fails to see that the
cross must come before the crown. Her pride has caused her to only listen when
Jesus talks about the kingdom coming in the future and she wants to make sure
that her boys are in the top rung of the future kingdom.
Verse 21 — Salome’s blind arrogance.
It ignores the very teaching which Jesus has just made.
Verses 22 & 23, a dialogue with
James and John. “You do not know what you are asking.” The cup is going to the
cross. “We are able.” Blind arrogance!
1. This is arrogance, legalism and
idiocy in view of everything that Jesus taught them.
2. The baptism of the cup is the
cross where Jesus Christ is going to provide our so great salvation.
3. Neither James nor John could
provide salvation on the cross, they could not die for the sins of the world,
as per the baptism of the cup just stated.
4. If man can do anything to provide
salvation then there is no salvation.
5. Man can appropriate salvation by
faith in Christ but man cannot provide salvation by being judged for our sins
on the cross. Only the God-Man Jesus Christ can do that.
6. Only a perfect man could do this,
hence the impeccability of Christ.
7. Blind arrogance is a combination
of the sin of pride plus evil thinking. Blind arrogance is minus the doctrine.
The doctrine has just been taught, the doctrine has not been accepted.
“Ye shall drink indeed my cup.”
James was the first disciple to be martyred; John was the last one. James and
John would die but not for the sins of the world.
“But to sit on my right hand, and on
my left, is not mine to give” — The Father is the author of the plan — “but it
is for those for whom it has been prepared in the past with the result that it
stands prepared by my Father.”
Verse 24 — the other ten were
indignant with their arrogance.
The concept behind blind arrogance
1. God’s standards for maturity and
qualifications for blessing are the same for every believer.
2. It therefore becomes blind
arrogance for any believer to imply that he has achieved spiritually what no
other believer ever has, or that he has some unique experience, or that his
life is more important than anyone else.
3. Blind arrogance comes in many
forms: in the form of legalism, like salvation by works, spirituality by works,
maturity by works.
4. The emotional arrogance of the
holy rollers who associate spiritual advance with the obsolete spiritual gift
of tongues is also blind arrogance.
5. The self-centred arrogance of
that believer who assumes that his life, his activities, his opinions are more
important than those of anyone else is also blind arrogance.
6. The person who assumes that the
plan of God stands or falls on the basis of his personal behaviour is in blind
arrogance.
7. It is arrogance to assume that
the plan of God depends on any believer. It is obvious that the plan of God
depends on the essence of God. This is the concept of grace, everything depends
on who on what God is.
8. The arrogance of the person who
sets up false standards and then by complying to these false standards
concludes that he is a great believer.
9. The person who assumes that any
form of kindness or friendliness from the opposite sex means that the person is
madly in love with him. This is blind arrogance.
10. The arrogance that assumes that
a few dates means a declaration of love and a silent agreement to marry is
blind arrogance.
11. The arrogance of perpetuating
your enthusiasms on others who are not interested and judging them with harsh
criticism because they are not interested. This is blind arrogance.
Verse 25 — Jesus called them to
solve the problem of blind arrogance with doctrinal teaching.
“rulers of the Gentiles (the Romans)
lord it over them (the Jews), and their great men (who are in command of the
province) exercise authority over them.” An historical trend which had been
noted by all of the disciples.
Verse 26 — “But it shall not be so
among you” — Don’t learn anything from the Romans in their administration of
the province of Judea, some of you are already acting like Romans — “but
whoever wishes to become great among you shall be your servant.”
In the spiritual realm service must
be based on grace orientation. Grace orientation is based on doctrine in the
soul, the utilisation of the inner resources of doctrine.
Verses 27, 28 — “And whosoever wills
to be first among you shall be your slave: just as the Son of man did not come
to be served, but to serve, and to give his life a ransom for the many.”
In effect He has said this. In the
royal family of God greatness is being under the authority Bible doctrine.
There are all kinds of authority in life but true greatness for the believer
and the avoidance of both evil and blind arrogance comes from being under the
authority of doctrine, not exercising authority over others. This will come in
due time for many believers. Believers will exercise and utilise authority. How
they utilise that authority will be based on doctrine in the soul. Human
standards always relate greatness to the obtaining of and the exercising of
authority. Divine standards demand that all believers be under authority for
greatness, and the authority is Bible doctrine in the soul. Therefore the
importance of the principle of learning doctrine, the function of GAP to
establish an inner dictator of the soul. Maximum doctrine in the soul insulates
the believer from the influence of evil and protects him from blind arrogance.
All believers must come under the authority of the Word of God and Bible
doctrine.
We now come to the grace
illustration. We are going to get a transition, some blind arrogance, but now
the entire situation switches to show us true greatness in two that you would
never think of as being great.
Verse 29 — we have the Lord Jesus
Christ leaving the area of Jericho, the place of the curse, to go back to
Jerusalem — “a great mob followed them.”
Verse 30 — the word for “sitting” in
the Greek is the present active participle of the verb kaqhmai. The present tense is a pictorial present, it
presents to the mind a picture of an event in the process of occurrence. In
other words, you have to picture the Lord Jesus Christ on the road from Jericho
to Jerusalem. It is a gradual climb but it gets very steep. Behind Him are the
twelve disciples and behind them a tremendous mob of people who have been under
the ministry of our Lord in Jericho, people who have been curious, people who
have sought miracles, people who have heard something of the controversy about
our Lord and about the Sanhedrin; but regardless of what it is they are now
following the Lord out of curiosity, at least for a short time.
Everything about these blind men
speaks of helplessness. They are not moving with the crowd, they are not
following the Lord, they are blind, they are dumped, as it were, out of life by
the side of a road. Their helplessness is described by the fact that both of
them have physical blindness.
When they heard that Jesus was
passing by the shouted, they didn’t cry out, saying, kurei, the vocative of the Greek word kurioj which stands for deity. We now have two blind men
who as soon as they hear that Jesus has just moved by they identify Him as God.
The recognise Him for what He is, that He is God, that He is co-equal with the
Father and the Holy Spirit.
Then they cry out, “Have mercy on
us” — the aorist active imperative of the verb e)leew
which means here, “Grace us out.” Then they cry out, “son of David,” speaking
of the humanity of Christ. So add to the deity of Christ perfect humanity.
Jesus is going to use this as the
illustration. He is followed by twelve arrogant disciples. There is also in
that mob the mother of two of the disciples, Salome the wife of Zebedee, and
she is arrogant. Everywhere our Lord has encountered blind arrogance and this
hinders the intake of the Word of God, it hinders the concept of grace
orientation. Jesus illustrated that it wasn’t what the blind men could do —
they could do nothing but sit — it was what the blind men were thinking. Jesus
gives a perfect illustration not only to His disciples but to us today. These
two men were sitting, they were blind, they were handicapped, they were
helpless, hopeless, useless. They were out of society as it were, they were
dragged upon life, absolutely and completely helpless. Yet the Lord says that
these two were the only two great ones that He encountered in all of His trip
to Jericho. These two were great not because of what they could do, they
greatness lies in what they were thinking. A thought can make or break you.
Greatness lies in the soul, not in the service and in the function. What you
think is infinitely more important than what you do.
Believers who are under the
influence of evil, believers who have rejected doctrine, are spiritually blind.
So we have a whole crowd of spiritually blind people following the Lord, they
have blind arrogance. Believers influenced by doctrine, even though they are
physically blind, are spiritually very alert and they see with the eyes of the
soul, they have the sight of grace orientation.
Verse 31 — the blind mob:
“multitude” is o)xloj which does not mean a
multitude, it means a mob. This refers to a mob of people with blind arrogance.
Many of these people are saved, some are unbelievers, but they are still
blindly arrogant.
Mobs
1. Mobs cannot think, cannot reason,
cannot accomplish anything worthwhile in life. Mob activity and mob rule is
absolutely contrary to the laws of divine establishment.
2. Mobs are the historical
illustration of mass blind arrogance.
3. Mobs are the are the antithesis
of the laws of divine establishment by which we have our freedom.
4. Mobs destroy freedom, privacy,
and hinder spiritual growth.
5. Mobs are anti-authority,
anti-discipline, anti-establishment, anti-revival.
6. This mob was typical. It was a
case of non-authorised persons sticking their nose into someone else’s
business, a typical invasion of the privacy and freedom of the two blind men.
Blind arrogance is always guilty of the long proboscis.
7. The doctrine of the long
proboscis is a great detriment to spiritual growth.
8. Nosy-type people who invade your
privacy are reversionistic, influenced by evil, and guilty of blind arrogance.
9. The mob is guilty of blind
arrogance. The two blind men have not gained the approbation of the mob, and
that speaks well for them, the mob is very antagonistic. If the judgment of the
mob had prevailed these two blind men would have been ignored.
“and the mob rebuked” is wrong. It
is the aorist active indicative of e)pitimaw which actually means to
censure or reprimand very severely. It can be translated, “and the mob severely
rebuked them.” The aorist tense is a constative aorist, it contemplates the
action of the verb in its entirety. It takes the manifestations of blind arrogance
as they existed in the mob, sticking its nose into the business of the two
blind men, and gathers it all into one entirety. It was a reprimand for
speaking up and declaring true doctrine. It was not only the fact that the two
blind men were shouting, but it is the content of their shouting. The mob did
not understand what was being said — the hypostatic union, the deity of Christ,
the humanity of Christ, any more than they understood the resurrection of
Christ which Jesus had just discussed with them. The active voice: the mob in
blind arrogance produces the action of the verb. Blind arrogance always
censures, always criticises. In other words, blind arrogance always goes where
angels fear to tread. The indicative mood is declarative for the historical
reality of the fact that the mob was in arrogance.
“them” is the dative plural indirect
object from the intensive pronoun a)utoj which refers to the two
blind men sitting by the road of Jericho. The intensive pronoun emphasises
their identity as two grace oriented persons, entirely different from those who
were rebuking them. We might translate this, “these same ones.”
“because” — the conjunction i(na which introduces a final clause. It denotes
purpose, objective, and here is should be translated “that.”
“they should hold their peace” — in
other words, this is what the mob gives by way of advice. The aorist active
subjunctive of the verb siwpaw means to shut up, stop
speaking, keep silent. The aorist tense is a culminative aorist, it views the
action of the verb in its entirety, regards it from the viewpoint of existing
results. The active voice with the subjunctive mood indicates that the mob
intended for the two blind men to blend into the background and be neither seen
nor heard. The subjunctive mood is potential, it goes with the conjunction i(na for the final clause.
“the mob severely reproved these
same ones in order that they might keep silent.”
Now we have the word “but,” the
adversative use of the conjunctive particle de.
This sets up a contrast. We have a contrast between the persistence of the
super-grace vision versus the blindness of evil arrogance. The mob has that
same evil eye as the union labourers in verse 15.
“they shouted the more” — they began
to shout all the more. Now we have the word krazw
for shouting. They not only wouldn’t shut up but they even made more noise than
they did before. This is the loudest possible shout. The ingressive aorist
means that they began to shout louder. The active voice: while physically blind
these grace oriented believers persisted in expressing their doctrinally
oriented humility. The indicative mood is declarative. Historically this is
what they did. They were not intimidated by the mob. They could easily be
abused by the mob and yet they stuck to their guns. The dynamics of life are
not in physical activity, the dynamics of life are always found in the soul of
the believer. It is a thought that makes or breaks you.
“Have mercy” — this should be “Grace
us out.” Again we have the same aorist active imperative of the verb e)leew. The culminative aorist regards grace in its
entirety but emphasises the result. The active voice: Jesus Christ must produce
the action. They are helpless, this is the contrast with blind arrogance. The
imperative mood: the command is based on maximum knowledge of doctrine,
especially the hypostatic union and the Davidic covenant.
Translation: “And the mob severely
reproved these same ones, in order that they might shut up: but they began to
shout all the more, saying, Grace us out, O Lord, son of David.”
Verse 32 — “And Jesus stood still”
is the aorist active participle of i(sthmi and it really means here to
stop. The aorist tense here is the constative aorist, it refers to momentary
action. Jesus produces the action by stopping as he hears these shouts. The
participle is circumstantial.
“and called them” — the word fonew means that He summoned them. In the aorist tense it
means a momentary summons.
“what do you wish” — the mob could
not handle them and therefore the Lord turns around and handles the whole
situation. We have an interrogative pronoun for “what,” the present active
indicative of qelw which means a desire. He is
still dealing with the soul. He knows what they think.
“that I shall do to you?” — the
future active indicative of poiew indicates that He will do
whatever they want. They’re straight, their doctrine is straight, they now have
His attention as it were, and He is ready to do whatever they want. Notice the
emphasis on free will and human volition in the historical stage of the angelic
conflict.
Principle: The free will of man
never detracts from the sovereignty of God under grace. Under grace these men
have made their grace appeal. Doctrine is the basis for their appeal. Under
grace the sovereignty of God says to their volition, “What do you wish?” Under
grace free will compliments, glorifies the sovereignty of God. Only arrogant
blindness is in opposition to the sovereignty of God. Jesus Christ as God made
an issue of their free will by asking them what they desired. This is because
their volition so orients to the will and plan of God as to be non-meritorious,
totally compatible with grace. They are grace oriented, they are the antithesis
of blind arrogance. So here is grace humility in contrast to blind arrogance.
Verse 33 — the grace petition. The
blind men ask for something which they could never do themselves. Grace always
puts the emphasis on the sovereignty of God; they put the emphasis there. “You
can do something that no one in the world could do for us, you can heal our
blindness.” Their case is hopeless.
“They said to him” — the historical
present is often translated like a past tense. Plus the dative of indirect
object, “They said to this same one.”
“Lord”, and then they used the final
clause, “that our eyes may be opened.” In their request they merely asked for
sight in the sense of opening the eyes. The aorist passive subjunctive of a)noigw is the word that is used here. Actually, the Lord
is going to do more than that, He is going to make it possible for them to have
perfect eyesight. The word a)noigw merely means that they will
be able to see a few things.
Verse 34 — the dynamics of grace
oriented humility, or how the last shall be first. Remember that the first are
those guilty of blind arrogance. The last are those who through doctrine
resident in the soul have true grace humility. Throughout this passage there is
a contrast between blind arrogance and grace humility. They see with the eyes
of the soul, their sight is based on doctrine, they do not have that evil eye
of verse 15.
“So Jesus had compassion” — the
aorist active participle of splagxnizomai which means here to be
moved with compassion. The constative aorist refers to the action of the verb
in its entirety. As God Jesus always had compassion. As member of the human
race the son of David He has compassion in a moment of time. So the constative
aorist gathers up eternity past and links it with this point of time, it is all
gathered together. The active voice: the Lord Jesus as the God-Man produces the
action. The participle is circumstantial.
The word “and” is not found in the
original. “So Jesus moved with compassion touched their eyes.” The aorist tense
indicates that He simply did it momentarily, so it is what is called an instant
constative. The word is a(ptw.
“and immediately” — literally, “at
once”; the words “their eyes” is not found in the original, it simply says “at
once they recovered their sight.” The word for recovering sight is the aorist
active indicative of the verb a)nablepw.
Blepw means
to see; a)na means again and again and
again, which means that they had perfect eyesight. This is a culminative aorist
to indicate the result of the grace dynamics in their thinking.
“and they followed him” — this is in
contrast to the following which we saw in chapter 19:27 where we find blind
arrogance following the Lord. Now we have grace humility following the Lord.
This is a dramatic aorist. it presents the reality of the fact that they went
with Him wherever He went. They could see now, they no longer had the handicap,
which implies that they went on and took in more and more doctrine, always
understood the point of the first advent, were never shook up like the
disciples.
Principles
1. To follow Christ initially is to
believe in Him.
2. To follow Christ for the believer
is to be faithful in the intake of doctrine. It is what you think that counts,
the content of your soul.
3. There is only one way to follow
Christ after regeneration and that is to be consistent in the intake of
doctrine, following the colours to the high ground which is super-grace.
4. Once the believer has established
a command post of doctrine in the soul he is free from the influence of evil.
But more than that, he is free from blind arrogance.
5. He sees with the perceptive grace
eyes of the soul. He fulfills the phrase which occurs twice in this context,
“the last shall be first” in reward and blessing.
6. The super-grace believer is first
in blessing in time, first for reward in eternity, whereas “the first” is blind
arrogance, last for blessing in time and in eternity last means none at all.