SUFFERING AND SOLUTIONS
CATEGORIES OF CHRISTIAN SUFFERING AND STAGES OF SPIRITUAL GROWTH
THE BIBLE EXPLAINS SUFFERING and reveals powerful divine assets for
coping with adversity. No believer in Jesus Christ should remain ignorant of
the causes and solutions to any difficulty in his life. Suffering is not
inexplicable. Every instance of suffering has a reason, an explanation, and a
solution.
Christian suffering can be
most clearly understood in relation to the individual believer’s spiritual
growth. From this perspective, adversities may be classified into five
categories. Two categories are typical of spiritual childhood; three
characterize spiritual adulthood. The two categories of suffering in spiritual
childhood are punitive. The three in
spiritual adulthood are designed by God for blessing.
This study will examine the
problems and divine solutions connected with self-induced misery, divine
discipline, providential preventive suffering, momentum testing, and evidence
testing. These five categories, which will be defined in due course, account
for all suffering in the Christian life.
The correlation of punitive suffering with spiritual
childhood and of suffering for blessing with
spiritual adulthood is not a rigid distinction. Some suffering for blessing
occurs in spiritual childhood, and punitive suffering can hit the spiritually
adult believer when he sins or makes bad decisions. The general pattern,
however, gives us a basis for understanding the pressures in our lives.
CATEGORIES OF CHRISTIAN SUFFERING |
STAGES OF SPIRITUAL GROWTH |
PUNITIVE 1. SELF-INDUCED MISERY 2. DIVINE DISCIPLINE FOR BLESSING 3. PROVIDENTIAL PREVENTIVE SUFFERING 4. MOMENTUM TESTING 5. EVIDENCE TESTING |
CHILDHOOD ADULTHOOD SPIRITUAL SELF-ESTEEM SPIRITUAL AUTONOMY SPIRITUAL MATURITY |
FIVE CATEGORIES OF
CHRISTIAN SUFFERING
Adversity plays a dominant role in the lives of
adult human beings. Suffering is like a parent. What responsible parents do for
their children, suffering does for adults. The discipline and restraints of
childhood imposed by parents are replaced by the discipline and restraints of
adult life enforced by suffering.
As a parent, a guardian, a referee ready to
blow the whistle, an authority provided by God, suffering challenges us as
believers to utilize the assets God has given us. Suffering depletes our human
resources and confronts us with our total dependence on the grace of God.
Suffering impresses upon us our need to conform to His plan.
Parents do more than discipline their children.
Likewise, suffering is not merely a warning and a restraint but a teacher and
motivator as well. Misfortune does not always come to injure, says a Latin
maxim. Pain not only discourages us from going in the wrong direction, but it
can also help to propel us in the right direction. The proper application of
Bible doctrine under pressure produces spiritual growth. We see doctrine
working. We experience the reality that God is “a very present help in trouble”
(Ps. 46:1). As a result of using His provisions, our love for Him grows
stronger, and we accelerate our spiritual advance.
Whether as a guardian or as a stimulus of
spiritual growth, all suffering in the Christian life must be understood in relation
to the plan of God. Suffering is designed for our good and for His
glorification: He is glorified by sustaining and blessing us in any situation, whether prosperity or
adversity. It is for His own glory, therefore, that amid the hardships and
disasters of life God promises, “I will never desert you, nor will I ever
forsake you” (Josh. 1:5; Heb. 13:5).
He will “never let the righteous [any believer] be shaken [or totter or fall]”
(Ps. 55:22). Rather than eliminating suffering from our lives, He gives us far
greater benefits by walking with us “through
the valley of the shadow of death” (Ps. 23:4).
TWO FUNCTIONS OF
SUFFERING IN GOD’S PLAN
Many principles in our study of suffering will apply to unbelievers as
well as to believers, but we will concentrate on Christian suffering. We are
studying the assets that God has graciously given to anyone who has believed
in the Lord Jesus Christ. We are also identifying difficulties that arise when
believers fail to utilize what God has given them.
DIVINE ASSETS: SPIRITUAL ROYALTY AND THE DIVINE DYNASPHERE
Spiritual childhood begins at salvation. At the moment anyone first
believes in Christ, God the Holy Spirit simultaneously accomplishes seven
ministries in behalf of the new believer. One of these ministries is the
baptism of the Spirit, in which the Holy Spirit instantaneously places the
believer into permanent union with Jesus Christ.[1]
For you are all sons of God through faith in
Christ Jesus. For all of you who were baptized into Christ [the baptism of the
Holy Spirit at salvation] have clothed yourselves with Christ. There is neither
Jew nor Greek [no racial distinctions], there is neither slave nor free man [no
social classes], there is neither male nor female [no sexual bias]; for you are
all one in Christ Jesus [in union with Christ]. (Gal. 3:26—28, NASB)[2]
The Lord Jesus Christ is the “King of Kings and
Lord of Lords” (Rev. 19:16). He holds the most exalted of all royal titles. He is
head of a new royal dynasty, the Church, to which we belong.[3]
The present era of history is the Church Age, in which every individual
who believes in Christ as his Savior is adopted as an adult son and heir into
the royal family of God (Ram. 8:15 Gal. 4:1—5; Eph. 1:4—5). Our adoption occurs
at the first moment of faith in Christ, when we are placed in union with Christ
(Gal. 3:26). We are royalty now and will be royalty forever. This is our
eternal position; in our current experience, however, we must learn to think as royalty. We must learn to conduct ourselves as royalty.
In order to think and live as spiritual
royalty, we need royal assets. Simultaneously with the baptism of the Spirit,
therefore, God the Holy Spirit also places each new member of the royal family
into a magnificent, invisible environment, a system of living that can be
compared to a royal palace. Because the believer’s very own invisible palace is
a sphere of spiritual power, I have named it the divine dynasphere. In the function of the divine dynasphere, God uj
has made available to each believer the exercise of divine omnipotence. The
believer’s utilization of divine omnipotence will be explained as our study
proceeds.
The palace, or the divine dynasphere, is a
teaching aid that clearly explains the tremendous assets and privileges that
God has given to each Church Age believer. Living as royalty in the palace is a
synonym for living the Christian way of life. Only in the palace can we use our
spiritual assets, develop capacity for life, and live with wisdom, happiness,
and graciousness as the spiritual aristocrats we are. Furthermore, the palace
is the only sphere in which Christian growth can occur.
Royalty lives by protocol. The Christian way of life can be called the protocol plan of God because the
system—the divine dynasphere—for utilizing God’s power is a system of protocol.
God designed the Christian life; we must do things His way. Protocol is a
rigid, long-established code prescribing complete deference to superior rank
and strict adherence to due order of precedence and precisely correct
procedure.[4]
Each element in Webster’s definition describes the plan of God for the
believer’s life.
4.
LONG-ESTABLISHED
CODE: In eternity past God created for
each Church Age
believer a rich portfolio of blessings, which
glorifies God, who it also designed the divine dynasphere as our means of
taking distribution of those blessings (Eph. 1:3—4).
2. DEFERENCE
TO SUPERIOR RANK: Sovereign and
omnipotent God
holds infinitely superior rank to
which we must give complete obedience.
3. DUE ORDER OF
PRECEDENCE: The highest priority in
our scale of e values must be learning the Word of God, Bible doctrine, which
teaches us d what assets we possess
and explains how to utilize them.
4.
PRECISELY CORRECT
PROCEDURE: Only by adhering to God’s
precise policies for
the royal family do we fulfill the conditions
for receiving our blessings created in eternity past that glorify God.
Divine grace has created a royal way of life
which divine authority commands the
royal
believer to execute. We are responsible for fulfilling the protocol
plan of God, but God never issues an order for which He has not already
provided the means of execution. To obey God’s commands is to tap His
resources.
The commands
of God are like gates that open upon divine assets. The believer passes
through these gates and uses his God-given assets by consistently learning and obeying God’s mandates, by following divine protocol. Obedience to divine authority puts the power of God into effect in the believer’s life.
Although hundreds of divine mandates for the
royal family are found in the New Testament, all of these commands can be
classified into eight categories. I call these categories the gates of the
believer’s magnificent, invisible palace. The divine dynasphere consolidates
God’s mandates for the Christian life into one consistent, comprehensive
system.
In Christian
Integrity the divine dynasphere is developed in detail, but here a brief
description of the eight gates will suffice, along with examples of divine
mandates pertinent to each gate. This section of the book outlines the divine
dynasphere; the next will fill in the outline, revealing the dynamics of the believer’s
palace when he faces suffering.
GATE 1, THE POWER GATE, is the silent,
invisible, enabling ministry of the Holy Spirit. Omnipotent God the Holy Spirit
sustains the believer, supplying the supernatural means of executing the
supernatural Christian way of life.
Be filled with the Spirit. (Eph. 5:18b)
Keep walking by means of the Spirit. (Gal.
5:16)
GATE 2, THE GATE OF BASIC CHRISTIAN MODUS OPERANDI, is the source of the
believer’s objectivity. In Gate 2, the most elementary systems of problem solving
are available to the immature believer, which include the following:
The Rebound
Technique is the grace means of restoring the believer to temporal
fellowship with God after sin has broken that fellowship.[5]
The believer initially enters Gate 1 at salvation, but he exits the
divine dynasphere when he sins. He can reenter only through Gate 1. When the
Christian follows the simple, grace mechanics of reentry, the Holy Spirit
automatically resumes control of the believer’s soul, restoring him to fellowship
with God.
If we acknowledge our sins [to God the Father],
He is faithful and just so that He forgives us our sins and also cleanses us
from all unrighteousness. (1 John 1:9)
Through the Faith-Rest
Drill the believer mixes the promises of God with faith and thinks
rationally to reach doctrinal conclusions (cf., Heb. 4: 1-2).[6]
In fact, we know that to those who love God, He
works all things together for the good . . . To what conclusion are we forced,
face to face with these things? If God [is] for us, who [can be] against us?
(Rom. 8:28—31)
Hope is the believer’s anticipation of promised
blessings and his initial basis for motivation.[7]
With reference to the hope, keep on rejoicing.
(Rom. 12:12a)
GATE 3, THE GATE OF ENFORCED AND GENUINE
HUMILITY,
makes the believer teachable.
Clothe yourselves with humility toward one
another, for God is opposed to the proud, but gives grace to the humble. Humble
yourselves, therefore, under the mighty hand of God, that He may exalt you at
the proper time. (1 Pet. 5:5b—6, NASB)
GATE 4, THE MOMENTUM GATE, is designed for intake, metabolism, and application of Bible doctrine, which cause spiritual growth and personal love for God.
Man shall not live on bread alone, but on every
word that proceeds out of the mouth of God. (Matt. 4:4b, NASB)
GATE 5. THE GATE OF SPIRITUAL SELF-ESTEEM, is
the entrance into spiritual adulthood. Spiritual self-esteem is the strength of
soul that comes from personal love for God. Love for God is the spiritually
adult Christian’s motivation in life. Spiritual self-esteem is also the
beginning of sharing the happiness of God.
For me, living is
Christ, and dying is advantage. (Phil. 1:21)
And you shall love the Lord your God with all
your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your mind, and with all your
strength. (Mark 12:30, NASB)
Though you have not seen Him, you love Him, and
even though you do not see Him now but believe in Him [Bible doctrine in the
soul] you rejoice with an inexpressible and glorious happiness. (1 Pet. 1:8)
GATE 6, THE GATE OF SPIRITUAL AUTONOMY, is the
stability of spiritual adulthood, characterized by impersonal love for other
people. Impersonal love is the functional virtue of the spiritually adult
Christian toward all mankind. Deriving its strength from the virtue of the
believer himself rather than being limited by questions of attractiveness or
compatibility with others, impersonal love is the foundation for every correct
mental attitude toward people.
You shall love your neighbor as yourself. (Mark
12:31b, NASB)
Love your enemies, and pray for those who
persecute you. (Matt. 5:44b, NASB)
GATE 7, THE GATE OF MOMENTUM TESTING, involves
suffering which accelerates the believer’s advance from spiritual autonomy to
spiritual maturity. Gate 7 is one of the categories of suffering for blessing.
I press on toward the goal for the prize of
that upward call from God in Christ Jesus, therefore, as many as are spiritual
adults, let us keep on thinking this [the aggressive mental attitude to continue
advancing spiritually under pressure]. (Phil. 3:14—15a)
GATE 8, THE WINNER’S GATE, is the gate of spiritual
maturity. This is the most advanced level of spiritual adulthood, in which God
is glorified and the believer is blessed to the maximum under all
circumstances, whether prosperity or adversity. The adult believer’s inner
happiness is stabilized and completely established in spiritual maturity.
If you keep My mandates, you will reside in the
sphere of My love [the divine dynasphere1, just as I [the humanity of Christ]
have fulfilled the mandates of My Father [who created the divine dynasphere]
and I reside in the sphere of His love [during His first advent Christ lived
in the prototype of the divine dynasphere]. I have taught you these things that
My happiness might be in you and that your happiness might be completed
[spiritual maturity]. (John 15:10—11)
When the Holy Spirit placed us in the palace of
the divine dynasphere, God the Father intended us to live there, not to get out
of fellowship with Him through sin and move into the dungeon of Satan’s
counterfeit systems.[8]
We are spiritual royalty, however, regardless
of where we live: Our salvation is eternally secure. But we must reside in our
palace to solve the problems of suffering and to grow spiritually. God’s plan
calls for us to handle suffering from inside the palace. Only in the palace is
His omnipotence at our disposal for handling the problems of life.
CATALOG OF THE BELIEVER’S
PROBLEM-SOLVING DEVICES
Each gate of the palace contains divine assets
that may be used to solve particular problems that cause or accompany
suffering. What difficulties do these eight gates solve? To help the believer
recall and utilize the grace of God in the midst of overwhelming pain, the
divine provisions for problem solving are best described in highly objective language.
The power and grace of God, therefore, will be presented in terms of
“problem-solving devices.” This terminology may sound harsh and mechanical, but
there is a reason for it.
Under pressure the believer needs truth. If he
is coddled, he may be in danger of intensifying his problem by slipping into
self-pity. No one with integrity wants to feel sorry for himself. Furthermore,
under stress the believer needs straight answers. He does not need a lot of
beautiful language. His emotions are already highly charged, and emotionalism
offers no hope of stabilizing him. Certainly the grace of God can be described
in beautiful, poetic terms, but emotional stimulation will not solve the
problem and might only complicate the Christian’s suffering which already is
difficult enough.
The purpose for the terminology I have chosen
is to make absolutely clear to the suffering believer that God has provided
real assets that both transcend his current misery and offer him effective help
in time of need. The purpose is not to commiserate or to comfort him. This
human dimension of the problem is not to be ignored, but that is not the focus
of this book. This book is intended to teach
and to present a system of orthodox doctrine with tremendous practical
application.
Simple problem-solving devices are available
for spiritual childhood in the first four gates of the divine dynasphere. More
powerful problem-solving devices become effective in spiritual adulthood in
the final four gates.
The Christian way of life is a supernatural way
of life that demands a supernatural means of execution. The only power
equivalent to the demand is the omnipotence of God. Therefore, Gate 1 is the
invisible, behind-the-scenes ministry of God the Holy Spirit in the believer’s
life. The Holy Spirit ad-ministers Gate 1 entirely by Himself from His divine
omnipotence. We contribute nothing. We merely ensure that we give Him control
of our lives by
using the rebound technique. Rebound is the believer’s first
responsibility in I Gate 2.
Rebound, faith-rest, and hope are basic
problem-solving devices found in Gate 2. Rebound
allows the believer to reside consistently in his palace. It switches on
the power of Gate 1. Because the spiritual child (indeed, every believer) is
prone to leaving his palace (1 John 1:8, 10), he must quickly learn how to
reenter. He exits the divine dynasphere by committing sin; he reenters by
naming that sin to God (1 John 1:9). I call this divine provision the rebound
technique because it causes the believer to bounce back after failure, ~1
restoring his fellowship with God, avoiding the trap of a guilt complex.[9]
The next problem-solving device in the
Christian way of life is faith-rest, which enables the believer to control his
own mental attitude. Emotion is a blessing, but it can also be a terrible
cursing when it sweeps away reason and truth. If emotion dominates thought in a
crisis, the result can be disastrous.
The spiritual child needs to know how to remain lucid when his emotions
rise, how to think clearly under pressure. The accurate application of doctrine
appropriate to a crisis demands a stabilized mentality. How does the distraught
believer regain and maintain his self-control? The solution is the faith-rest drill. A confusing,
complicated situation must first be reduced to utter simplicity by claiming
stated promises of God (Heb. 4:1—3). Stabilized by divine promises, he can
recall principles he has learned and eventually reach doctrinal conclusions.
From the divine viewpoint he can then deal with the complexities of the
situation.[10]
Another basic problem-solving device in Gate 2
is called “hope” in the Bible. Hope answers the question “Where am I going in
life?” The believer learns pertinent doctrine about his own future blessings;
his eager anticipation, or hope, of receiving those blessings motivates him to
keep advancing in the protocol plan of God. Hope begins as a basic
problem-solving device in Gate 2 but increases in strength as the believer
grows spiritually. As a result, hope also becomes one of the key
problem-solving devices of spiritual adulthood.
Arrogance is the believer’s worst enemy. What
is the immediate and long-term solution to the insidious, multifaceted problem
of arrogance? In Gate 3, enforced
humility is an immediate problem-solving device as the believer submits to
the authority of God’s system. Obedience to divine protocol means using perfect
divine assets rather than trusting inferior human ability. As the believer
learns more doctrine, he understands the reasons behind God’s commands and
sees how His commands reveal His matchless character. With a growing knowledge
of Bible doctrine, enforced humility becomes genuine humility, the foundation for personal love for God.
The most critical issue in the believer’s life
is how does he solve the problem of ignorance? At salvation he knows nothing
of God and His protocol plan. The solution in Gate 4 includes tremendous divine
assets for learning, metabolizing, and applying the Mind of Christ (1 Cor.
2:16).[11]
The Bible draws an analogy between eating food
and learning doctrine, which is the believer’s spiritual food (Deut. 8:3; Matt.
4:4). Just as food must be metabolized to sustain the body, so doctrine must be
metabolized before it is usable in spiritual growth, application, or problem
solving. Someone may order a meal at a restaurant, and the food, if well
presented, may be attractive to the eye. But the food nourishes him only when
he eats it. Likewise, the believer learns doctrine academically, but doctrine
benefits him only when he believes what he has learned. He must integrate the
new doctrine he hears with the rest of the doctrine he knows for that new truth
to contribute to his spiritual growth. To dispel his ignorance, the believer
must establish a firm policy of learning Bible doctrine every day. He must
always organize his day to accomplish his first priority, the assimilation of
God’s Word.
Spiritual childhood continues from salvation
until the believer reaches Gate 5, which is personal love for God. Spiritual
adulthood extends from Gate 5 all the
way to Gate 8, the winner’s gate.
As the Christian moves into spiritual
adulthood he finds solutions to many problems. How can he love God whom he
cannot see? How can he have an objective yet positive attitude toward self,
even though he knows his own flaws and weaknesses? How can he tolerate
obnoxious, antagonistic people? How can he avoid being distracted by the people
he loves?
These are problems in relationships,
and the solutions lie in virtue-love. Virtue-love is the combination of Gates 5
and 6 of the divine dynasphere, which include personal love for God, spiritual
self-esteem, spiritual autonomy, and impersonal love for all mankind.
I express these biblical concepts in
contemporary terminology to communicate the progression and the mechanics of
spiritual adulthood. Gates 5 and 6 solve problems in relationships with God and
with other people. Toward God, virtue-love
derives its strength from God Himself, the object of the believer’s personal
love. Personal love for God naturally generates spiritual self-esteem and
spiritual autonomy within the believer’s own soul. The believer gains
confidence concerning his eternal spiritual royalty, and that inner composure
becomes the self-assured basis for kindness, thoughtfulness, and graciousness
toward other people. Toward others, therefore,
virtue-love is impersonal love for the entire human race. Impersonal love draws
its strength not from the object of love but from the virtue of the believer
himself, even when the object of love is totally incompatible or antagonistic
toward him.
When the believer begins to acquire
virtue-love, how does he coordinate his newly developed spiritual muscles? How
do the first awkward expressions of
virtue-love become the genuine poise of spiritual strength? The answer is
suffering for blessing. Between Gates 5 and 6, and again after virtue-love is
consolidated in Gate 6, God applies pressure to test the believer and to
accelerate his advance. Gate 7 is a series of tests designed to propel him into
spiritual maturity.
The mature believer is a winner in
life. He has developed the capacity to receive the conveyance of “every
spiritual blessing in heavenly places in Christ” (Eph. 1:3), all of which were
tailor-made for him “before the foundation of the world” (Eph. 1:4). These
fabulous blessings, now on deposit for but a] each believer, are called
“greater grace” (James 4:6). Conveyance of the believer’s greater blessings
glorifies God to the maximum.
Now that the believer has reached maturity, he
becomes aware of yet another problem. Having learned the doctrine of the
angelic conflict, which explains the existence of the human race and the
objective of human history, he knows that God’s purpose is always to
demonstrate His glory.’5 How is God glorified to the maximum? How
does He express His glory in the life of a believer who already receives the
magnificent blessings of maturity?
The answer is evidence testing. Evidence
testing is Satan’s cross-examination of a mature believer whom God has called
to the stand as a witness for God’s character, a demonstration of God’s glory.
Satan attempts to discredit each witness, but spiritual maturity gives the believer
the strength to face the worst Satan can throw at him. When the believer uses
divine assets under extreme duress, not only is God’s perfection demonstrated
to Satan, but the marvel of God’s grace is also made dramatically clear to the
mature believer himself. His occupation with the person of Christ sustains an
inner happiness that is the greatest of all problem-solving devices (1 Pet.
1:6—8).
Whether enjoying prosperity or coping with
adversity, the mature believer has access to all the problem-solving devices of
the entire divine dynasphere. As he grows, he still uses all the
problem-solving devices of spiritual childhood, but now they are reinforced
with the strength of adulthood. Using the tremendous assets of his palace, he
sustains his spiritual momentum throughout his life and handles suffering with
such confidence that he becomes a maximum demonstration of God’s perfect grace
and integrity.
MENTAL ATTITUDE IN SUFFERING: THE PRINCIPLE OF THE OFFENSIVE
Besides the doctrines of the royal family and
the palace, yet another concept must be understood in connection with
suffering. The protocol plan of God is an aggressive plan. Its objective
sharply focuses the believer’s attention. The Christian’s purpose in life is
to know God, as He has revealed Himself in His Word. This goal is achieved by
learning, metabolizing, and applying Bible doctrine, which not only cause the
believer to personally love God but also create true motivation in all realms
of spiritual and temporal life.
Positive volition is more than a passive
interest in God and His plan. The believer must take the offensive and employ
divine assets to attain the goal that God has set for every believer.
No one stands still in the Christian life: If a
believer does not advance, he retrogresses. This truth is intensified under
pressure. Suffering never leaves the Christian the same as he was before;
suffering makes him either better or any worse. The believer who reacts to pain
and pressure with arrogance— has manifested in bitterness, vindictiveness,
implacability, guilt, or self-pity—sets
himself back in the Christian life. To advance, he must follow the
example of Paul who repeatedly expresses the attitude of the offense: “I press
on .reaching forward . . . I press on toward the goal of the upward call of God
in Christ Jesus” (Phil. 3:12—14).
The offensive has always been an important
principle in life. It is a military axiom that offensive action is the only
means by which a victory is gained. Offensive action brings victory, while defensive
action can only avoid defeat.
Just as the offensive increases the
effectiveness of the military force adopting it, likewise taking the offensive
in the spiritual life increases the believer’s ability to handle any suffering
he encounters. The offensive in the military also raises morale, permits
concentration of effort, and allows freedom of action. Defensive action can be
used to assist offensive action elsewhere, to gain time, to utilize terrain, or
to compensate for weakness, but offensive action must be used where there is
any reasonable chance for success.
In the Christian life there is always a
“reasonable chance of success.” Taking our cue from the many biblical
analogies drawn from military life (for example, Eph. 6:10—17 or Heb. 4:12),
let us use the parallels between the Christian life and a military operation as
a means of anticipating where our study of suffering will carry us.
The believer has an objective in life, which is
to know and love God. This personal objective implies that the believer must
attain spiritual maturity, in which status his life glorifies God to the
maximum. How does he reach his assigned objective? He goes on the offensive by metabolizing Bible doctrine while
consistently living in the divine dynasphere. Doctrine gives him spiritual
momentum. From doctrine he develops capacity to love God; he attains spiritual
self-esteem. Spiritual self-esteem is a remarkable achievement, which we will
study in detail. It is the giant step into spiritual adulthood, the first major
intermediate objective along the route of advance to maturity.
Because spiritual self-esteem can easily become
arrogance, God strengthens the believer’s spiritual self-esteem with
providential preventive suffering. This is the first category of Christian
suffering designed for blessing. When strengthened, spiritual self-esteem
becomes spiritual autonomy, which is a base of further operations. The believer
continues his advance to spiritual maturity through the valley of momentum
testing, which is yet another category of Christian suffering for blessing.
Upon reaching spiritual maturity, the believer is in a position to face the
challenge of evidence testing and to glorify God to the maximum.
Suffering plays a major role in the believer’s advance. His personal
determination to achieve maturity by obeying God’s mandates makes him equal to
any suffering in life. Mental alertness and a readiness to use the assets God
has provided are the attitudes of the spiritual winner.
Chapter 2
THE LAW OF VOLITIONAL RESPONSIBILITY
SELF-INDUCED MISERY
BY FAR THE MOST PREVALENT CATEGORY of human suffering is self-induced
misery. People in general and believers in particular cause themselves
tremendous anguish, both within their own souls and in the overt circumstances
they create. The law of volitional responsibility recognizes that a believer’s
decisions have natural and logical consequences. When he makes bad decisions,
suffering will naturally result. In nearly every instance of Christian
suffering, therefore, part or all of the problem can be traced back logically
to the choices of the one who suffers.
Before God created the human race, He decreed
that man would have free will. By divine decree, our decisions (or indecisions)
have real repercussions for which we are responsible. Just as there are
scientific laws in which science observes the faithfulness of Jesus Christ who
“uphold[s] all things by the word of His power” (Heb. 1:3; cf., Col. 1:16), so
also there are laws of human consequence in which each individual’s thoughts,
decisions, and actions establish the trends in his life.
Every human being has free will. We make
decisions constantly. Some of those decisions are good, others bad. You
probably discovered in early youth that when you chose to take certain actions
you were punished, but when you chose to take other actions you avoided
punishment and perhaps enjoyed some measure of blessing. This principle also
holds true in the spiritual life. When we follow divine protocol we are
blessed; when we violate protocol we suffer. The obvious conclusion is that we
must learn God’s system and abide by it.
The implication of the law of volitional
responsibility is that every human being must take the responsibility for his
own decisions and actions. If properly reared, a person understands that he
never blames others for his unhappiness. He acknowledges any mistakes or wrong
decisions he has made regarding relationships, activities, motives, and
functions in life and fulfills the obligations he has incurred. If he suffers
from causes beyond his control, he does not allow the pain to tyrannize his
soul. Rather than poison himself with bitterness and self-pity, he makes the
most of his present options and opportunities through good decisions
compatible with the protocol plan of God.
The law of volitional responsibility is clearly
taught in Scripture.
Be not deceived; God
cannot be mocked. Whatever a man sows, this he will also reap. (Gal. 6:7)
Sowing and reaping can be beneficial or
detrimental. In Galatians 6:7 they illustrate the law of volitional
responsibility, warning the believer not to ignore or violate the protocol plan
of God. The seeds a farmer plants will invariably produce their own species of plant and fruit. Likewise, the sins
a person commits sprout and follow a natural pattern of growth.
Tracing the results of a particular sin is not
the point of this verse. Just as no two seeds are exactly alike and just as
they are affected by nearly infinite combinations of soil and weather, a
believer’s sins produce suffering in keeping with all the variables of his
life. The harvest of suffering will differ from one person to another even if
they seem to commit the same sins. But anyone who thinks he will escape the
consequences of his own decisions deceives himself. He assumes that God has
not sovereignly decreed man to have free will. If man’s decisions had no
effect, he would not have free will. However, man does have free will and his bad decisions have bad effects.
Arrogance is self-deception. An inflated
opinion of self is the believer’s great enemy, an illusion which will
relentlessly undermine his life and happiness. Most suffering in life is
caused by arrogance. In contrast to Bible doctrine, which orients the believer
to reality, arrogance is divorcement from reality. The divine decrees guarantee
that the consequences of man’s decisions occur in reality, and because the
arrogant believer’s perception and thought are divorced from reality, his
suffering will seem to come out of nowhere. The natural results of his
decisions often will take him by surprise. Situations for which he himself is
responsible will shock and disappoint him, will confound his expectations, will
dash his misplaced hopes.
In arrogance and ignorance the believer
will falsely blame his misfortunes on other people, environment, childhood
trauma, bad luck, the devil, or even God. Because he is out of touch with
reality, he is ultimately illogical in his thinking. Blaming others is
rationalization; everyone is responsible for his own decisions.
VOLITION AS THE SOURCE OF SIN, HUMAN GOOD, AND EVIL
Volition, which is a component of the human soul, is the source of personal sins and human good and is also a
source of evil,
PERSONAL SIN is an act of volition contrary
to the will and standards of God. Personal
sin is distinguished from Adam’s
original sin, which caused the fall of the entire human race, and distinct
also from the old sin nature, which
is the genetic legacy of Adam’s sin in the body of each of his descendants.[12]
Personal sin is one manifestation of man’s fallen state.
The old sin nature is a source of
temptation, but volition is the source of every personal sin. Personal sin
results from volition saying yes to temptation, whether or not the individual
knows he is transgressing God’s will. The presence of the old sin nature is no
excuse for committing personal sins, nor is ignorance. God has given us assets
with the power to overcome these handicaps. Personal sins are classified as
(1) mental attitude sins, like
arrogance and jealousy, (2) verbal sins, such
as gossip, maligning, and lying, and (3) overt
sins, like murder, theft, and fornication.
HUMAN GOOD is man's relative righteousness, which can never meet the
human standards of God’s absolute righteousness. Certain categories of human
good are legitimate between people, but when offered to God, man’s “righteousnesses
are like filthy rags” (Isa. 64:6). Religion vainly seeks to earn the
approbation of God through the “dead works” of human good (Heb. 6:1; 9:14),
areas whereas Christianity, which is not a religion, is a personal relationship
with God based not on human good but on the possession of perfect divine
righteousness. At the moment of salvation, God imputes His own righteousness to
every believer (Gen. 15:6; Rom. 3:22; 4:3) and declares each believer
justified, vindicated, acceptable to the absolute standards of God (Rom.
3:19—30).
EVIL is a self-destructive way
of thinking that is hostile to the will of God. As ruler of the world
Satan implements his multifaceted policy of evil, a policy of guaranteed misery which many Christians execute.[13]
SINS OF IGNORANCE AND ERRORS IN JUDGMENT
Sin, human good, and evil are absolutely
excluded from the plan of God for the believer’s life. But since believers
still have their old sin natures after salvation (1 John 1:8, 10), and since
many believers fail to learn what constitutes sin, human good, and evil or how
to deal with them, Christians will inevitably commit these violations of divine
protocol.
Suffering under the law of volitional
responsibility will afflict the believer who does not know he is involved in
sin, human good, or evil. Because volition operates in ignorance as well as in
cognizance, whether or not a believer knew a particular thought or act was
wrong, he nonetheless chose to commit it. He did it because he wanted to do it.
Consequently, he must take responsibility for that decision and for any
resultant suffering. He is foolish if he remains oblivious to the correlation
between his decisions and his misery.
No one has an excuse for practicing sin, human
good, or evil. Free will is always the cause. Even in psychosis people use
their volition. Indeed, psychosis is primarily volitional. In fact, many
psychotic individuals have exceedingly strong wills. Very few people are born
psychotic; most mental illness is acquired through arrogance,
self-centeredness, selfishness, self-righteousness, and the practice of making
thousands of subjective wrong decisions over an extended period of time. In
deliberate rebelliousness, in ignorance, or in psychosis, suffering piles on
top of suffering—for which the individual bears responsibility.
Not all suffering under the law of volitional
responsibility arises from sin, human good, or evil. Occasionally, our
suffering originates from nothing more than poor judgment. The very fact that
we are imperfect means that our judgment will be flawed from time to time. No
matter how smart we are, someone can always deceive us. Despite wisdom and
objectivity, we all have areas of subjectivity and sentimentality that can
distort our thinking. Intelligence is no protection. Experience affords little
help. Advice from friends or warnings from experts will never keep us from
doing the foolish things we set our minds on doing. A great deal of suffering
arises from errors in human judgment.
Violations of the laws of divine establishment
guarantee suffering to both believer and unbeliever under the principle of
volitional responsibility.[14]
The Scriptures describe in detail operational laws for the entire human
race within the framework of national entities. The sanctity of life and
property, of privacy and freedom, must be respected or suffering will result.
If a believer commits murder, for example, he has not only committed a sin
against God but he has violated the laws of establishment concerning the
sanctity a human life. He should, therefore, suffer capital punishment because
he mad the criminal decision to commit murder (Rom. 13:1-4).
The Christian way of life is more demanding than the establishment life
o the unbeliever. The believer’s life has a divine purpose; the unbeliever’s
life does not—except to become a believer. Hence, the Christian suffers fro
violations of establishment principles, as would any unbeliever, but he also
suffers when he ignores the mandates of God’s protocol plan. He is commanded to
reside and function in the palace, the divine dynasphere, under th enabling
power of God the Holy Spirit, but if he “quenches” or “grieves” Holy Spirit through
sin (Eph. 4:30; 1 Thess. 5:19), he cuts himself off fro God’s purpose for his
life and enters the dungeon of Satan’s system. All suffering from the cosmic
system is classified under the law of volitional responsibility, but the
believer in the cosmic system suffers more severely than do the unbeliever in
the cosmic system.
COLLECTIVE SUFFERING
The law of volitional responsibility not only explains individual
suffering but also accounts for the collective suffering that man brings upon
himself. A corporation may go bankrupt through the bad decisions of a few
company officers and government officials. Suffering from their decisions
touched many other people.
With so many individuals operating in the world, each with free will, a
certain amount of suffering inevitably overflows into one’s life from the
decisions of others. Volition is still the cause. If not created by one’s own
volition, suffering results from someone else’s volition. The innocent suffer
wi the guilty, but innocent or guilty, each believer must apply the solutions
available in the divine dynasphere through his own good decisions. If he
personally fails to use divine assets and problem-solving devices, the blame
for misery can fall only upon the believer himself.
Ultimately there are no innocent parties; man by nature is a flawed
imperfect creature. Since the fall of Adam, no one is naturally great; nobility
of soul is a rare achievement. Evidence of this biblical principle is found~
the tremendous amount of suffering in the world today, suffering that h been
rampant through thousands of years of human history. In every generation, there
is always a plethora of suffering. Each individual (excluding humanity of
Christ) is identified with Adam in his fall; each is genetically related to fallen
Adam. Because of Adam’s deliberate decision to sin in Garden, we are born with
genetic and environmental handicaps to which add our own volitional flaws from
personal sin and poor judgment, creating our own suffering under the law of
volitional responsibility.
Human weakness, ignorance, and arrogance
weave a tapestry of inevitable suffering for many
people. However, we
are not doomed by our handicaps to lives of misery and despair. A principle of
grace is far more
powerful than is the unavoidable law of volitional responsibility: While man
manufactures his own
problems and resultant suffering, God manufactures solutions and blessings in
the midst of suffering.
FORGIVENESS AND
RESPONSIBILITY
All personal sins were judged at
the cross (1 Pet. 2:24; 2 Cor. 5:21).[15]
The Gospel of salvation is
the supreme illustration that divine sovereignty and human free will
coexist by divine decree.
In grace God the Father, who
is the author of the divine plan, took direct, unilateral action and solved the
sin problem. He imputed all the sins of mankind to Christ on the cross and
judged Him as our substitute (I Pet. 2:24). Jesus Christ died for the sins of
every member of the human race, paying in full, once and for all, the penalty
demanded by the absolute righteousness of God (1 Pet. 3:18). That is why the
Scripture says “whoever believes may
in Him have eternal life” (John 3:15).
One nonmeritorious act of
positive volition to believe in Christ appropriates the work of eternal,
omnipotent, sovereign God. This is grace (Eph. 2:8—9). Through Christ’s
perfectly meritorious work and man’s nonmeritorious faith, God totally removes
the barrier between fallen man and Himself, reconciling the believer to Himself
forever.
Even though sins were judged
on the cross, and we have eternal salvation through faith in Jesus Christ, our
daily living on earth involves the natural repercussions of our sins. Sin has
temporal consequences toward God, toward self, and toward other people. In
relation to God, the sin caused by negative volition removes the believer from
temporal fellowship with Him in the palace of the divine dynasphere. When we
rebound, the sin is always forgiven and we are restored to fellowship with God.
Admitting, naming, citing our sins privately to the Father is our
responsibility toward God (1 John 1:9), which is our first obligation after committing a sin.
What is our responsibility
toward self? In relation to self, the danger lies in allowing the sin that God
has already forgiven to kindle a mental attitude reaction. Like a chain smoker
who lights his next cigarette on the butt of the last one, the chain sinner
ignites a mental attitude sin on a sin that rebound has taken away.
For example, when a believer guilty of hatred confesses his sin t~ God
forgives him and forgets the sin. If the believer then fails to forge God
Himself has forgotten, the old hatred can lead to further sins of bitterness
and revenge. Likewise, fornication is a sin that, even though totally forgiven
by God, may cause the devastating sin of guilt. Or, in erroneous zeal to up for
a sin for which Christ was already judged on the cross, a believe enter into
self-righteous, crusader arrogance which once again ejects hire the divine
dynasphere.
An essential part of rebound, therefore, is the isolation of sin.[16]
We never allow one sin to become the cause of another and another in
a subjective chain reaction. After perfect God has forgiven us, a guilt complex
or pity or a “root of bitterness springing up” must be classified as nothing
devastating mental attitude sin, a prime cause of self-induced misery 12:15).
By understanding and applying the powerful doctrines that underlie the
simplicity of the rebound technique, we are able to prevent the forgiven sin
from igniting another sin.[17]
We are responsible to rebound and move on in our Christian lives r~ than
be enslaved to past sins by bitterness or a guilt complex. Any suffering that
our sinning brings about is converted by rebound from cursing to blessing.
Although we may be the cause of our own pain, our situation has now come an
opportunity to utilize divine assets, to see God’s provisions in act to grow in
grace.
Since we are responsible for all of our decisions, what is our
obligation to people who have been hurt by our sinning? What is our
responsibility to those harmed by our bad judgment? Although our sins are
forgiven and we are stored to fellowship with God, although we have avoided
chain sinning. have proceeded to apply doctrine in our own lives, our sins may
continue have injurious effects on other people. Rebound and the isolation of
sin marvelous problem-solving devices supplied by the grace of God, but they
give us no excuse for irresponsibility toward others. Rebound is a license
spiritual growth, never a license for sin. Nor does God’s grace in rebound ever
justify a believer’s flip attitude toward the freedom, privacy, property,
feelings of others.
Here we sail into dangerous waters where we must “rightly divide Word of
truth” (2 Tim. 2:15). To be right with man does not mean that we a right with God. Unbelievers can have honorable relationships with other people,
proving that human relationships are not at the heart of the Christian way of
life. What the unbeliever can do is not the Christian life.
In the protocol plan of God, relationship with
God comes first and has a positive impact on relationships with people. A right
relationship with God leads to a right relationship with man. The believer’s
most important function after committing a sin is to restore his fellowship
with God inside the divine dynasphere, where he is filled with the Spirit and
thereby perpetuates his spiritual growth.
Much less important, but still part of the
believer’s volitional responsibility, is the fulfillment of his obligations in
relation to other people. Every situation is different; each believer must
apply doctrine for himself. There is no pat solution by which the Christian
resolves his human relationships, but certain biblical principles must guide
his thinking and application.
Responsibility to people we have harmed lies
between two extremes that we must avoid. We must not be insensitive, nor should
we allow ourselves to be enslaved by anyone’s implacability. In other words, we
are not to ignore the just cause of anyone who suffers because of our
decisions, but neither should we be motivated by fear or a guilt complex.
Between these two erroneous extremes lies our responsibility.
If the suffering we cause can be alleviated, we
should go to the extent that justice, sensitivity, and common sense dictate in
easing the situation. Often the problem is complex. Usually both parties in any
dispute are guilty to some degree. Some “solutions” would only aggravate the
problem. We should be thoughtful and generous and should walk the extra mile
(Matt. 5:41), but when nothing more can be done, we must leave the situation in
the Lord’s bands for solution as we press on in our Christian lives (2 Sam.
12:13). No matter whose volition originally causes the suffering, each person
is ultimately responsible for applying Bible doctrine in his own life.
Above all else, the believer must live his life
as unto the Lord, not as unto people. This is not to be construed as ignoring
the human dimension of the problem, but application of the law of volitional
responsibility does not mortgage the believer’s future to pay for his past
failures. Instead, the protocol plan of God demands the virtues of humility,
personal love for God, and impersonal love toward other people. Bad decisions
make suffering inevitable, and when a believer commits a sin, he must take
responsibility for its consequences toward God, self, and others.
THE LIMITED EXAMPLE OF ESTABLISHMENT COURAGE
In the devil’s world a certain amount of
suffering is unavoidable, but self-induced
misery can always be avoided. The key is found in the application of truth
resident in the soul. All truth is ultimately based on the absolute person of
God, and all human integrity is loyalty to some category of truth. Truth exists
in three categories:
1. LAWS
OF DIVINE ESTABLISHMENT for believers and unbelievers alike,
2. THE GOSPEL OF SALVATION for unbelievers,
3. BIBLE DOCTRINE for believers
only.
When inculcated with truth, the human soul can
triumph over terrible adversity. This point is dramatically illustrated by the
establishment-oriented unbeliever. Although he has limited resources of truth,
he displays admirable stability and courage under stress. If the unbeliever can
handle suffering with the restricted power of establishment truth, then far
greater are the believer’s dynamics as he utilizes Bible doctrine and the
divine omnipotence available in the divine dynasphere to meet the challenges of
life.
The effectiveness of divine establishment as a limited
source of strength dramatically reveals the superior power of doctrine.
American prisoners of war in North Vietnam provide a notable example of
unbelievers and believers whose inner strength was derived from establishment
principles. These men were sustained by a code of establishment concepts
through years of bestial, crippling torture. Rear Admiral James B. Stockdale,
(Ret.), the senior American prisoner of war, was awarded the Medal of Honor
for his “valiant leadership and extraordinary courage” as the leader of
prisoner resistance.[18]
He confirms that even under extreme suffering, the law of volitional
responsibility remains operational, and he describes the prisoners’ ability to
avoid self-destructive mental attitude sins.
There are a lot of things [a
torturer] can’t do with torture. Aristotle said that compulsion and free will
can coexist, and he was right.... A man about to undergo torture must have
burned into his mind the fact that he can be hemmed in only within a very
narrow window and that he need not volunteer information ....
To keep your integrity, your
dignity, your soul, you have to retain responsibility for your actions, to
deal with guilt. (“Yes, I lost the bubble, I might have done better, but I
didn’t.”) You need to look squarely at what you did and measure its limited
gravity in the light of the overall truth of the total situation, then use the
guilt, such as it is, as a cleansing fire to purge the fault, as a goad for
future resolve, and above all not be consumed by it. But you have to do all
this yourself. To say that guilt doesn’t exist or that it was the work of “evil
spirits” or “brainwashers” is self-delusion. . . . What is indispensable to
avoiding the web of fear and guilt is the ability to stand isolated, without friends
and surrounded by entreaters, and quite uncharitably say “no,” without the
crutch of anger, without embarrassment, with finality and with commitment to
the consequences...
Young Americans in Hanoi
learned fast. They made no deals. They learned that “meeting them half way” was
the road to degradation. My hypothetical young prison mate soon learned that
impulses, working against the grain, are very important in political prisons,
that one learns to enjoy fighting city hall, to enjoy giving the enemy
upside-down logic problems, that one soon finds himself taking his lumps with
pride and not merely liking but loving that tapping guy next door, the man he
never sees, the man he bares his soul to after each torture session, until he
realizes he is thereby expiating all residual guilt. Then he realizes he can’t
be hurt and can’t be had as long as he tells the truth and clings to that
forgiving band of brothers who are becoming his country, his family.[19]
American prisoners of war
applied establishment truths concerning personal freedom and responsibility as
well as humility, honesty, and mutual respect. They avoided torturing
themselves with mental attitude sins. Moreover, free from self-induced misery,
they learned to actually enjoy the challenges of their unspeakable situation.
Their success did not stem from mere stubbornness, which can be a counterfeit
of integrity. Anger, fear, guilt, vengeance, implacability, or insecurity may
motivate unyielding tenacity. This pseudo-strength may appear admirable and may
even achieve a degree of success, but the inner result of such false motivation
is only wear and tear on the soul. In particular, fear is a tremendous drain of
mental and physical energy.
God is the source of
establishment truth, but the protocol plan of God both includes and exceeds
divine establishment. If the application of establishment truth creates genuine
strength of soul, the application of Bible doctrine has far greater dynamics.
The whole is greater than the part. The advancing believer understands that
“the overall truth of the total situation” includes the magnificent grace of
God, His divine omnipotence, and the problem-solving devices of His protocol
plan.
Free volition causes suffering
under the law of volitional responsibility, but the existence of free will also
strips away every excuse for self-induced misery. The believer’s own negative
volition is his only hindrance to advancement in the protocol plan of God.
There is no excuse for failing to perceive, metabolize, and apply Bible
doctrine in the power of the divine dynasphere. Far surpassing establishment
truth, fabulous equal privileges and equal opportunities are granted by God to
every believer for the fulfillment of His plan, purpose, and design.
MAKING GOOD DECISIONS, FOLLOWING DIVINE PROTOCOL
The believer is responsible for most of his own
suffering, but what is the solution? He must reverse the trend. Rather than
make bad decisions, the believer must begin to make good decisions, which also have logical repercussions—good
results. The believer who obeys the mandates of God frees the omnipotence of
God to advance and bless him. This means that he must learn Bible doctrine. Only the believer who understands and
properly uses the problem-solving devices available to him in the palace of the
divine dynasphere fulfills his destiny in the plan of God.
Divine protocol is precise. “God is not a God
of confusion” or disorganization (1 Cor. 14:33). The believer is free to
express his individual volition within the boundaries established by the plan
of God. God’s plan must be accurately understood and applied. The believer who
distorts God’s plan by overemphasizing isolated elements rather than living by
the entire system of protocol is not solving his problems; he is compounding
them.
The rebound prayer, for example, is the means
of reentering the divine dynasphere and of restoring the ministry of God the
Holy Spirit in the believer’s life. But even a precisely accurate rebound
prayer generally does not cause pain to instantly, magically cease. In reaction
to pain, prayer is often taken out of its protocol context and falsely applied
to suffering. Prayer is a weapon for the strong, not a crutch for the weak.[20]
Prayer has many wonderful applications within the rules God has laid
down, but no amount of prayer will reverse the natural results of bad
decisions.
When a believer prays for himself or asks
others to pray for him because he is hurting from bad decisions, he may be
hoping prayer will achieve what it was never designed to accomplish. If he
merely wishes his suffering to end, he wants God to suspend the law of
volitional responsibility, change His entire plan for the human race, and
somehow miraculously make the pain go away. The source of the suffering is the
wrong decisions the believer himself has made —regarding business, or personal
relationships, or when facing temptation or sin. There are divine solutions to
suffering, which we are studying, but imploring God for relief is not one of
them. In fact, the removal of suffering might deny the believer a special
blessing available to him only through the suffering.
The protocol plan of God establishes the
correct procedure to use; the believer must learn and obey the system God has
established. The ignorance and confusion of believers who have never learned
the protocol of the Christian life can only intensify their suffering.
DIVINE DISCIPLINE
AN EXPRESSION OF GOD’S GRACE
WE HAVE SEEN THAT MOST CHRISTIAN SUFFERING arises from the believer’s
own thoughts, decisions, and actions. One bad decision follows an-other until
his life is unbearable. He makes a shamble of his present experience and
destroys his future options. No one can devastate a person’s life as~ he can
himself.
At some point in this self-destructive process,
God intervenes with divine discipline. God will not stand by while members of
the royal family sink into degeneracy; He takes stern measures to alert them to
their dire situation and to encourage them to rebound and reenter the palace.
In His perfect wisdom God knows when and how to warn each believer. Our
heavenly Father knows the most effective way to confront us with the fact that
we are totally dependent on His grace.
All divine discipline is administered in grace.
The Christian under discipline may doubt that God is treating him in grace, but
he could not imagine how much more he would hurt if God were not acting in grace. God severely
punishes believers but not because He likes to see us squirm. He is perfect. He
is just. We are His children, the royal family of God, and He punishes us for
our benefit.
By definition, divine discipline is the sum
total of punitive action taken by the justice of God in grace to correct, to
punish, to encourage, to train, to motivate the believer’s free will toward the
protocol plan of God. Divine discipline is for believers only (Heb. 12:8) and
occurs only in this life, not in eternity (Rev. 21:4).
Divine discipline is a warning that the
believer is outside the boundaries of God’s plan. Just as a football game is
played inside the boundaries of the playing field, so the plan of God must be
executed within the bounds of divine protocol (2 John 9). Just as the referee
blows a whistle when the ball carrier steps out of bounds, so God blows a
whistle on us and administers divine discipline when we live outside the divine
dynasphere.
DISCIPLINE AS PARENTAL TRAINING IN HEBREWS 12
When a believer cuts off his fellowship with God
through sin and remains in the cosmic system, God in His grace must deal with
him as a child. Bible doctrine has been ignored; God must get the believer’s
attention through pain.
And so you yourselves have forgotten a
principle of doctrine which teaches you as sons: My son [God addresses
believers as His children], do not make light of corrective discipline from
the Lord nor be fainting when you are reprimanded by Him. (Heb. 12:5)
Hebrews 12:5 encourages us by explaining that
divine discipline is tailored to each believer. God treats us as individuals.
Discipline is neither too lenient (“do not make light”) nor too severe (“nor be
fainting”) but is administered for maximum effectiveness in every believer’s
life.
For whom the Lord loves He disciplines, and He
punishes every son whom He welcomes home. (Heb. 12:6)
Divine discipline from the Lord is part of
parental training in the royal family of God. The premise in comparing divine
discipline with child rearing in the home is that, except for the humanity of
Jesus Christ, there is no such thing as a perfect child. Some children are
unquestionably better behaved and more responsive to instruction than others,
but every child needs training so that eventually he will be able to function
in adult society. Parents try to instill authority orientation in their
children. Anyone who leaves home without authority orientation makes himself a
monster who will manufacture misery for himself and others under the law of
volitional responsibility.
On the spiritual side of the analogy, there is
no such thing as sinless perfection in this life, again with the exception of
Christ’s impeccable humanity. As long as any believer lives in his mortal body,
in which the old
sin nature resides, he will continue to sin. As he matures spiritually,
he will sin less frequently and perhaps will commit different categories of
sin, but periodically he will succumb to temptation and enter the cosmic
system.
If we [believers] say we have no sin [no sin
nature], we are deceiving ourselves, and the truth is not in us. . . . If we
say that we have not sinned [do not commit personal sins], we make Him a liar,
and His Word is not in us. (1 John 1:8, 10)
If the believer remains in the cosmic system, his
thinking loses touch with the reality of God’s protocol plan. Under prolonged
cosmic influence, his arrogance becomes antagonism toward God; he multiplies
his own unhappiness and incurs divine discipline. Like parental training,
divine discipline is designed to inculcate humility, which is orientation to
reality and authority. Only the humble believer is teachable (Ps. 25:8—9); he
desires to understand how he fits in the overall scheme of God’s grace. Only
with humility can anyone be objective and responsive to the authority of Bible
doctrine.
Although self-evaluation when accompanied by
arrogance rapidly slips into subjectivity, we have the responsibility to
analyze our lives objectively in the light of the Word of God. We should be
first to recognize our own weaknesses. If we do not, divine discipline
enforces humility on us, teaching us to see ourselves as we really are in
relation to God and His marvelous plan. The very fact that we receive
discipline from God tells us we are divorced from reality and that God is
bringing us back to grace-oriented objectivity. From that solid footing we can
rebound and resume our spiritual growth.
Because of corrective discipline, endure. (Heb.
12:7a)
This is a command to endure suffering inside the divine dynasphere. In other
words, rebound! And after rebound, keep applying doctrine!
Hebrews 12 continues with an explanation of
divine discipline in terms of parents and children. The entire passage should
be cited (with exposition) as documentation of God’s magnificent purpose in
disciplining His own.
As a result, God will deal with
you as sons, for what one is a son [royal family] whom the Father has not
disciplined? But if you are without discipline, of which all [believers] have
become participants, then you are bastards [unbelievers] and not sons.
Another point: We had our
human parents for corrective discipline, and we respected them. Therefore, to a
greater degree you will become subordinate to the Father of our spirits and
continue living [in the divine dynasphere]. For they [human parents] on the one
hand, disciplined us for a short time [during our childhood] according to what
seemed best to them, but He [God] on the other hand disciplines us for our
profit in order that we might receive a share of His holiness [blessing from
the justice of God].
So, on the one hand, all
discipline while in progress appears to be an occasion not for happiness but
sorrow; afterwards [after recovery by rebound], on the other hand, sorrow pays
back with interest a prosperous gain from virtue [resumption of momentum inside
the divine dynasphere] to those who are taught by it [discipline teaching the
humble believer].
Therefore, restore to power
[rebound, or restore to the divine dynasphere] the listless hands and the disabled
knees [illustrations of how the believer can suffer]. Be making straight tracks
by means of your feet [momentum in the divine dynasphere] in order that the
cripple [the believer in the cosmic system] may not be put out of joint
[permanently] but rather be healed [restored through rebound]. (Heb. 12:7b—13)
CATEGORIES OF DIVINE DISCIPLINE
God is never arbitrary in administering
discipline: His punishment is always appropriate to the individual in question.
From His perfect divine justice, all discipline not only fits the violation
but also matches the believer’s receptivity. Hence, there are three categories
of divine discipline:
1. WARNING
DISCIPLINE,
2. INTENSIVE
DISCIPLINE,
3. DYING
DISCIPLINE.
When the believer does not use rebound, these three
categories of discipline are progressive. Mild discipline gives way to more
and more severe discipline if the believer fails to respond.
The believer who refuses to live in the divine dynasphere receives warning discipline, added to the misery he has already created for himself under the law of volitional responsibility. He has isolated himself from fellowship with God; he has shut Christ out of his thoughts.
Behold, I
[Christ] stand at the door and I keep knocking. (Rev. 3:20a)
That knock at the door is warning discipline.
As a general rule, warning discipline is in itself less severe than the
believer’s self-induced misery. However, the combination of warning discipline
and self-induced misery adds up to a significant shock. Because he has not yet
declined into the later stages of negative volition, this believer is still
sensitive to the truth. He can still profit from this degree of discipline so
that God does not have to proceed to the next stage of punitive suffering. He
can still hear the knocking on the door. God can catch his attention with
relatively mild suffering.
If the believer ignores or rejects divine
warnings, he eventually requires intensive discipline. By habitual obstinance
he has dulled his sensitivity to truth; warning discipline is no longer
sufficient. God still has a marvelous plan for blessing this cosmic believer,
but God’s plan can be executed only in the power of the divine dynasphere. God
continues to support him with logistical grace, keeping him alive so that he
might return to his palace. Where there is life there is hope, and God fans the
feeble flame of hope by continuing to discipline the believer even after he has
insulted and blasphemed God by choosing to remain in Satan’s cosmic system.
Stiffer divine discipline is required to jolt
the habitually rebellious believer into objectivity. Intensive discipline alone
is worse than self-induced misery:
When these two categories of suffering are combined, the total pain from
God and from self is extremely severe. This adds up to unbearable suffering for
the believer who persists in the cosmic system.
God is exceedingly patient with His children.
He extends to the believer every possible opportunity to fulfill His protocol plan.
But with each rejection of God’s gracious appeal to return to the divine
dynasphere, the Christian renders himself less capable of making a positive
decision. “Hardness of heart,” or scar tissue of the soul, eventually locks his
volition in negative (Heb. 4:7; 6:6). Unless he rebounds, he will arrive at the
third and final stage of divine discipline, the sin unto death (1 John 5:16).
Dying discipline, or the sin unto death, is a
horrible departure from time into eternity. The Christian involved has no inner
resources for meeting death. In ignorance of doctrine, death becomes a
terrifying plunge into the unknown.
God’s work of salvation can never be canceled;
even the most hardened, self-righteous Christian is immediately “absent from
the body and. . . at home face to face with the Lord” when removed from life on
earth (2 Cor. 5:8). Such a recalcitrant believer will enjoy complete happiness
in heaven (Rev. 21:4), but he receives no eternal rewards with which to glorify
the Lord Jesus Christ forever (1 Cor. 3:15). This cosmic believer is a loser in
life; his tailor-made blessings for time and eternity are never delivered to
him but remain permanently on deposit in heaven as a memorial to his lost
opportunity and to God’s magnificent, irrevocable bounty (Eph. 1:3; 1 Pet.
1:4).
BELIEVERS WHO SERVE SATAN
Not every
Christian who fails to rebound and continues in locked-in negative volition is
removed
immediately from this life. God may keep a believer alive for a long
time in the intensive stage of divine discipline. With great finesse God may
employ these eternally saved “enemies of the cross” (Phil. 3:18) as agents of
momentum testing in the lives of growing believers. Specifically, Christians
suffering intensive divine discipline may administer the people test, the
thought test, the system test, or the disaster test to spiritually adult
believers. Representing many different personalities, attitudes, and
styles of living, and taking many different human approaches to life, cosmic
Christians who periodically receive intensive discipline serve Satan as cosmic
evangelists. Satan uses these negative believers to distract positive believers
from the protocol plan of God. Cosmic Christians draw other believers into the
pseudo-strength and superficial attractions of the cosmic system (Rev. 2:2).
Besides “enemies of the cross of Christ” (Phil. 3:18), other biblical terms for
cosmic believers include “enemies of
God” (James 4:4), “haters of God” (John 15:23), “anti-Christs” (1 John 2:18,
22; 4:3; 2 John 7), “hostile toward God” (Rom. 8:7), “men of the flesh” (1 Cor.
3:1—3), “double-minded” (James 4:8), “agents of the devil” (1 John 3:8), and
“disciples of the devil” (1 John 3:10). All these phrases refer to eternally
saved believers, not to unbelievers. Cosmic believers are like aggressors in
army field exercises. Often troops who have only a few weeks remaining in the
service will be issued weapons and blank ammunition in order to play the role
of the enemy against soldiers who are being trained. The aggressors and the men
in training are members of the same army, but the only troops benefiting from
the simulated combat are those being tested, not the aggressors. Likewise, the
only reason God sustains the lives of some negative believers is to use them to
train others. These “enemies of God” (James 4:4) are still members of the royal
family; their eternal life is secure. But the only role they can play in the
glorification of Christ is to be a test for positive believers. Because of
their own failures to execute the protocol plan of God, they become merely a
means of building strength in someone else. Obviously, this is not a
Christian’s highest calling.
These cosmic Christians on the
verge of maximum discipline may be sincere, sweet, and highly legalistic
individuals who have distorted Christianity into a religion of human good
works. They may be moral degenerates
rather than immoral degenerates. The
growing believer who can see through their facade, discerning the evil of
self-righteousness, yet avoiding condescension himself, accelerates his growth
in the divine dynasphere. God’s genius is wonderfully displayed as He permits a
negative Christian in Satan’s system to ambush a positive Christian in the
divine dynasphere. The believer who is going in the wrong direction
inadvertently contributes to the maturity of the believer advancing in the
right direction (Ps. 76:10a).
LEARNING THE HARD WAY
Divine discipline may incidentally help someone
besides the one being punished, but primarily discipline is a teacher, a
private tutor of the one in pain. Through suffering, God confronts the believer
with his ignorance of Bible doctrine.
Believers who fail to learn doctrine will
suffer all their lives until they are removed by the sin unto death. They may
be negative at different points in the learning process, which involves
reception, retention, and recall of doctrine. Those who refuse to listen to
Bible teaching (no reception) will live out their days in a welter of
ignorance, self-induced misery, and divine discipline. They will be unhappy and
will never understand why.
Other believers who do listen to doctrine, even
those who listen consistently, may reject true information they do not like to
hear (reception, but no retention). The points of doctrine they resist must be
learned another way, the hard way, through divine discipline. Divine discipline
is suffering, but not for its own sake; divine discipline is teaching. Where
the believer has reception and retention but no recall of doctrine for
application, divine discipline solves the problem by forcing the believer to
concentrate on doctrine in a humanly hopeless situation. God must teach—and all
of us must learn—a certain number of lessons through suffering.
We have a choice: Learn the easy way through
Bible teaching, or learn the hard way through suffering. These are the two
systems of learning in the Church Age. Instruction from one’s pastor is God’s
unlimited means of communication (depending on how diligently the pastor
studies). In contrast, discipline from God is a limited means of communication.
The academically prepared, orthodox pastor who teaches the Word of God line by
line, verse by verse can cover the whole realm of divine truth, resulting in
spiritual momentum and maturity in his listeners. Discipline, however, can
only motivate the believer to return to the plan of God and resume learning
doctrine under his pastor. Divine discipline has a limited objective, to alert
the believer that he is out of bounds and to motivate his recovery through
rebound. Concentrating in Bible class may be difficult from time to time, but
it is not nearly as painful nor as limited as receiving discipline directly
from God.
Discipline reminds us that we never get away
with anything. God never overlooks any member of His royal family. No believer
is ever ignored by the grace of God. Sooner or later God will provide
sufficient punishment to remind the believer of what is really important in
life.
FURTHER BIBLICAL DOCUMENTATION OF DIVINE DISCIPLINE
God takes punitive action in order to teach and
train us. Divine discipline motivates us to learn
so that the renewing of our minds with Bible doctrine becomes a way of
life. We may learn the hard way from time to time, but we learn nonetheless.
Those whom I
love [believers, who possess God’s imputed righteousness] I reprimand [warning
discipline to the cosmic believer] and I punish [intensive discipline];
therefore, be zealous [motivation from divine discipline] and change your mind
[rebound]. (Rev. 3:19)
In context, the well-known challenge of
Revelation 3:20 deals with warning discipline, not with salvation.
Behold [Now
hear this!] I stand at the door [opportunity for rebound] and I keep knocking.
If anyone [believer living in the
cosmic system, addressed as “beloved” in verse 19] hears My voice and opens the
door [rebound], I will enter face to face with him [recovery of residence in
the divine dynasphere], and I will dine with him and he with Me [fellowship
with God, the grace provision of Bible doctrine as spiritual food necessary for
growth]. (Rev. 3:20)
The Church Age believer always belongs to
Christ’s royal priesthood, even when he lives in the cosmic system. He always
has the right to approach the throne of grace with rebound and be restored to
his palace (Heb. 4:16). Discipline alerts the cosmic believer to the fact that
something is wrong with his life. The Lord graciously keeps knocking, giving
the believer continuing opportunities to rebound. Failure to respond after
hearing God’s warnings results in intensive discipline.
Behold, he
[cosmic believer] shall have labor pains of vanity [warning discipline] because
he has become pregnant with frustration [wrong decisions causing self-induced
misery], therefore he has given birth to a life of deceit. (Ps. 7:14)
Arrogance in any of its myriad forms is a “life
of deceit.” The arrogant believer denies the results of his own bad decisions and
ignores the warning discipline that God adds to his self-induced misery. If he
is a moral degenerate, he practices
sin and evil behind a facade of respectability. Preoccupied with his own
righteousness and zealous to convert others to his brand of human good, he
refuses to believe that he causes most of his own trouble or that God is trying
to get his attention through suffering. If he is an immoral degenerate, his sins will be more blatant. He may blame
circumstances or environment for his behavior. He may claim to be no worse than
others by fallaciously comparing his few strengths against their weaknesses. He
may look upon his sins as isolated exceptions rather than as the consistent
trend of his life.
Both moral and immoral degeneracy attempt to
justify self, but both are equally abhorrent to God. The only way God can break
through the “life of deceit” is with pain that strikes the degenerate believer
in his particular area of sensitivity. God “makes war against the arrogant”
(Prov. 3:34; James 4:6; 1 Pet. 5:5), attacking arrogance where the discipline
will hurt most and be most effective. The believer who remains adamant in his
arrogance loses all sensitivity to God’s appeals and eventually incurs maximum
discipline which removes him from this life.
Therefore,
because you are lukewarm [a cosmic believer], in fact neither hot [an advancing
believer] nor cold [an unbeliever], I am about to vomit you out of My mouth
[the sin unto death]. (Rev. 3:16)
Addressed to the local church in Laodicea,
Revelation 3:16 uses the notorious Laodicean water supply to illustrate the
malaise of cosmic involvement. While neighboring Hierapolis was renowned for
its hot springs and nearby Colossae enjoyed cold springs, Laodicea had neither.
Its piped water was lukewarm by the time it arrived and had an offensive
mineral smell. The Laodicean believers perfectly understood the startling,
anthropomorphic image of God vomiting.
Lukewarm water illustrates the cosmic
believer’s lack of capacity for life. As a result of the law of volitional
responsibility, life begins to turn sour, growing noxious under progressive
stages of divine discipline. If bad decisions are not remedied by good
decisions—to rebound and execute the protocol plan of God—the believer will
sink into the cosmic system until God unceremoniously expels him from this
life.
He [a negative
believer] dug a grave [bad decisions resulting in cosmic involvement] and
explored it [perpetuating his misery], therefore he has fallen into a ditch
which he himself has constructed [self-induced misery]. His frustration shall
return on his own head; his violent oppression of others shall descend on the
crown of his head. (Ps. 7:15—16)
All three stages of divine discipline are
illustrated in Paul’s description of certain Corinthian believers who came to
the communion service drunk.
For this
reason [believers partaking of the Eucharist while outside the divine
dynasphere] many are weak [warning discipline] and sick [intensive discipline]
and a number of believers sleep [dying discipline], but if we would judge
ourselves [rebound] we should not be judged. (1 Cor. 11:30—31)
When the believer rebounds, his discipline may
cease, diminish, or continue at the same intensity. Whatever suffering remains
after rebound is designed for blessing rather than for cursing. Restored to his
palace, the believer is now in a position to apply the divine assets he has
attained and to benefit from using God’s resources under pressure.
Behold, happy
is the man whom God reproves. Therefore, do not despise the discipline of
El-Shaddai [the “many-breasted God,” a divine title emphasizing God’s
logistical grace], for He inflicts pain [warning discipline] and He bandages
the wound. He wounds [intensive discipline] and His hands heal. (Job 5:17—18)
In contrast with most Christian suffering,
which is self-inflicted, the purpose of discipline is healing. God is like a
physician who must cause pain to set a fracture or to perform life-saving
surgery. We hurt ourselves when we ignore the law of volitional responsibility
and continue to live in the dungeon of the cosmic system; God must hurt us more
to bring us back to health and strength. He gives only what contributes most to
our blessing and happiness: In discipline God gives us exactly what our cosmic
status requires.
DISCIPLINE AND ETERNAL SECURITY
The God of logistical grace disciplines His
children, but never does He abandon us. Even in the pressure of intensive
discipline, the “many-breasted God” faithfully supplies all the logistical
grace we need to sustain our lives, Discipline never implies that God forsakes
us.
Divine discipline never means loss of
salvation. Once anyone believes in Christ, that believer’s salvation cannot be
canceled by anything he thinks, says, or does. Salvation is the irreversible
work of God. Only human arrogance could presume that a failure by man could
undo the permanent work of God. Christ on the cross paid for all man’s sins,
including the sin of arrogance, so that no human sin, no human decision, no
human absurdity can destroy the believer’s eternal relationship with God.
Even renunciation of faith does not affect the
believer’s eternal status as a member of the royal family of God.
Faithful is the
Word:
For if we died
with Him [at the moment of faith in Christ, the baptism of the Holy Spirit
identifies us with Christ in His death],
We shall also
live with Him [eternal salvation is now an unconditional fact].
If we persevere
[in the palace during our Christian lives on earth],
We will rule
with Him [as an eternal reward].
If we deny Him
[refuse to use divine assets],
He will deny us
[eternal rewards].
If we are
faithless [spend our lives in the cosmic system],
He remains
faithful [we are eternally saved],
He cannot deny
Himself. (2 Tim. 2:11—13)
At the moment of salvation God imputes His
absolute righteousness to every believer and declares him righteous or
justified (Rom. 3:21—28). If God excluded from eternal salvation anyone who
possesses God’s own righteous. ness, He would have to deny Himself and
contradict His own pronouncement of justification. Our salvation is as strong
as the essence of God.
When God provided salvation, He knew in His
omniscience that believers would be easily distracted. He is not shocked when a
Christian ignores his own royal birthright. We may be appalled by the
unfaithfulness of members of the royal family, but the sins that shock us have
already been judged on the cross. God is not forced to change His plan because
man periodically demonstrates the foolishness which God always knew he would
exhibit. God’s plan is greater than human sin and failure. His grace is
immutable. He is nol thrown off balance by every shadow of turning in a
believer’s life (James 1:17). Divine discipline, no matter how severe, never
cancels salvation. Instead, God is training His children to obey His protocol
plan.
THE PROTECTIVE ROLE OF DISCIPLINE
Two specific categories of divine discipline
will serve to illustrate how God administers punishment. First, His treatment
of individuals is demonstrated in triple compound divine discipline; second,
His punishment of families, groups, and nations is illustrated by the
fourth-generation curse. These two examples will show how divine discipline not
only punishes the guilty but also protects mankind from self-destruction. If
negative volition were unrestrained, the human race could not survive. The
freedom which the believer exercises under the law of volitional responsibility
is guarded by the authority of divine discipline.
Verbal sins such as gossip, judging, and
maligning warrant harsh divine discipline because they destroy the privacy of
their victims. Privacy is an essential component of freedom. Living his own
life before the Lord would become difficult for a believer if he were vilified
and his personal business were constantly criticized. Sins of the tongue
violate the sanctity of human freedom, and if a believer actually were living
in the cosmic system, maligning him would only interfere with his recovery (Rom.
14:10—14).
God has protected individual privacy through
the laws of divine establishment and has doubled the guarantee to each Church
Age believer by adding the privacy of the priesthood. At salvation, God
appoints each Christian to the royal priesthood of Christ (Heb. 5:6, 10; 1 Pet.
2:5, 9; Rev. 1:6; 5:10; 20:6).[21]
Every member of the royal family is his own priest, representing himself before
God; each royal priest is answerable to God alone for his spiritual life.
Because God has so thoroughly guarded the
believer’s privacy, He obviously will not permit the unrestrained practice of
sins that directly attack privacy. In fact, He administers triple compound
divine discipline to believers habitually guilty of sins of the tongue.
Triple compound divine discipline deals first
with the believer’s decision to commit mental attitude sins. There is always a
motive behind verbal sins, and that motivation may be arrogance, jealousy,
bitterness, hatred, vindictiveness, implacability, self-pity, or a guilt complex,
any of which is liable for divine discipline. Mental attitude sins motivate the
believer to exalt self and put down someone else. In other words, after
deciding to indulge in mental attitude sins, the believer makes the additional
bad decision to convert his mental sins into verbal sins, which incur a second
liability to divine discipline. One of the most foolish actions a believer can
take is to become involved in verbal sinning.
Judge not that
you be not judged [divine discipline]. (Matt. 7:1)
Judging is a general term for verbal sins
directed against another person. In judging, someone states or implies
something derogatory about someone else. Whether or not the accusation is true
is of no consequence. Even if the information were accurate, and accuracy is
difficult to establish, there is no excuse for repeating gossip. And to merely
hint at someone’s sins or failures is just as wrong as actually declaring them.
Judging violates the principle of grace. God
has granted each believer-priest the right to conduct his own life before the
Lord. In particular, all believers, in every stage of spiritual growth, have an
equal right to assemble in the local church to hear the teaching of Bible
doctrine. When other members of the congregation assume God’s prerogative by
judging a believer, they interfere with his spiritual momentum. He cannot
concentrate on Bible doctrine and apply it to his own life if he is thrown on
the defensive by the wagging tongues of other Christians. Therefore, according
to the principle of grace, and in light of God’s desire for each believer’s
spiritual advance, gossip incurs a triple liability, which we will classify as
triple compound divine discipline. The slanderer is liable for:
1. MENTAL ATTITUDE SINS that
motivate him,
2. VERBAL SIN itself, and
3. SINS HE MENTIONS in the slander.
Different Christians will enjoy different
activities, will represent a wide variety of tastes in dress and deportment,
will hold diverse opinions on numerous topics. Certain characteristics in any
believer will be offensive to other Christians. These qualities are expressions
of personality and background rather than targets for malignant criticism.
Each believer-priest’s responsibility is to grow in grace and live his own life
as unto the Lord, not to supervise the lives of his fellow Christians and
coerce them into his own mold of spirituality.
For God sees not as man sees, for man looks at the outward
appearance, but the Lord
looks at the heart. (1 Sam. 16:7b, NASB)
Obviously exceptions to the
principle of privacy exist. Parents have the right and responsibility to
regulate the lives of their minor children who live at home. Because a pastor
is responsible to protect members of his congregation from invasions of privacy,
he must be alert to discourage gossip. Likewise, a supervisor who evaluates his
subordinates is not committing a sin when, as part of his professional
responsibilities, he truthfully reports an employee’s weaknesses and failings.
If that supervisor, however, spreads his reports to people who have no
professional need to know, he too is guilty of judging.
Anyone who engages in judging
is actually guilty of two sins: the verbal sin itself and the mental sin that
motivated him to gossip or malign his victim. Each of these sins calls for
divine discipline; suffering is already compounded. But that is not the end of
discipline for sins of the tongue. Yet another administration of punishment is
added, based on the sins that are mentioned in gossip.
For in the way you judge, you will be judged,
and by what measure you measure to others, it will be measured back to you.
(Matt. 7:2)
The maligner is liable for the
discipline that would have gone to the one he maligns. If the victim is
actually guilty of sins, God has already been dealing with him, either through
the law of volitional responsibility or through divine discipline. But as soon
as his sins are made a subject of gossip, all the discipline is transferred
over to the one who has maligned him. If the victim of gossip is not guilty of
sin, he is blessed while his antagonist receives discipline appropriate to the
sins he mentioned in gossip.
This adds up to triple
liability and triple compound discipline. The maligner is punished for mental
attitude sins, for verbal sins, and for the sins he mentions in judging his
victim. Triple compound divine discipline is extremely harsh. It is a kind of
poetic justice that gives believers a marvelous incentive to avoid the sin of
gossip. Every believer should develop a conscious habit of keeping his mouth
shut when tempted to run someone down or make innuendos against someone he
cannot stand.
The ability to
control one’s tongue always accompanies spiritual growth.
If anyone does not stumble in what he says, he
is a perfect [mature] man, able to bridle the whole body as well. (James 3:2b)
Up to this point we have concentrated on suffering
caused by individual believers. A staggering amount of human misery, however,
seems to originate beyond any believer’s personal responsibility, afflicting
thousands of people throughout wide geographical areas. How do mass historical
disasters such as wars, famines, epidemics, and economic depressions fit into
the biblical doctrine of suffering? The answer to this critical question will
provide the frame of reference for understanding the fourth-generation curse,
which will be our second example of how God administers discipline.
Widespread historical suffering always involves
three sources: Satan, man, and God. Satan rules the world (John 12:31; 14:30;
16:11; Eph. 2:1—8; 1 John 2:13—14). Even in his fallen state, Satan is still
the most powerful creature (apart from the resurrected humanity of Christ) ever
to come from the hand of God. The devil is an extraordinary genius of
unparalleled executive ability. The cosmic system is his brilliant strategy and
policy for ruling his kingdom.
Satan’s ambition is to prove himself equal with
God (Isa. 14:14), but no creature stands independent of the Creator. Satan will
never be God’s equal in any sense of the term. Arrogance always causes a person
to overestimate his abilities—indeed, Satan’s lust for success and power has
produced only misery. In the phrase of L. S. Chafer, much of the world’s
suffering is caused by the devil’s “inability to execute all that he has
designed.”[22] Satan’s
arrogance, his cosmic system, his frustration, violence, and ultimate incompetence
create an environment of misery on earth. Suffering is a fact of life in the
devil’s world, and man makes himself the willing victim of Satan through
freewill decisions that place him in the cosmic system.
If Satan cannot succeed independently of God,
obviously man cannot. In fact, when man lives outside the plan of God, he is
far from independent; instead, he becomes a slave in the devil’s
self-destructive cosmic system. Angelic and human rejection of God’s plan
causes only self-induced misery and would destroy the human race if Jesus
Christ did not retain control over human history.
But Jesus Christ does control human history
despite Satan’s reign over the world (Ps. 2; John 5:22; Rev. 1:5, 18). Our Lord
exercises control through direct and indirect action. He directly intervenes by providentially controlling the variables of
history that lie beyond the scope of human volition, variables like climate,
weather, and natural disasters. He indirectly
controls world affairs through the agency of human volition, when man
freely complies with truth and utilizes available divine omnipotence. Truth is
revealed in the laws of divine establishment, the Gospel, and Bible doctrine.
Divine omnipotence is available in the divine dynasphere.
With perfect justice Jesus Christ administers
either blessing or cursing. He blesses believers and unbelievers who adhere to
the laws of divine establishment. He delivers far greater blessings to
believers who execute the protocol plan of God and achieve spiritual maturity.
Blessings to the mature believer overflow to the friends, relatives, and
associates who live and work in his periphery. These people are blessed either
directly by God or indirectly through the mature believer. The mature believer,
therefore, has tremendous, invisible impact because individuals and
organizations receive blessing by their association with him.
God is glorified by blessing mature believers.
Consistent with God’s eternal purpose, Jesus Christ lovingly watches over
mature believers (Ps. 1:6; 33:18—22; 34:15—19; 66:7), directing the course of
history for their advantage (Rom. 8:28). They may not know one another, but God
knows each of them. They are the hub, the pivot on which turns the prosperity
of the organizations to which they belong—families, social and service groups,
professional associations, corporations, local churches, geographical areas,
towns, cities, or nations. Our Lord blesses the human race through the royal
family, specifically through spiritually mature members of the royal family.
Conversely, Jesus Christ disciplines believers
and judges unbelievers who reject truth and violate His plan.[23]
Just as there is a principle of blessing by association, there is also
cursing by association. Self-induced misery by itself makes the cosmic
Christian a pariah, obnoxious to everyone he meets. Added to the law of
volitional responsibility, divine discipline to this cosmic believer also
affects people in his periphery and organizations to which he belongs (Jonah
1:4—16). Cursing by association expands to become collective divine discipline
against the cosmic believer’s nation. In addition to satanic rebellion and
human disobedience, therefore, the third source of suffering on a historical
scale is divine retribution.
COLLECTIVE DISCIPLINE AND THE CLIENT NATION TO
GOD
Although church and state must always remain
separate, all categories of truth—establishment, the Gospel, and Bible
doctrine—are consistent with one another as well as coherent within themselves.
Through the laws of divine establishment, God has divided mankind into nations
(Gen. 11:9; Acts 17:26), and along these national lines flow certain spiritual
blessings (Gen. 22:18). Among the nations
of the earth, client nations are used
by Jesus Christ as a conduit of blessing to mankind.
A client nation is one whose government
protects the freedom, privacy, and property of its citizens and, while
maintaining the separation of church and state, does not hinder the
presentation of the Gospel and Bible doctrine within its borders. From within
the client nation, nongovernmental organizations such as local churches or
mission boards initiate and support biblically orthodox missionary work in
foreign countries. Evangelism, Bible teaching, and foreign missions indicate
the spiritual vigor of the client nation.
Adherence to the laws of divine establishment
also makes the client nation a haven for Jews, a refuge from anti-Semitic
persecution in other parts of the world (Gen. 12:3). The Jews suffer horribly
as a prime satanic target in the angelic conflict because God created them as
His special instrument for blessing mankind (Gen. 12:1—3; 22:18) and because
His unconditional covenants to Israel hinge on the historical survival of the
Jews (Ps. 89:28—37). Israel was God’s original and unique client nation; the
Jews are His eternal chosen people (2 Sam. 7:10—16). If all Jews could be
destroyed, reasons Satan, then God could not keep His word to them. Divine
integrity would thus be compromised, and Satan would win his case in the
angelic conflict. However, Christ the Messiah will fulfill all unconditional
covenants to the Jews when He restores Israel to client nation status at His
second advent and rules forever as King of the Jews (Isa. 5:26; 11:11—13; Zech.
10:6—12).
Because Israel is under divine discipline
during the Church Age, God currently blesses mankind through a succession of
gentile client nations during “the times of the Gentiles” (Luke 21:24).[24]
The Roman Empire under the Antonine Caesars (AD. 96—192) was the first gentile
client nation. Since that time, many other client nations have risen and
fallen, including the Frankish kingdom of Charlemagne in the eighth century and
Great Britain of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. The United States of
America is a client nation today.
In the client nations of the Church Age,
blessing by association within the believer’s personal periphery expands to
become the royal family’s invisible historical impact. Never before the Church
Age has God granted to each individual believer the privilege of utilizing
divine omnipotence and of having a powerful, invisible impact on history. In
Israel a few mature believers used only a fraction of the divine assets we
possess and had a significant influence on national and world history. Certain
principles of historical impact did exist in the Age of Israel. Even in Israel
the believers were the “salt of the earth,” the preservative and seasoning of
the land (Matt. 5:13), also called the remnant according to the election of
grace” (Rom. 9:27; 11:5). That principle still applies: As go the believers, so
goes the client nation (Ps. 33:10—19). But now, each member of the royal family
is also a “new [spiritual] species” (2 Cor. 5:17) with a new system of protocol
and power that gives him far greater potential for making an impact on history
than had any believer of the Jewish Age.
The mature Church Age believer has invisible
influence in at least three realms:
1. BLESSING BY ASSOCIATION in his personal
periphery,
2. HISTORICAL IMPACT in his nation, and
3. INTERNATIONAL IMPACT as he supports
missionary activity to nonclient nations.
Unheralded in the annals of human history,
Christians in relatively small numbers anonymously determine the uptrends and
downtrends of civilization. Jesus Christ prospers His client nation when its
believers advance in the divine dynasphere; He disciplines the nation when
believers live habitually in the cosmic system. Usually a nation will begin to
decline under the weight of its own degeneracy. If enough believers ignore the
increasingly severe stages of individual discipline and remain in the cosmic
system, the nation’s spiritual pivot shrinks and the nation itself must receive
collective divine discipline. As an application of this doctrine, your primary
duty to your country is to advance to spiritual maturity in the divine
dynasphere.
Divine retribution against the client nation
intensifies through five cycles of discipline, which include social
disintegration, economic collapse, and political chaos (Lev. 26:14, 18, 21).
The fifth cycle destroys the nation’s sovereignty through the horrors of
military conquest, reducing the vanquished populace to poverty, barbarism, and
slavery (Deut. 28:49—67).
My people are destroyed for lack of knowledge
[of Bible doctrine]. Because you [believers] have rejected knowledge, I [God]
also will reject you [the Northern Kingdom of Israel] from being My priest
[client nation]. Since you have forgotten the law of your God, I also will
forget your children [loss of client nation privileges and blessings]. (Hosea
4:6, NASB)
COLLECTIVE DISCIPLINE AND INDIVIDUAL BELIEVERS
How do the five cycles of national discipline,
which devastate wide areas and whole populations, affect individual Christians?
Blessing and cursing by association differ in
one key respect. Blessing by association frequently benefits people who
personally reject Christ and the protocol plan of God. This often explains why
“the wicked prosper” (Jer. 12:1—2); they receive blessing by association
despite their own indifference to God as the source of their prosperity.
Cursing by association, however, does not
destroy the spiritual advance of maturing believers who may live or work in the
periphery of cosmic believers. The law of culpability states that no one
suffers divine discipline apart from his own negative volition. The
positive impact of growing believers offsets the negative influence of cosmic
believers. When the pivot is too small to balance the spin-off of negative
Christians, however, God must administer divine discipline.
In a magnificent display of perfect timing and
omnipotence in the control of history, the disasters that God sends upon cosmic
believers are coterminous with suffering for blessing for growing believers. The
sweep of collective suffering across the face of contemporary history
administers to some believers the various categories of suffering for blessing
and to other Christians all three categories of divine discipline. The same
historical event may bring blessing on one hand but warning discipline,
intensive discipline, or dying discipline on the other hand. No one is ever
lost in the shuffle; God never forsakes any believer (Ps. 37:25). God always
has you personally an mind.
The mature or growing believer is never
deprived of blessings by downtrends in history (Ps. 23:4—5; Jer. 39:l0—18).[25]
Since Jesus Christ controls history in this Church Age, all the negative
forces of international economics and politics cannot obstruct the timely
delivery of blessings to even one mature Christian (Rom. 8:38—39). War,
economic depression, and religious persecution never hinder divine omnipotence
(Job 5:19—27). While the world seems to be collapsing around the protocol
believer, he enjoys a stimulating life of blessing and total confidence in God.
Just as God built a wall of fire around Jerusalem when she stood vulnerable in
the midst of her enemies (Zech. 2:5), the divine dynasphere protects the
growing believer frost the destructiveness of mass suffering.
The cosmic believer is caught up in the same
historical disasters that besiege the advancing believer. This negative
believer, however, is a cause of collective divine discipline and lacks the
inner resources of Bible doctrine needed to meet the crisis. He has no inner dynamics
because he has failed to utilize God’s power system. Instead of suffering for
blessing, his pain is divine discipline, whether warning or intensive.
Some believers, shocked into objectivity by
historical trauma, recover from the cosmic system. Others persist in their
personal degeneration. For them the collective suffering of the nation serves
as the instrument of the sin unto death. Christians will be among the victims
of nearly any historical catastrophe.
Suffering in itself does not conclusively
indicate whether God is blessing a believer, or disciplining him, or permitting
him to create self-induced misery. Therefore, each Christian must apply
doctrine for himself and determine his own status before the Lord. No believer
has a right to judge, malign, or gossip about another believer in personal
suffering and historical disasters.
THE FOURTH-GENERATION CURSE AS COLLECTIVE
DISCIPLINE
In contrast to
triple compound discipline for gossip, which deals with individuals, the
fourth-generation curse is an illustration of divine discipline related to
historical trends. We usually think of collective discipline as punitive
action in a particular geographical area, but the fourth-generation curse deals
with a group of people defined not only as they extend over a geographical
area but also as they extend over a period of time. God is never arbitrary. In
the administration of perfect divine justice, God considers every facet of
every situation, including the factor of time and the manner in which one
person is influenced by others.
God first
declared the fourth-generation curse in the Ten Commandments.
“You shall not make for
yourself an idol, or any likeness of what as in heaven above or on the earth
beneath or in the water under the earth. You shall not worship them or serve
them; for I, the Lord your God, am a jealous God, visiting the iniquity of the
fathers on the children, on the third and the fourth generations of
those who hate Me.” (Ex.
20:4—5, NASB)
How can a God of grace, justice, and love
visit “the iniquity of the fathers on the children, on the third and the fourth
generations of those who hate [Him]” (Deut. 5:9; Num. 14:18)? God is never
unfair to anyone. A villainous ancestry does not prejudice God against any
individual. Instead, as we shall see, the divine policy of a fourth-generation
curse punishes the guilty while protecting the innocent and guaranteeing the
freedom of each individual to express his positive or negative volition.
God treats every individual as
a person, yet He does not fail to deal with destructive collective trends that
intensify from one generation to the next. As an essential part of giving
mankind free will, God allows human volition enough free rein to be genuinely free.
Patterns of sin which are habitually repeated become ingrained characteristics
of a family, group, or nation. Children learn sins and evils from their
parents and perpetuate family trends. Rather than instantly disciplining man,
God permits negative volition to run its course.
Many possible categories and combinations of
wickedness, rebellion, and sin are allowed to form and harden for three or four
generations as expressions of human freedom (Ex. 34:6). But when negative
volition runs so rampant as to threaten His plan, God “does not leave the
guilty unpunished” (Ex. 34:7). After a period of grace before judgment,
extending over these three or four generations, He administers collective
discipline to the family, group, or nation.
To protect the human race from
self-destruction, God administers collective discipline that grows
progressively severe from one generation to the next. In the third or fourth
generation, He sends a catastrophe to dissipate or eliminate the trend. This
form of discipline allows evil patterns to develop in the course of human
history but destroys them before they can jeopardize the plan of God. God
permits no trend of present history to hinder the positive volition of
subsequent generations.
Under this system of collective discipline,
each generation is disciplined for the same sins because those sins are
committed by each generation. The sons commit the sins of the father. “Those
who hate [God]” (Ex. 20:5; Deut. 5:9) are disciplined because they themselves
reside perpetually in the cosmic system and establish patterns of evil in their
lives. But no one suffers under the fourth-generation curse except by his own
volition. At any point the curse may be broken by believers who execute the
protocol plan of God, refusing to follow the evil pattern of their progenitors.
Fathers shall not be put to death for their
children, nor children be put to death for their fathers; each is to die for
his own sin. (Deut.
24:16)
The sins of the father have to be repeated in
the next generation for culpability to be established and for punitive action
to be administered from God. Otherwise, a different law applies: the law of
grace.
Know therefore that the Lord your God is God.
lie is the faithful God, keeping His covenant of grace to a thousand
generations of those who love Him and keep His mandates. (Deut. 7:9)
After first announcing the fourth-generation
curse, God immediately promised that obedience to His plan will always break
the curse.
But showing love to thousands who love Me and
keep My commandments. (Ex. 20:6)
No one suffers under the fourth-generation
curse apart from his own culpability. Despite historical trends, God’s grace
is always operative on the earth. Indeed, the curse upon a family or nation can
be broken in any generation when individuals believe in Christ and form a pivot
of mature believers by fulfilling the plan of God.
The Lord is good [divine essence is perfect]
and His love endures forever. His faithfulness continues through all
generations. (Ps. 100:5)
God’s motivation in delaying historical
discipline is illustrated by His patience toward mankind prior to the Last
Judgment at the end of human history.
The Lord is not slow about His promise [to judge
mankind], as some count slowness, but is patient toward you, not wishing for
any to perish but for all to come to a change of mind [about Christ as Savior,
for unbelievers, or about the protocol plan of God, for believers]. (2 Pet.
3:9)
The fourth-generation curse furnishes a
principle that helps us interpret human history from the divine viewpoint:
Historical disasters are often divine discipline sent to break up destructive
trends and to give the next generation opportunity to fulfill the plan of God.
Proverbs 30:11—14 documents four generations of increasing degeneracy,
beginning with disrespect for parental authority and culminating in “a
generation whose teeth are [like] swords to devour the afflicted.” God protects
the human race from the self-destructiveness of such rampant arrogance.
The principle of the fourth-generation curse,
which the Bible presents in the context of the ancient world, sheds light on
upheavals in modern history. The French Revolution, for example, was a
conflagration of evil trends that had crystallized in the long reign of Louis
XIV. The Sun King, as he was called, destroyed the pivot of mature believers in
France by revoking the Edict of Nantes and, furthermore, reduced the French
aristocracy to sycophantic courtiers. The disappearance of a spiritual pivot
and the absence of a vigorous aristocracy destabilized every level of society.
As a result, unrestrained middle-class jealousy incited lower-class violence.
Ultimately, French society was destroyed in the Reign of Terror, and a new
order was established under Napoleon. The Russian Revolution also vented evils
that had built up for many years before overt violence broke out.
What does the fourth-generation curse teach us?
First, it warns us that rejection of God’s plan can become the accepted,
ingrained tradition of a family or nation. A little neglect, a little
compromise, a little arrogance soon becomes a way of life. Second, this system
of divine discipline advises us that opposition to God leads to terrible
suffering personally and to disaster for the nation. Third, the
fourth-generation curse reveals God’s marvelous grace. He patiently applies
discipline to each rebellious generation but will never permit evil trends to
destroy the options of future generations. Because of God’s grace, exhibited in
collective divine discipline, the human race cannot destroy itself.
The doctrine of the fourth-generation curse
encourages the believer to utilize divine assets in his own life because this
category of discipline emphasizes his invisible impact on history. Believers
can either perpetuate the fourth-generation curse or break the pattern of
discipline. The privileges and opportunities of the royal family imply
tremendous responsibility. If a Christian fails to live and grow in his palace,
he contributes to divine discipline against his entire nation.
The fourth-generation curse never implies that guilt passes from parents to children
but that parents who oppose God’s plan will influence
their children to follow the same pattern of opposition. Children are
influenced by their parents and tend to repeat their parents’ sins.
The fuse on historical disaster burns for three
or four generations as children perpetuate the sins of their parents. Toward
the end of this period, God initiates the cycles of discipline against the
nation to warn believers to return to the protocol plan of God and break the
curse.
At any time, a generation can respond with
positive volition to the Gospel and Bible doctrine, heading off national
catastrophe. A biblical example of an eleventh hour recovery is the Assyrian
Empire’s response to Jonah’s message (Jonah 3:10). Another example is the
spiritual recovery of the second generation of Jews in the Exodus. Had they
continued in the rebellion of the first generation, collective divine
discipline would have intensified. In reality, their positive volition broke
the curse that already had prevented their fathers from entering the promised
land.
In modern history the United States is rapidly
approaching historical disaster—economically, militarily, socially,
spiritually. The one factor that stands between our nation and maximum divine
discipline is the positive volition of believers. Only divine grace can avert
the horrible suffering of the fourth-generation curse, but God will bless this
nation only if there is a strong pivot of mature believers to be the recipients
of His grace benefits.
The solution to the fourth-generation curse
requires severe punishment of criminal youths (Deut. 21:18—21) but emphasizes
instructing children in the laws of establishment and Bible doctrine.
You will inculcate these doctrines of Mine in
your hearts and minds, tie them as notes on your hands, and as training aids
tie them around your foreheads. Teach them to your children, talking about them
when you sit down at home, when you travel, before you go to bed, and when you
wake up. Write these on the door frames of your houses and on your gates so
that your days and the days of your children may be many in the land that the
Lord has promised to give to your ancestors (promises made to Abraham, Isaac,
and Jacob], as long as the heavens remain above the earth. (Deut. 11:18—21)
The perpetuation of the client nation to God
always involves training the next generation. Rather than be a negative
influence, parents must be a positive influence by teaching divine
establishment, the Gospel, and Bible doctrine to their children. Parents
should bring blessing by association to their children rather than lead them to
disaster under the fourth-generation curse.
SUMMARY OF PUNITIVE SUFFERING AND PREVIEW OF SUFFERING FOR BLESSING
In concluding our study of punitive suffering
and in approaching the subject of suffering for blessing, we can draw a series
of contrasts.
In disciplinary suffering, which is deserved,
the issue is sin and wrong decisions
from a position of weakness. In the adult believer’s undeserved suffering, the
issue is blessing and momentum
because of right decisions from a position of strength. Spiritual momentum from
metabolized Bible doctrine results in still greater blessing.
The believer’s status under divine discipline
is cosmic involvement, which is
described by a variety of terms: worldliness, carnality, apostasy, reversionism.
Under suffering for blessing, the believer’s status is always residence in the
palace of the divine dynasphere. There
is a tremendous difference between living in a palace and wasting away in a
dungeon.
Under discipline the suffering is unbearable. The promise that “no temptation
has overtaken you. . . beyond what you are able” to bear (1 Cor. 10:13a),
describes testing, not divine discipline. Testing is designed to exercise and
strengthen the believer’s spiritual muscles, but discipline must be severe
enough to shock the believer, to get his attention. He must learn from the suffering
that human resources are inadequate; he must hurt unbearably so that he is
forced to consider the divine solution. Under testing, suffering for blessing
is always bearable. The believer
under testing is using the assets of the divine dynasphere which constitute
“the way of escape . . . that [he] may be able to endure it” (1 Cor. 10:13b).
|
DIVINE DISCIPLINE |
SUFFERING FOR BLESSING |
ISSUE |
Sin |
Blessing |
STATUS |
Cosmic System |
Divine Dynasphere |
INTENSITY |
Unbearable |
Bearable |
VIEWPOINT |
Arrogance |
Humility |
SOLUTION |
Rebound |
Advanced
Problem-Solving Devices |
INTENDED RESULT |
Cursing Turned to Blessing |
Accelerated Growth Growth |
DIVINE
DISCIPLINE IN CONTRAST TO SUFFERING FOR BLESSING
The believer’s viewpoint when he incurs divine
discipline is arrogance and
subjectivity. In suffering for blessing, his viewpoint is humility and objectivity.
The solution to divine discipline is the rebound technique, which is the
Christian’s most basic problem-solving device. The solution to suffering for
blessing involves more advanced systems
of problem solving.
The result of divine discipline, when the
believer uses rebound, is that cursing is
turned to blessing. The suffering ends, is diminished, or continues at the
same intensity, but in any case the purpose now is blessing instead of
punishment. God’s solutions are always designed for blessing. The result of
suffering for blessing is that the Christian gains multiple benefits from the acceleration of spiritual growth: enlarged
capacities and the greater blessings of spiritual maturity.
There are five categories of Christian
suffering, but all five categories are designed for the believer’s personal
benefit. We have just covered the first two; the last three are the subject of
the remainder of this book.
FOR PUNISHMENT:
1. Self-Induced Misery
2. Divine Discipline
FOR BLESSING:
3. Providential Preventive
Suffering
4. Momentum Testing
5. Evidence Testing
When the believer remains outside the divine
dynasphere, which is tantamount to being out of fellowship with God, he reaps
punitive suffering from his own bad decisions or as a result of divine
discipline. This suffering is still beneficial to him because it can make him
face the reality of his dependence on God’s grace, bringing him to the point
of rebound and recovery. Punitive suffering can show him that his scale of
values is wrong and that he must correct his priorities.
But when the believer resides inside the divine
dynasphere and suffers through no fault of his own, the benefit is even
greater. The purpose now is not to take a negative believer and motivate
recovery but to take a growing believer and accelerate his growth. In contrast
to punitive suffering, which is beneficial on a limited scale, suffering for
blessing is designed by God to accelerate the believer’s growth through the
stages of spiritual adulthood that lead to spiritual maturity.
SUFFERING FOR BLESSING
SUFFERING AND GROWTH IN
SPIRITUAL ADULTHOOD
THE PROTOCOL PLAN OF GOD includes two systems of spiritual growth Gradual growth comes through the
perception, metabolism, and application of1 Bible doctrine. God
commands every believer to operate consistently under this system throughout
his life on earth (Matt. 4:4; Eph. 4:11—13; 2 John 4 6) The second system, accelerated growth, occurs when
metabolized doctrine is tested under pressure. After attaining spiritual
adulthood, further growth requires periodic
suffering. This suffering for the purpose of blessing draws~ upon the believer’s
reservoir of doctrine, exercising and increasing his inner strength. Bible
doctrine is spiritual nourishment; suffering for blessing is~ spiritual
exercise.
In spiritual childhood, most suffering is
self-induced misery or divine discipline. The only pain that can be construed
as suffering for blessing in the life of the spiritual child is the suffering
that continues after rebound. In spiritual childhood suffering for blessing is
like a teacher, but in spiritual adulthood suffering for blessing is more like
a demanding college professor.
By definition, suffering for blessing is the
undeserved pain, hardship, difficulty that God periodically sends into the life
of the spiritually adult believer for the purpose of accelerating spiritual
growth and demonstrating the total sufficiency of His grace.
Suffering for blessing by its very connotation
is not intended to hurt the believer or to make him miserable but to advance
him. For the adult believer undeserved suffering is strictly a matter of
blessing. Indeed, only God can bless with suffering; suffering caused by self
is harmful.
God does not administer suffering for blessing
until the believer is qualified to handle it. That is why suffering for
blessing is reserved for spiritual adulthood. Nor does God send suffering for
blessing until the believer has capacity to appreciate God as its source and to
be grateful for the problem-solving devices that He has provided in the palace
of the divine dynasphere. Again, this explains why God can periodically give
suffering for blessing only to spiritually adult believers. But God never gives
the believer more suffering than he can bear.
No testing has overtaken you but such as is
common to mankind; but God is faithful, who will not permit you to be tested
beyond what you are able [to bean, but with the testing will also provide a
solution [a way out], that you may be able to endure it. (1 Cor. 10:13)
In God’s protocol plan, strength precedes
suffering for blessing. God provides the means of dealing with a situation
before He applies the pressure so that suffering for blessing never overloads
any believer. Only by his own bad decisions can the believer create more
suffering for himself than he can bear. Only the believer himself can decide to
live outside his palace. Only he can refuse to learn Bible doctrine so that he
has no spiritual resources to draw upon.
When pressure crushes a believer, the cause of
defeat is always his own volition, never the sovereignty of God. Suffering for
blessing is always bearable. Unbearable suffering under the law of volitional
responsibility, with divine discipline added on, is designed to awaken the
believer to his dependence on God’s protocol system.
Obedience to divine protocol prepares believers
for suffering. All problems of suffering are resolved in the mechanics of the
protocol plan of God, and all solutions stem from Bible doctrine. Consistent
residence and function in the divine dynasphere arm the believer for the
pressures of life.
THE PATTERN OF MOMENTUM IN SPIRITUAL ADULTHOOD
The final three categories of suffering in the
Christian way of life are reserved for spiritual adults. We will devote an
entire chapter to each category.
1. PROVIDENTIAL PREVENTIVE SUFFERING keeps the
believer front distorting his newfound spiritual self-esteem into arrogance. At
the same time providential preventive suffering converts spiritual self-esteem
into spiritual autonomy.
2. MOMENTUM TESTING accelerates the believer’s
spiritual advance, carrying him from spiritual autonomy into spiritual
maturity.
3. EVIDENCE TESTING demonstrates the efficacy of
God’s grace in the life of the spiritually mature believer and culminates in
maximum glorification of God.
These three categories of undeserved suffering
are specialized provisions of God’s grace. Their purpose is the continued
spiritual growth of a believer who has faithfully adhered to divine protocol.
Sadly, in any generation relatively few Christians obey divine mandates and
utilize His marvelous grace assets. Few ever reach spiritual adulthood. Easily
distracted from their true destiny as members of the royal family of God, most
believers lack the positive volition, the humility, the consistency to stick
with the protocol plan.
Not many believers will ever face suffering for
blessing. Hardly any will enjoy the benefits of experiencing God’s grace in
action under extreme duress. Personal and historical disasters rarely find
believers prepared to enjoy God’s provisions. Instead, self-induced misery and
divine discipline are by far the most common forms of Christian suffering. If
you have not learned a great deal of Bible doctrine, you have no right to
assume that the pressures in your life are suffering for blessing. If, however,
you have inculcated your soul with God’s thinking, you can anticipate a
challenging, stimulating life of special grace from God—in adversity and in
prosperity.
In spiritual adulthood, the believer’s
spiritual momentum follows a definite pattern:
1. Consistent perception and metabolism of
Bible doctrine inside the divine dynasphere result in the believer’s giant
step into personal love for God and SPIRITUAL SELF-ESTEEM.
2. When tested under providential preventive
suffering, spiritual self. esteem becomes SPIRITUAL AUTONOMY.
3. By successfully passing the momentum tests,
spiritual autonomy becomes SPIRITUAL MATURITY.
4. When spiritual maturity stands up under
evidence testing, GOD IS GLORIFIED TO
THE MAXIMUM in the historic angelic conflict.
Paul describes this pattern of momentum in his
second epistle to the Corinthians.
Then He [God] assured me: My grace [has been
and still] is sufficient for you; for the power is achieved with weakness. . .
. for when I am weak, then I am powerful. (2 Con. 12:9—10)
We will examine this passage more thoroughly
when we focus on providential preventive suffering. Here we need to note only
the pattern of the adult believer’s
continued progress.
“The power is achieved with weakness” states
that suffering is necessary for spiritual advance. The Greek noun dunamij (dunamis), “power,” refers to God’s omnipotence
as utilized by the believer in the advance through spiritual adulthood:
spiritual self-esteem, spiritual autonomy, and spiritual maturity. The adult
believer has power because he consistently lives inside the divine dynasphere.
The verb telew (teleo), which is ambiguously translated “made
perfect” in the King James Version, means “to finish, to accomplish, to
fulfill, to achieve,” the latter best agreeing with the context in verse 9.
How is power achieved? How does the believer advance through the final sates of his palace? The Greek preposition e)n (en) plus a)sqeneia (astheneia)—in the instrumental case of manner—indicates the manner in which the ac of the verb is carried out: “with weakness.”
“Weakness” refers to the
progressive phases of suffering for blessing. Weakness here is not failure or
sin but helplessness. Suffering for
blessing puts the spiritually adult believer in a situation he cannot resolve
with human resources. He is helpless and must totally depend on divine assets
that he has acquired by metabolizing Bible doctrine in his soul. The suffering
itself does not advance the believer; his utilization of God’s power in
suffering is what advances him.
Power and weakness exist together at the same
time: The adult believe uses the strength of spiritual self-esteem to move
through his weakness in providential preventive suffering. He uses the strength
of spiritual autonomy go through his weakness in momentum testing. And he uses
the strength o spiritual maturity to move through his weakness in evidence
testing. He no only exercises the power inherent in each stage of spiritual
adulthood to meet the test, but when he succeeds in passing each test, he
“achieves the power’ of the next stage of spiritual adulthood. With each test
he passes, he moves up
What degree of strength is required to endure
providential preventive suffering? Spiritual self-esteem. What power is
required to pass momentum testing? Spiritual autonomy. And what is needed to
pass evidence testing Spiritual maturity.
As a result of dealing with the undeserved
suffering that God sends, the believer’s strength increases so that he is able
to cope with the next increment suffering when it comes. In His perfect wisdom
God gives each believer the unique sequence of blessing and suffering, of
prosperity and adversity, necessary to bring him to maximum glorification of
God.
SPIRITUAL SELF-ESTEEM
THE FLAW IN HUMAN SELF-ESTEEM
BEFORE GOD ADMINISTERS SUFFERING FOR BLESSING, the believer must have
the inner strength necessary to endure and profit from the test. In other
words, the believer must have spiritual self-esteem. God will not send suffering
for blessing until first the believer is confident in his relationship with God
and in his own ability to use the assets that God has given him. His nil must
be inculcated with Bible doctrine so that he loves God and lives by his own
doctrinal thinking (Rom. 14:22).
For believer and unbeliever alike, a person’s
attitude toward self affects his attire outlook on life. An important branch of
psychology emphasizes the key rule of self-esteem.
Of all the
judgments we pass in life, none is as important as the one we pass on
ourselves; for that judgment touches the very center of our existence.
We stand in the
midst of an almost infinite network of relationships: to other people, to
things, to the universe. And yet, at three o’clock in the morning, when we are
alone with ourselves, we are aware that the most intimate and powerful of all
relationships and the one we can never escape is the relationship to ourselves.
No significant aspect of our thinking, motivation, feelings, or behavior is
unaffected by our self-evaluation.[26]
This psychologist has made an accurate
observation. He recognizes man’s genuine need to regard himself in a positive
light. Although self-esteem solves many problems in life, human self-esteem
ultimately has a fatal flaw.
The heart [of man] is more deceitful than all
else and is desperately sick; who can understand it? (Jer. 17:9, NASB).
The problem is that man is rarely worthy of his
own esteem. Since the fall of Adam, the human race has been inherently
depraved. Man is born spiritual. ly dead, utterly isolated from his Creator,
totally incapable of a relationship with God (Eph. 2:1). Man proves his
depravity by the personal sins he commits and by the human good and evil he
practices. Man is commonly arrogant, greedy, self-centered, superficial,
cowardly, petty, devious, self-righteous, cruel, violent. Only by a concerted
effort of the will can he even partly control his old sin nature (1 John 1:8).
Human nobility of soul is a rare and transitory achievement.
Unbelievers who follow the laws of divine
establishment have a legitimate basis for human self-esteem. They live by true
principle. Their integrity gives them cause for self-respect. From strength of
character, they may also achieve a degree of success in a profession, in
marriage, in family life, in relationships with others. Such men and women of
genuine self-esteem are exceptional, however, and even these few are far from
perfect. Part of their virtue is their humility; they know that their
self-esteem is measured by a temporal, relative standard. They honestly face
the reality of their own weaknesses and failings.
In contrast to the exceptional individuals with
establishment virtue, the great majority of the human race lacks self-esteem.
Regard for self is nearly always some form of arrogance. Most people deceive
themselves with intellectual rationalizations or psychological delusions
concerning their own importance.
Man feels the need for a positive self-image,
yet he falls short of his own relative standards, to say nothing of totally
failing by God’s absolute standards. The very self which man desires to esteem
is weak and prone to evil Man’s best intentions and greatest achievements are
undercut by ignorance, handicaps, distractions, and temptations. Human
self-esteem is an elusive and flimsy substitute for what man really needs and
what God in His grace has provided: spiritual
self-esteem. Spiritual self-esteem is based on who and what God is, not on
who and what man is. It stands on God’s absolute integrity, not on man’s
unstable character.
THE SUPERIORITY OF SPIRITUAL
SELF-ESTEEM
Spiritual self-esteem belongs to the protocol plan of God. The
Christian achieves spiritual self-esteem by faithfully learning and applying
Bible doctrine, by advancing step by step within God’s protocol system until
he reaches Gate 5, personal love for God. Spiritual self-esteem is an
inevitable result of personal love for God. The believer’s self-confidence is
not derived from self but from the confidence that he has a unique relationship
with the God of
the universe.
Believers of the royal family of God have greater cause for spiritual self-esteem than do believers of any other dispensation. God displays His glory in the Church as never before and as never again in human history. His objective is to show “the riches of His grace which He has lavished upon us” (Eph. 1:7—8) and to demonstrate “what is the surpassing greatness of His power toward us who believe” (Eph. 1:19). Even a partial list of the advantages granted to every Church Age believer will demonstrate the superiority of spiritual self-esteem over human self-esteem.
As Church Age believers we
are a “new [spiritual] species” in union with Christ (2 Cor. 5:17). By the baptism of the Holy Spirit at
the moment of salvation, we are “created in Christ Jesus” for the purpose of
utilizing divine power, not human power (Eph. 2:10). God has made available to
us the exercise of divine omnipotence for the execution of His plan (Acts 1:8;
1 Cor. 2:4; 2 Cor. 4:7; Eph. 1:19—20; Cot. 1:10—12; 2 Tim. 1:7). Never before
the Church Age did God extend this privilege to every believer. Only partial
utilization of God’s omnipotence was made available to a few believers of
previous dispensations.
We are instructed to “walk in
newness of life” (Rom. 6:4; Eph. 2:10; 4:24) because the new spiritual species
is designed to utilize total availability of the omnipotence of all three
members of the Trinity. The omnipotence of God the Father created for every
Church Age believer a portfolio of invisible assets which includes the divine
dynasphere (Eph. 1:3). The omnipotence of God the Son sustains the universe and
perpetuates human history (Heb. 1:3). The omnipotence of God the Holy Spirit
provides the function of the divine dynasphere (Acts 1:8).
Furthermore, our bodies are
indwelt by all three members of the Trinity. God the Father indwells us for the glorification of His protocol
plan which He designed in eternity past for each Church Age believer (John
14:23; Eph. 1:3, 6, 12; 4:6; 2 John 9). God
the Holy Spirit indwells us to create a temple for the indwelling of Christ
as the Shekinah Glory,[27]
to be a down-payment of our royal inheritance, and to empower us in the
execution of the Father’s plan (Rom. 8:11; 1 Cor. 3:16; 6:19—20; 2 Cur. 6:16,
Eph. 1:14). God the Son in-dwells us
for a number of reasons:
1. As a sign or badge of the royal family (John
14:20),
2. As a guarantee of the availability of divine
power in time (2 Cor. 13:4—6; Rom. 8:10),
3. As a guarantee of life after death in the
presence of God forever (Col. 1:27),
4. As the depositary of special blessings for
time and eternity (Eph. 1:3) and as the escrow officer who will deliver these
blessings to the believer when he reaches spiritual adulthood and when he
appears before the Judgment Seat of Christ (1 Cur. 3:13—14; 2 Cor. 5:10).
5. As
motivation for continued momentum when facing the three categories of
suffering for blessing: providential preventive suffering, momentum testing, and
evidence testing (Gal. 2:20),
6. As
the basis for assigning highest priority to relationship with God over
relationships with people, and to the use of divine power over the exercise of
human power (1 John 2:24),
7. As
the basis for the glorification of Christ, the Shekinah Glory, in the unique
life of the Church Age believer (John 17:22—23, 26).
Never before the Church Age did any member of the Trinity indwell any believer. But every Church Age
believer is permanently indwelt by the entire Trinity. As a consequence, many
other advantages also belong to us. For worship and privacy in our unique
relationship with God, we have been inducted into the highest of all priestly
orders. Every Church Age believer belongs to the royal priesthood of our great
high priest, Jesus Christ (Heb. 4:14; Rev. 1:6). In addition, each of us has
been granted a royal warrant from God to be Christ’s ambassador in Satan’s
kingdom (2 Cor. 5:20). We represent Christ on earth and have an invisible
impact on history. Furthermore, each Church Age believer possesses his own
royal palace, the divine dynasphere, the prototype of which was tested and
proven by the humanity of Christ (John 15:10). We are heirs of God, joint heirs
with Jesus Christ (Rom. 1:17). We will accompany our Lord and glorify Him
forever (Eph. 2:6—7).
Even this partial delineation
of our royal assets shows that our status is unique. There are no ordinary
Christians. Each ‘ordinary’ Christian has a position and a function far
superior to anything available to the greatest believers of previous
dispensations.
Our extraordinary status is
revealed to us through our consistent, faithful, lifelong intake of Bible
doctrine. Doctrine teaches us who we are in the plan of God. Doctrine orients
us to God’s will, plan, and purpose for our lives and emphasizes the attainment
of spiritual self-esteem, spiritual autonomy, and spiritual maturity. Advance
in the protocol plan of God manifests the spiritual royalty to which God has
elevated us. God has given us a basis for spiritual self-esteem totally
related to grace, unspoiled by human weaknesses of any kind.
THE SOURCE OF
SPIRITUAL SELF-ESTEEM
Personal love for God
precedes spiritual self-esteem and becomes the source of this initial stage of
spiritual adulthood. Who is this infinite and eternal Person who has granted
us so exalted a position in Christ? What is the character of our majestic God?[28]
God reveals Himself to us in
His Word. He has “exalted [His] word above tHis] name” (Ps. 138:2). His essence
is reflected on every page of Scripture: in every doctrinal dissertation, in
every biblical illustration and application, in every passage of historical
narrative, in every line of biblical poetry.
To be “transformed by the
renewing of [his] mind” (Rum. 12:2), the believer must learn every biblical
doctrine his pastor teaches. Even if its relevance is not obvious at the
moment, every doctrine contributes a vital facet to the Christian’s
understanding of God’s essence and personality. The Bible was not designed
merely to provide solutions for a believer’s current problems; the Bible’s
purpose is to reveal the magnificent and multifaceted character of God.
How precious. . are Thy thoughts to me, O God!
How vast is the sum of them! (Ps. 139:17, NASB)
To learn God’s essence is a marvelous, lifelong
endeavor for which we have been given powerful assets related to the divine
dynasphere. This greatest of all enterprises demands right priorities and the
self-discipline for faithful intake, metabolism, and application of Bible
doctrine. To understand God’s attributes is to love Him. This constitutes the
very purpose of our lives.
In spiritual childhood the believer does not
have the capacity or capability to love God. Much sincerity, emotionalism, and
sentimentality is misconstrued as love for God. In reality, to love God the believer must know God. This requires cognition of
Bible doctrine.
God is invisible. The incarnate Lord Jesus
Christ is the visible “exact representation of His [invisible] essence” (Heb.
1:3), but the resurrected humanity of Christ is now absent from the earth. How
does the believer love someone whom he has never seen (1 Pet. 1:8)?
Love is based on perception. We come to know
and love God through His Word. In fact, Bible doctrine is the Mind of Christ (1
Cor. 2:16). Doctrine reveals to us God’s attributes, His wisdom, His love for
us, His brilliant system of protocol. We love God when our souls are inculcated
with doctrine so that we think His thoughts, share His viewpoint, and
appreciate His perfect integrity and matchless grace. Learning doctrine takes
time; love for God does not come overnight. But after years of faithfully
learning the Word of God, the day will come when the believer will wake up and
realize that Jesus Christ is his best friend. That will be the giant step from
spiritual childhood into spiritual adulthood. That will also be the beginning
of spiritual self-esteem.
THE PATTERN FOR SPIRITUAL
SELF-ESTEEM
The believer’s spiritual self-esteem is
patterned after two precedents:
1. DIVINE SELF-ESTEEM and,
2. the SPIRITUAL SELF-ESTEEM OF THE HUMANITY OF
CHRIST residing in the prototype divine dynasphere.
God can personally love only that which is
perfect. Because He is absolute righteousness, God loves Himself. He is totally
worthy of his own demanding, uncompromising love. Within the essence of God,
therefore, we discover the. ultimate pattern for spiritual self-esteem: His
perfect love is directed toward. His own perfect righteousness. God has total
self-esteem and has found a way to make spiritual self-esteem available to the
Church Age believer.
The humanity of Christ is the pattern for
spiritual self-esteem for the royal family of God. The divine dynasphere was
originally designed for our Lord’s humanity, a gift from God the Father given
on the first Christmas.[29]
Through-nut His first advent the humanity of Jesus Christ resided and
functioned constantly inside the prototype divine dynasphere. Though tempted
far beyond anything we have ever known, He never departed from the Father’s
plan; He never stepped out of the divine dynasphere.
From early childhood, the humanity of Jesus
Christ learned Bible doctrine and lived by the doctrine in His soul. From His
youth He “kept increasing in wisdom [Bible doctrine] and stature, and in favor
with God and man” (Luke 2:52, NASB). This
pattern continued throughout our Lord’s first advent. Doctrine was first
priority in His life (Matt. 4:4; Luke 11:28; John 7:15—16; 1:25—27). His final
words on the cross were not only a quotation of Scripture, but the Scripture He
quoted was a tribute to the Father as “God of doctrine” (Luke 23:46, cf., Ps.
31:5).[30]
In the humanity of Christ, doctrine produced personal love for God, which
inevitably resulted in spiritual self-esteem.
When we study evidence testing, we will examine
our Lord’s spiritual self-esteem as it developed through spiritual autonomy
into spiritual maturity. We will see that He set the precedent for our
spiritual self-esteem.
KNOWING HOW TO LIVE AND HOW TO
DIE
The believer with spiritual self-esteem is dependent on God but not
inordinately dependent on other people. The independence in his soul
contributes to his capacity for meaningful and enduring personal relationships.
Every Christian lives in a world of people. A few people will love him, others
will tolerate him, some will despise him. For the vast majority, he will always
remain a total stranger. Although surrounded by people, each believer must do
many things for himself. He must think his own thoughts, establish his own
priorities, make his own decisions, suffer his own pain, and eventually do his
own dying.
The critical importance of spiritual
self-esteem is dramatically seen in the fact that no one can die another
person’s death. Friends may stand by and perhaps lend comfort, but when the
time for death comes, each one goes it alone. Nor can anyone bear another’s
pain, feel another’s emotions, or think another’s thoughts. Always there is a
place for sensitivity, compassion, and encouragement from one person to
another, but ultimately the most basic activities of life require spiritual
self-esteem of each individual believer.
One of the greatest achievements in life is the
ability to equate living and dying. Life on earth includes the period in which an
individual knows that he is dying; dying is part of living. Only by facing the
reality of death with doctrinal objectivity can any believer face life from
the divine viewpoint (Phil. 1:20—2 1). And only through suffering for blessing
and attaining the stages of spiritual adulthood can the believer equate living
and dying and thereby benefit from suffering.
Every believer must not only learn how to live but also learn how to die. Being alive does not imply that a person has the
slightest idea of how to live, of how
to fulfill the potential that human life affords. Nor does being a member of
the royal family of God mean that a believer knows how to conduct himself as a
spiritual aristocrat. A Christian does not necessarily know the first thing
about the Christian way of life and the mechanics of executing God’s will,
purpose, and plan for the Church Age. Certainly possessing eternal life does
not guarantee that he knows how to pass from time into eternity with confidence
and poise.
After salvation we must learn Bible doctrine to
know how to live and die in prosperity or adversity, in pleasure or pain, in
the company of others or alone. Even learning Bible doctrine is something each
believer must do for himself—under the teaching ministry of his pastor-teacher.
Every Christian must make his own decisions to give doctrine first priority in
his life, to assemble where the Word of God is taught, to be filled with the
Holy Spirit while he listens, to concentrate on the pastor’s message, to
believe the truth to properly apply the doctrine he understands. This is what
the Bible means when admonishing us to “cherish [guard, or keep]
understanding.”
He who gets wisdom loves his own soul;
He who cherishes understanding will prosper.
(Prov. 19:8)
To “get wisdom” and to “cherish understanding”
describe the believer’s faith fulness in consistently learning and applying
doctrine over a long period of time At all stages of spiritual growth, he
requires daily nourishment from doctrine.
To love “his own soul” is a description of
spiritual self-esteem. This legiti mate love for self, combined with
“prosper[ity],” reveals the pattern of growth in spiritual adulthood. The
believer grows spiritually by “get[tingl wisdom and enters spiritual adulthood
when he attains spiritual self-esteem. As spiritual self-esteem is stabilized,
strengthened, and tested under the pressure q suffering for blessing, he
advances stage by stage to spiritual maturity. H “prosper[s]” all along the
way.
This is how the Christian learns to live and
die for himself. When the Mini of Christ has been inculcated and metabolized
into the soul of the believer that individual acquires spiritual self-esteem.
Inside the divine dynasphere the virtues of the humanity of Jesus Christ are
formed in him (Rom. 13:14; Gal. 4:19;
1 Pet. 2:9b), including our Lord’s great personal love for the Father (John
15:10). From his own love for God and
divine viewpoint thinking, the
believer then has the contentment, stability, composure, and all the other characteristics of spiritual self-esteem with which to face the challenges of f living and dying.
Yea, though I walk through the valley of the
shadow of death, I will fear no evil: for thou art with me. (Ps. 23:4a,
KJV)
THE
CHARACTERISTICS OF SPIRITUAL SELF-ESTEEM
Spiritual self-esteem can be
explained categorically as having~ fourteen characteristics.
1. THE
BEGINNING OF CONTENTMENT. Contentment, or capacity for happiness in one’s
present circumstances, begins in spiritual self-esteem, grows stronger in
spiritual autonomy, and reaches a peak in spiritual maturity (2 Cur. 12:10; 1
Tim. 6:6—8; Heb. 13:5). In spiritual adulthood, sharing the happiness of God is
the Christian’s greatest and most effective problem-solving device (Phil.
4:11).
2. MENTAL
STABILITY. A stabilized mentality comes from the consistent and accurate
application of Bible doctrine in adversity and in prosperity (Phil. 4:12—1 3).
3. COMPOSURE
MARKED BY SELF-ASSURANCE. Self-assurance is characteristic of the believer who
can consistently and accurately apply doctrine to life and who has experienced
the efficacy of doctrine in his own life (James 1:22—25).
4. GRACE
ORIENTATION TO LIFE. The believer with spiritual self-esteem appreciates the
extension of God’s grace toward him without distorting that grace policy into
antinomian license (Rum. 6:1). Furthermore, he demonstrates a gracious attitude
toward other people without distorting toleration into compromise of integrity
(Rum. 12:10).
5. DOCTRINAL
ORIENTATION TO REALITY. Spiritual self-esteem on-eats the believer to reality
by maintaining his humility, by avoiding inordinate ambition and competition,
by developing spiritual common sense, spiritual independence, and a sense of
humor (Rum. 12:3; Eph. 4:23).
6. GOOD DECISIONS FROM A POSITION
OF STRENGTH. The divine dynasphere is the position of strength in which good
decisions are possible, based on divine viewpoint thinking—in Gate 4—and
motivation from personal love for God—in Gate 5 (Eph. 6:10; Phil. 2:2; Col.
1:11).
7. THE BEGINNING OF PERSONAL CONTROL OF ONE’S LIFE. Spiritual
independence is based on maximum use of one’s royal priesthood, by which the
believer represents himself before God. His perspective in life is focused on
God rather than on people (Col. 2:7; Heb. 12:2—3).
8. THE USE OF SPIRITUAL SELF-ESTEEM AS A PROBLEM-SOLVING DEVICE.
Spiritual self-esteem solves the problems of inadequacy, fear, emotional
disturbance, lack of personality identity, and uncertainty concerning one’s
niche in life (2 Tim. 1:7). Furthermore, the believer with spiritual
self-esteem solves his own problems from the doctrine he knows rather than running
here and there for counseling and spiritual advice. He views difficulties as
opportunities to utilize the doctrine in his soul (2 Tim. 2:3—4).
9. THE BEGINNING OF A PERSONAL SENSE OF DESTINY. The believer’s
personal sense of destiny becomes stronger as he progresses through the three
stages of spiritual adulthood. The meaning, purpose, and definition of his
life become clear as he resolves his relationships with God, self, and people.
10. POSTSALVATION EPISTEMOLOGJCAL REHABILITATION. Epistemology is the
study of knowledge itself, addressing the question of how man knows what he
knows. After salvation the believer must concentrate on a new source of truth,
Bible doctrine, under the teaching ministry of an academically prepared,
theologically orthodox pastor filled with the Spirit. The believer must
acquire a new doctrinal frame of reference through learning and metabolizing
the Word of God by faith, for “the righteous [believer with imputed divine
righteousness] shall live by faith” (Rum. 1:17). Post-salvation epistemological
rehabilitation is a term that encompasses all the Bible doctrine the believer
has learned between salvation and spiritual adulthood. This renovation of
thought includes everything from understanding spirituality and how to execute
the protocol plan of God, to appreciating one’s portfolio of invisible assets,
to mastering the subject of this book, Christian suffering. Metabolized
doctrine has “transformed [the spiritually adult believer] by the renewing of
[his] mind” (Rom. 12:2).
11. COMMAND OF SELF. Fulfilling the responsibilities that accompany
independence, the believer exercises self-control, self-restraint, poise, and
self-regulation (Prov. 19:11; 1 Cur. 14:33; 2 Tim. 2:10). Command of self facilitates
good communication with other people, which is mandatory in all successful
relationships.
12. A NEW ATTITUDE TOWARD LIFE. Personal love for God gives the believer
a dynamic attitude, viewpoint, and perspective on life. His thoughts and
priorities change as his focus on Christ motivates him in everything he does
(John 15:10—17).
13. QUALIFICATION FOR PROVIDENTIAL PREVENTIVE SUFFERING. Spiritual
self-esteem gives the believer the ability to handle suffering for blessing.
The characteristics of spiritual self-esteem qualify him to pass the test of
providential preventive suffering and advance him into the next stage of
spiritual adulthood, which is spiritual autonomy (1 Pet. 4:12—16).
14. A’VFAINMENT OF THE FIRST PHASE OF THE UNIQUE LIFE. God has designed
a unique life for the Church Age believer, part of which is experienced and
part of which is not (Rum. 8:10). The nonexperiential aspect of the unique life
includes the indwelling of all three members of the Trinity. This is the Church
Age believer’s permanent status, not his progressive experience. The
experiential aspect of the unique life is the glorification of Christ in the
body of the believer (Eph. 5:1; 1 Cor. 6:20).
A distinction must be made between the
permanent, unchanging, unfelt indwelling of Christ as the Shekinah Glory and
the Christian experience of Christ being glorified in our bodies (Phil.
1:20—21). A distinction also must be made between the permanent, unchanging,
unfelt indwelling of the Holy Spirit and His invisible, behind-the-scenes
function in the divine dynasphere through which He glorifies Christ in our
bodies (John 16:13—14).
Each stage of spiritual adulthood brings a new
experiential glorification of Christ. This progressive experience begins with
spiritual self-esteem, which is described by the phrase “Christ ... formed in
you” (Gal. 4:19). In spiritual autonomy, which is the next stage of Christian
growth, the glorification of Christ in the unique life of the royal family will
be described as “Christ [being] at home in your heart” (Eph. 3:16—17). In
spiritual maturity, the final stage of spiritual adulthood, the unique life
will be expressed as “Christ [being] glorified in [your] body” (Phil. 1:20—21).
DESCRIPTION OF SPIRITUAL
SELF-ESTEEM
Spiritual self-esteem is the assertion of Bible
doctrine resident in the soul; it is living by one’s own thinking from that
doctrine; it is making application of metabolized doctrine under all circumstances,
including suffering for blessing.
The Christian who gains spiritual self-esteem
has crossed the dividing line between spiritual childhood and spiritual
adulthood, between spiritual dependence and spiritual independence, between
punitive suffering and suffering for blessing. Spiritual self-esteem is the
giant step in the believer’s life, the first stage of spiritual adulthood.
The believer with spiritual self-esteem thinks and
applies Bible doctrine to life, motivated by his personal love for God. He
understands enough doctrine to think independently, having the courage of his
own perceptions and doctrinal applications rather than being erroneously
influenced by others. Furthermore, instead of arrogantly exaggerating his
strengths or his weaknesses, he orients to the biblical reality of who and what
he is as a member of the royal family of God and at the same time never loses
sight of who and what God is. He accepts his human limitations while
emphasizing the unlimited privileges and opportunities that God gives to every
Church Age believer. He utilizes divine assets; he exploits his options.
When a believer has attained spiritual
self-esteem, he does not feel threatened by others. He refuses to be
manipulated through guilt or fear by those who would impose erroneous,
legalistic standards on him. If he is guilty of sin, human good, or evil, he
assumes the responsibility for his own decisions, good or bad, and resolves his
problems according to divine protocol. He understands his right as
a member of the royal family of God to live his life as unto the Lord in the
privacy of his own priesthood. His life does not belong to other people but to
God. God’s logistical grace sustains him, not so he can live up to the
expectations of others, but so he can adhere to divine mandates in the protocol
plan of God. Spiritual self-esteem enables the believer to exploit all the
problem-solving devices in the divine dynasphere. With spiritual self-esteem he
can begin to enjoy happiness and tranquillity of mind in every category of
suffering for blessing.
The Christian with spiritual self-esteem knows
he belongs to a winning plan. He understands what God accomplished for him in
eternity past. He knows at the present time how to thrive in God’s protocol
system. He has learned that a fabulous eternal future awaits him after death.
God’s protocol plan gives his life meaning, purpose, and definition. He
advances in the certainty that logistical grace will support his life and
empower his indomitable will to triumph over any handicaps or weaknesses he may
possess. Spiritual adulthood and continuing spiritual growth are the believer’s triumph over his
handicaps, genetic and acquired.
With spiritual self-esteem the believer
persists in learning and applying Bible doctrine because he loves God and His
promised blessings in time and eternity (Heb. 6:18). Personal love for God is
the highest motivation in life. The believer with spiritual self-esteem confidently
persists in the plan of God without needing flattery or fanfare, without
relying on recognition, encouragement, counsel, inspiration, or bullying from
other believers. He leans on no one but God. Rather than borrow motivation and
fortitude from the soul of someone else, he uses the doctrine in his own soul.
He has nothing to prove to anyone. He fears no one. He does not crave the
approval of people or overreact to their indifference, disapproval, or
rejection. Nor does he slavishly imitate the personality or demeanor of others.
He is content with his own personality; he has identified his own niche in
life.
Spiritual self-esteem makes the believer
intellectually independent, but it does not make him a boor. Many positive
Christians go through the awkward, sophomoric stage of being overconfident
religious zealots, bursting with answers, eagerly imposing their ideas on other
people. Such arrogance is not spiritual self-esteem. Spiritual self-esteem
makes the believer a good listener; his genuine humility in Gate 3 of the
divine dynasphere makes him teachable. He appreciates the graciousness of other
people and recognizes legitimate authorities, including the authority of the
pastor who teaches Bible doctrine. Spiritual independence means the believer flourishes
within God’s structures of human and
spiritual authority, not outside His protocol system as a rebel, a crusader, or
a self-styled free spirit.
Although modern psychology cannot provide
spiritual self-esteem, it can accurately describe the lack of spiritual and
human self-esteem.
... The two most striking characteristics of men
and women who seek psychotherapy are a deficiency of self-esteem and a
condition of self-alienation. In some crucial ways they do not feel appropriate
to life and its requirements, and they lack adequate contact with the world
within, with their needs, wants, feelings, thoughts, values and potentialities.
Thus diminished in consciousness, they are estranged from their proper human
estate. Large areas of the self lie undiscovered, unexpressed, unlived. They
are sleepwalkers through their own existence.[31]
The believer wakes up to reality by learning
Bible doctrine in the power of the divine dynasphere. In studying the two
punitive categories of Christian suffering, we noted that if a member of the
royal family of God fails to wake up through perception and application of
Bible doctrine, he will be shaken by self-induced misery and divine discipline.
PROVIDENTIAL PREVENTIVE
SUFFERING
PAUL’S THORN IN THE FLESH
As THE FIRST CATEGORY of
suffering for blessing, providential preventive suffering performs a dual
function. Its offensive role is to accelerate the believer’s spiritual
momentum beyond spiritual self-esteem into spiritual autonomy; its defensive
role is to prevent him from falling victim to arrogance.
Spiritual self-esteem is probably the most
vulnerable stage of the Christian life. As the believer begins to think for
himself and live by the doctrine in his own soul, he may distort his newfound
independence. He may assume that his strength comes from self rather than from
God’s Word and the divine dynasphere. As he flexes his new spiritual muscles
and enjoys the results of spiritual growth, he may forget that God is the
source of his growth.
God in His grace does not wait for the believer
to fail. Rather than picking up the pieces, God provides the means of keeping
the believer from falling apart. In grace God takes preventive action by
sending suffering for blessing. Providential preventive suffering reminds the
believer of his dependence on the protocol plan of God and forces him to use
divine assets under circumstances that human ability cannot resolve.
As an unbeliever, Paul was aware of his own
genius. With concentration and self-discipline he exploited his tremendous
human assets. As a young man he excelled academically in a rigorous education.
He then channeled his unusual nervous energy and extraordinary intellectual
powers to rise within the religious and political establishment in Judea. Human
dynamics enabled him to advance rapidly within an evil system.
Paul was a man of action who was also at home
in the realm of ideas. He was a master of both Jewish theology and Greek
philosophy. The application of his human genius was the zealous persecution of Christians.
He had relished the success that his human abilities had achieved; he was
ambitious for further promotion. After believing in Christ, Paul had to learn
dependence on divine rather than human power, but he never lost his strong
personality or his brilliant intellect. Hence, when he reached spiritual
self-esteem, he was in danger of corrupting his own spiritual advance. He might
have assumed that his own mental prowess enabled him to comprehend the deep
things of Bible doctrine, when in fact metabolized doctrine resided in his soul
only because of God’s grace system of perception. To protect Paul from his
natural vulnerability to arrogance, God sent providential preventive
suffering, which Paul called his “thorn in the flesh.”
And for this reason, lest I should become
arrogant because of the extraordinary quality of revelations, I was given a
thorn in the flesh, an angel from Satan that he might torment me, lest I should
become arrogant. (2 Cor. 12:7)
Paul was chosen by God to serve as the apostle
to the Gentiles, the principal spokesman for the doctrines of the royal family
of God. These “mystery” doctrines had never been revealed prior to the Church
Age.[32]
Because of God’s sovereign decision to use him in this special way, Paul
had a unique ministry, and the divine revelations given to him exceeded those
of any other apostle. Peter acknowledged Paul’s superior comprehension of
doctrine, recognizing that Paul’s “epistles contain some things that are hard
to understand, which ignorant and unstable people distort” (2 Pet. 3:15—16).
God gave Paul the unparalleled blessing of
teaching and recording Church Age doctrine, but Paul was also given another
blessing called a ‘Thorn in the flesh.” Doctrine orients the believer to
reality; arrogance divorces him from reality. Arrogance must be prevented
because it neutralizes the effectiveness of doctrine in the believer’s life.
Doctrine provides spiritual self-esteem; arrogance is self-alienation.
Arrogance is the insidious enemy of the spiritual life, the very attitude that
corrupted Lucifer, who was originally the greatest of all the angels. Paul’s
ministry might have been destroyed by arrogance, but the thorn in the flesh was
given to him to preserve him in a period of grave danger.
Bible scholars have speculated on the nature of
Paul’s thorn in the flesh, but Paul deliberately omits the details to emphasize
the principle of providential preventive suffering. Paul says only that God
permitted Satan to dispatch a demon to constantly torment him. The work of this
“thorn demon” provided Paul with an illustration of God’s total ability to care
for His own. God’s provisions are far superior to any possible challenge. He is
able to make even our enemies benefit us (Ps. 76:10).
If God [is] for us, who [can be] against us?
(Rom. 8:3 lb)
There is a fine irony in Paul’s suffering. The
thorn demon wanted to destroy Paul but could only force him to rely on God’s
superior provisions. God used Satan’s attack to keep Paul from falling into the
same pattern of arrogance that originally caused the fall of Satan. God has a
wonderful sense of humor; with marvelous finesse, He lets the devil defeat
himself. Only omnipotent God has the power to turn suffering into blessing,
and this power has been made available to us through residence and function in
the divine dynasphere. God can use adversity to our advantage, even pressures
our foes have designed to harm us.
While Paul was suffering intensely and
wondering why God did not relieve the pain, God was masterfully demonstrating
His preeminence to Paul. The apostle was hurting and sought relief, but
“underneath [were] the everlasting arms” (Dent. 33:27). Through this experience
Paul’s personal love for God increased. But before he reaped the benefits of
providential preventive suffering, Paul applied a false solution and made a
wrong application of doctrine.
A FALSE SOLUTION AND WRONG
APPLICATION
As the first stage of spiritual adulthood,
spiritual self-esteem is still an awkward phase in which the believer has not
yet developed the true instincts of spiritual maturity. That is why Paul
reacted emotionally to the pain of providential preventive suffering. In an
understandable human reaction, he was momentarily affected by the discomfort
before regaining his composure and passing the test.
Concerning this [thorn in the flesh] I appealed
to the Lord three times that it might depart from me. (2 Cor. 12:8)
Paul’s use of prayer was a false solution to
suffering for blessing; his request that the suffering be removed was a wrong
application of doctrine.
Providential preventive suffering is essential
to the adult believer’s spiritual advance. He should never ask God to remove
the means of his growth. He should never pray for the removal of suffering for
blessing by which the protocol plan of God is fulfilled.
We think we know when we have had enough
suffering, but God knows us better than we know ourselves. He never sends more
pressure than we can bear (1 Cor. 10:13), but on the other hand He sends enough
pressure to accelerate our growth. Only when He sees that we have passed the
test or that we have flunked so badly that we need time to regroup does He
remove or reduce the suffering. What God does not remove He intends for us to
bear.
God has a unique plan for each believer. His
timing is perfect for every individual. He makes the sovereign decision to
nurture the positive Christian’s growth with the right kind, the right
intensity, and the right duration of suffering or prosperity. Too much or too
little adversity, too much or too little prosperity, the wrong combination, or
the wrong timing would retard the believer’s spiritual progress. A believer
who tells God how and when to administer suffering for blessing claims to have
greater wisdom and a better plan than God. This is blasphemy. We do not dictate
to God. We are told to “come boldly before the throne of grace” (Heb. 4:16),
but we have no right to question the sovereignty of God, much less to ask for
the cancellation of divine wisdom.
Paul made a false application of doctrine by
entreating God to remove providential preventive suffering. Worse yet, he made
an even more basic error by employing prayer to accomplish what it was never
designed to do.
Prayer is a powerful tool that has many
effective applications, but the spiritually adult believer should not pray for
strength or for relief under suffering for blessing. Why not? Such a prayer
would violate divine protocol.
Billions of years ago God established the
system for giving strength to the royal family. That system is the divine
dynasphere. The believer does not need to ask for what has already been
provided. Therefore, any Church Age believer who prays for strength when
pressure assails him is insulting God. He implies that divine omnipotence, made
available in the divine dynasphere, is insufficient
to enable spiritual royalty to live the Christian life under all circumstances.
The utilization of divine assets is a matter of learning and applying Bible doctrine, not a matter of prayer. Too often the believer does not understand his suffering because he has neglected or resisted doctrine. He remains ignorant of the powerful problem-solving devices that belong to the royal family.
Frequently, believers under pressure entreat
God for a miracle, but miracles are no solution to suffering for blessing. By
performing a miracle involving the sudden removal of pressure, God would be
canceling his own system for accelerating the believer’s spiritual advance. For
sovereign, omnipotent God, nothing is easier than a miracle. Miracles express
only His sovereign decision; they do not require man’s positive volition or any
function of human free will. Blessing is far more difficult for God to bestow
when the Christian’s volition is involved, yet that is precisely what God has achieved
by creating the protocol plan.
The believer must freely choose to reside in
the palace of the divine dynasphere. There he must learn and metabolize
(ingest and digest) Bible doctrine. He also must consistently apply this
metabolized doctrine throughout suffering for blessing. God will terminate the
test in His own perfect time (1 Cor. 10:13). That is a divine promise, so that
the believer’s natural desire for relief from pressure becomes a matter of
confidence in God, not an occasion for pleading for miracles. The believer with
positive volition gains strength by using doctrine, by exercising his own mind
which is inculcated with the thinking of God, not by observing supernatural
events.
False solutions to one’s own suffering include
miracles and the misuse of prayer; all true solutions are integral parts of the
divine dynasphere. We have already discussed these problem-solving devices for
spiritual childhood and spiritual adulthood in chapter 1. They include rebound,
the faith-rest drill, hope, virtue-love, and sharing the happiness of God.
DIVINE COUNSELING FOR PAUL
Obviously God did not answer Paul’s prayers. He
did not remove the thorn in the flesh, nor did He respond in any way except to
perpetuate Paul’s suffering. Finally, after Paul had repeated his urgent
request on three occasions, God reminded the great apostle of a doctrine he
already knew.
Then He assured me: My grace [has been and
still] is sufficient for you, for the power is achieved with weakness. (2 Cor.
l2:9a)
We have already noted the pattern of
achievement in this verse. What is the “power” in this context, and
what is the “weakness”? The power is
divine omnipotence as it becomes available to the believer with each stage of
spiritual adulthood through residence, function, and momentum in the divine dynasphere.
Omnipotence operates in the adult believer in the form of spiritual
self-esteem, spiritual autonomy, or spiritual maturity.
The weakness
is the suffering for blessing which God applies to the believer in each of
these stages of spiritual achievement. God sends the weakness of providential
preventive suffering, momentum testing, or evidence testing so man experiences
the weakness in suffering that is beyond human solution. God provides the power
in the divine dynasphere which is employed by man in his helplessness and
produces accelerated spiritual growth.
Therefore, I will boast all the more gladly
about my weaknesses in order that the power of Christ may reside in me. (2 Cor.
12:9b)
This is boasting not in the sense of glorifying
self but as a manifestation of esprit de
corps. Paul’s boasting expresses his delight in belonging to God’s protocol
plan. Such boasting indicates submission to God’s system and is the antithesis
of arrogance. Thus Paul demonstrates that providential preventive suffering has
been effective in his life. Divine protection against arrogance succeeded
because of his positive volition in the application of metabolized doctrine in
his soul. He stopped feeling sorry for himself, as when he had begged God to
remove the pain. Rather than being preoccupied with himself and his problems,
Paul now focuses his attention on the person of Christ.
Paul’s suffering had not changed. His human
weakness had not changed. His old sin nature had not changed. The divine
dynasphere had not changed. What had changed was Paul’s attitude. He had begun
to apply the doctrine he knew to the circumstances in which he found himself.
He remembered doctrine, began to think objectively, utilized his
problem-solving devices, and regained control of his life.
Suffering in itself has no virtue. The meaning
and blessing in suffering lie in the demonstration of divine grace and power in
the believer’s life. Omnipotence operates through God’s Word resident in the
believer’s soul. From doctrine comes personal love for God resulting in
spiritual self-esteem, and that inner strength furnishes yet greater capacity
to love God.
Suffering for blessing illuminates God’s grace.
Suffering converts self-glorification into glorifying God which is worship,
love, and appreciation of God. Paul’s boasting was not the loud, overt bravado
we normally associate with braggarts. Instead, he was confident and sure, not
of himself, but of the efficacy of the divine dynasphere. He celebrated the
essence of God, His protocol plan, and the fabulous assets available to every
Church Age believer. Boasting, here, is an attitude of the soul that is the
epitome of spiritual self-esteem.
Having been reminded of God’s grace provisions,
Paul expressed his total confidence in God’s policy of suffering for blessing.
Now that he was thinking Bible doctrine, he recalled a further point of
doctrine that motivated him to endure his thorn in the flesh. He remembered
that the prototype of the divine dynasphere sustained the humanity of the Lord
Jesus Christ during His first advent. Paul refers to the prototype divine
dynasphere as “the power of Christ.”
In the prototype divine dynasphere Christ
attained spiritual self-esteem, spiritual autonomy, and spiritual maturity. He
perfectly fulfilled the Father’s plan, which included suffering for blessing,
for “although He was a Son, He learned obedience from the things which He
suffered” (Heb. 5:8). The same policy of suffering for blessing that Paul was
enduring in the operational divine dynasphere, and that we endure today, had
been the means of accelerating the spiritual growth of the humanity of Christ.
For this reason I find contentment in
weaknesses, in slanders, in pressures, in persecutions, in stresses in behalf
of Christ, for when I am weak, then I am powerful. (2 Cor. 12:10)
“Contentment” is capacity for happiness; it is
the believer’s satisfaction with the blessings God gives him. The spiritually
adult believer in the operational divine dynasphere can share the happiness of
God in all circumstances, just as the humanity of Christ in the prototype
divine dynasphere possessed inner happiness on the cross while being judged for
the sins of mankind (Heb. 12:2). If God the Holy Spirit could sustain Jesus
through the excruciating pain of being judged for our sins, certainly the
ministry of the Spirit and the operational divine dynasphere can sustain us in
any hopeless situation in which we may find ourselves.
Some divine blessings involve prosperity;
others come in the guise of adversity. The believer can be grateful for
whatever he has in whatever state he finds himself (Phil. 4:11—12). This
tranquillity of soul is derived from his personal love for God, for when a
Christian loves the One who gives, he appreciates His gifts. “Contentment,” or
sharing the happiness of God, is the problem-solving device directed toward
self. This inner happiness characterizes all three stages of spiritual
adulthood, increasing in strength with the attainment of each successive stage.
WARM-UP EXERCISES FOR MOMENTUM
TESTING
Several types of providential preventive
suffering are listed in 2 Corinthians 12:10, setting up a distinct pattern. As
Paul has already stated, each category of suffering for blessing creates a
situation of helplessness. The believer cannot use his human intelligence,
experience, ingenuity, talent, or influence to resolve the problem. He must
rely on divine assets. The word “weaknesses,” therefore, expresses this
helplessness and represents the overall concept of providential preventive
suffering. The believer with spiritual self-esteem has the capacity to “find
contentment” whenever suffering enters his life.
The next four categories of testing in 2 Corinthians
12:10 are precursors of the four momentum tests which we will study in
connection with spiritual autonomy. Providential preventive
suffering familiarizes the growing believer with these momentum tests—in
advance and at reduced intensity. God carefully prepares the believer for the
future, when more intense suffering will be needed to perpetuate his spiritual
growth. Here we discover again the truth that God will not test the positive
believer “beyond what [he is] able [to bear]” (1 Cor. 10:13).
Providential preventive suffering not only
suppresses arrogance and moves the believer into spiritual autonomy, but it
also serves as a warm-up for the testings that will accelerate him beyond
spiritual autonomy into spiritual maturity. “In slanders” corresponds to people testing. “In pressures”
anticipates thought testing. “In
persecutions” corresponds to system
testing. And “in stresses” prepares the believer for disaster testing.
This entire system of spiritual advancement is
said to be “in behalf of Christ.” The principle that suffering is a key element
in the glorification of Christ is also stated in Paul’s epistle to the
Philippians.
For to you it has been given in behalf of
Christ not only to believe in Him but also to suffer for His sake. (Phil. 1:29)
How does our suffering benefit Christ? By
fulfilling the protocol plan of God we glorify the Lord Jesus Christ. He is
exalted in our lives as we attain spiritual adulthood and proceed toward
maturity so that we are qualified to receive maximum blessing. Christ is
glorified by delivering special, tailor-made blessings to the mature believer.
We “suffer for His sake” in the sense that periodic suffering is
essential to our advance. The emphasis is on spiritual growth and on Christ’s
glorification, not on suffering itself.
Personal love for the Lord Jesus Christ motivates us to desire His glorification. Our application of doctrine during providential preventive suffering accelerates spiritual growth, which contributes to the demonstration of His glory. Therefore, as Paul states in 2 Corinthians 12:9, we suffer for His sake “all the more gladly.”
Our purpose in life is to utilize the assets of
the divine dynasphere so that we advance to spiritual maturity. Much of this
advance is spurred by suffering for blessing. Concluding his discussion of
providential preventive suffering, Paul reiterates that when we pursue our
destiny, moving step by step toward the goal, “then [we are] powerful” (2 Car.
12:10). The omnipotence of God sustains and empowers us at each stage as we
move forward in His protocol plan.
Because 2 Corinthians 12:7—10 describes
providential preventive suffering, lhe final word “powerful” in this passage
refers to the next stage of advance after spiritual self-esteem. Paul has
passed the test of providential preventive suffering and has attained new
power. ‘Powerful” in this context becomes a synonym for spiritual autonomy.
WEAKNESSES as warm-ups for MOMENTUM TESTING |
|
SLANDERS |
People Testing |
PRESSURES |
Thought Testing |
PERSECUTIONS |
System Testing |
STRESSES |
Disaster Testing |
Chapter 7
SPIRITUAL AUTONOMY
THE DYNAMIC STATE OF SPIRITUAL
SELF-ESTEEM
PHYSICAL EXERCISE DEVELOPS
STRENGTH, coordination, and
stamina and is essential for good health. In the same way, adversity gives the
believer the vital spiritual exercise that builds spiritual autonomy. According
to this athletic analogy, spiritual autonomy is spiritual self-esteem with
muscle.
The experience of using divine assets under
providential preventive suffering strengthens all the characteristics of
spiritual self-esteem. Success in handling pressure dramatically increases the
believer’s confidence in God. As a result, legitimate self-confidence also
grows. The believer becomes keenly aware of belonging to God’s protocol plan
and of possessing tremendous divine assets that work in time of crisis or
tranquillity. Occupation with Christ and sharing the happiness of God cause the
believer with spiritual autonomy to conduct himself with confidence,
graciousness, and unshakable poise.
Derived from the classical Greek noun au)tonomia (autonomia), the word “autonomy” originally meant
to live under one’s own laws, to live in a state of being independent. In
modern usage autonomy expresses independence, self-determination,
self-direction. In the Christian way of life, spiritual autonomy is the
freedom of exercising royal prerogatives within one’s own palace, the divine
dynasphere. Spiritual autonomy is the dynamic state of spiritual self-esteem.
The spiritually autonomous Christian knows that
God has equipped him to meet the demands of life. Through his pastor’s faithful
teaching and his own experience of doctrinal application, he has learned to
utilize invisible divine assets in his daily life. Furthermore, suffering for
blessing has given him a new attitude toward other people. Spiritual autonomy
gives the believer strength to love others consistently with impersonal love.
IMPERSONAL LOVE MANDATED BY GOD
Impersonal love is defined in contrast to
personal love. Personal love comes in two categories:
1. ROMANCE is personal love for a member of the
opposite sex,
2. FRIENDSHIP is personal admiration for a
member of either sex.
Personal love is attraction or admiration for
someone else based on one’s own standards. By falling in love or making a
friend, however, a person creates a problem. The object of his love is
imperfect, and sooner or later, for one reason or another, that person will
become a source of suffering and testing. Because no one is perfect, the
object of personal love will cause disappointment, frustration, and hurt. The
problem is that no one is perfect, neither the subject nor the object. Both
contribute their flaws to the relationship.
When God commands us to love all believers
(John 15:12, 17), our neighbors (Matt. 19:19; Rom. 13:9), and all mankind
(Luke 6:27—28, 35), obviously He cannot mean personal love. God is commanding
us to resolve problems, not to create problems. In fact, the only
personal love with inherent virtue is personal love for God. God is the only
perfect object of love.
What category of love fulfills the divine
mandate? Impersonal love directed toward all mankind has inherent virtue and
problem-solving characteristics. Impersonal love is unconditional with regard
to its object. This means that no merit is assigned to the object of love; the
motivation for impersonal love is not attractiveness, rapport, or worthiness.
Motivated by the believer’s own virtue, impersonal love is, therefore,
tolerant, unprejudiced, courteous, and objective in the face of hostility and
antagonism. Impersonal love is the attitude of the spiritually adult Christian
resulting from the filling of the Holy Spirit and the perception, metabolism,
and application of Bible doctrine inside the palace of the divine dynasphere.
DEFINITION AND DESCRIPTION OF IMPERSONAL LOVE
To understand the love that God commands every
believer to have for all people, a distinction must be made between the subject
and object of love. The subject is the one who loves; the object is the one who
is loved. When love emphasizes the object, personal love is in view. When love
emphasizes the subject, impersonal love is in view. Impersonal love is
unconditional, emphasizing the virtue and spiritual status of the subject
rather than rapport with or worthiness of the object. The greater the virtue of
the subject, the greater the scope or range of its objects. The object of
impersonal love can be known or unknown, friend or enemy, attractive or
repulsive, honorable or dishonorable, good or evil, believer or unbeliever.
Impersonal love, therefore, is defined as the
virtue of the subject resulting from residence, function, and momentum in the
divine dynasphere. Impersonal love develops in stages, specifically the three
stages of spiritual adulthood: spiritual self-esteem, spiritual autonomy, and
spiritual maturity. Impersonal love is a sign of spiritual adulthood, since all
three stages possess impersonal love in some degree. The Christian’s impersonal
love is not fully developed in Gate 5 of the divine dynasphere but becomes
stabilized in Gate 6 and maximized in Gate 8.
Personal love for God, which is the source of
spiritual self-esteem, is also the source of impersonal love for all mankind.
In other words, Gate 5 of the divine dynasphere precedes Gate 6.
If someone should allege, “I love God,” and yet
he hates his fellow believer, he is a liar. For he who does not love his
fellow believer, whom he has seen, is not able to be loving God, whom he has
not seen. Furthermore, we have this mandate from Him, that
he who loves God [personal love for God, Gate 5 of the
divine dynasphere] should also love his fellow believer [impersonal love,
Gate 61. (1 John
4:20—21)
Spiritual self-esteem is
prerequisite to the function of impersonal love. The mandates to “love your
neighbor as yourself” imply that
spiritual self-esteem is the
essential foundation for
impersonal love (Matt. 22:39; Mark 12:31; Gal. 5:14). Then, as the believer
advances to spiritual autonomy, he builds the spiritual muscle to
comply with every divine mandate regarding impersonal love for all
mankind. Capacity for impersonal love is acquired
through providential preventive suffering, which
carries the believer into spiritual autonomy. Impersonal love is then tested through the people test as part
of momentum testing on the way to spiritual maturity.
Impersonal love is not
indifference or a lack of compassion. It is the virtue al the core of all
successful personal relationships in friendship or romance. Impersonal love is
a virtue from God attained in the fulfillment of the protocol plan, whereas
personal love is an expression of man’s ego that may not involve virtue.
Impersonal love emphasizes the virtue, integrity, and spiritual adulthood of
the subject; personal love emphasizes the attractiveness and desirability of
the object. Impersonal love encompasses the entire human race; personal love is
reserved for a few. Impersonal love is sustained by Bible doctrine; personal
love is sustained by rapport and mutual admiration. Impersonal love is
imperative, mandated by God of all believers toward all mankind; personal love
is optional and exclusive. Impersonal love requires fulfillment of the protocol
plan of God; personal love requires no qualifications—Anyone can fall in love.
Impersonal love is a problem-solving device; personal love is a
problem-manufacturing device.
While personal love for members of the human
race can be a distraction to the believer’s relationship with God, impersonal
love for all mankind is a manifestation of personal love for God as the highest
motivation in life. Impersonal love brings virtue to all problems of love and
hate, friendship and enmity, attraction and animosity. Impersonal love
perpetuates its own honor, virtue, and integrity without retaliation, reaction,
prejudice, discrimination, or revenge. Impersonal love cannot be destroyed by
hatred, persecution, unjust treatment, vindictiveness, or any other category of
antagonism.
Impersonal love is the effective basis for
dealing with all mankind. It is the quality of not allowing one’s personal
feelings or emotions to motivate discourtesy and thoughtlessness. Impersonal
love is the mental attitude that does not react in a personality conflict but
treats others on the basis of one’s own honor, integrity, and objectivity.
Spiritual autonomy is that honor, integrity, and objectivity in the believer. Although
impersonal love begins to emerge in earlier stages of Christian growth, it is
erratic prior to reaching spiritual autonomy. In fact, the distinguishing
quality of spiritual autonomy is impersonal love for all mankind. An overview
of the characteristics of spiritual autonomy will describe the inner strength
which animates impersonal love.
CHARACTERISTICS OF SPIRITUAL AUTONOMY
As the Christian advances in the divine
dynasphere, he utilizes available divine omnipotence on a consistent basis in
more areas of his life. When compared with the qualities previously listed
under spiritual self-esteem, the more powerful characteristics of spiritual
autonomy reflect this greater utilization of divine omnipotence.
1. CONTINUATION OF CONTENTMENT. The believer
possesses increased capacity for happiness and tranquillity of soul. He can
appreciate the grace of God at work in every circumstance of his life. The believer’s
happiness increases in strength and becomes more constant in each stage of
spiritual adulthood.
2. PERPETUATED MENTAL STABILITY. Mental
attitude improves with each stage of spiritual advance.
He who gets wisdom [Bible doctrine] loves his
own soul [spiritual self-esteem from metabolized doctrine]; he who cherishes
understanding prospers [advances beyond spiritual self-esteem to spiritual
autonomy]. (Prov. 19:8)
Keep on having this thinking in you which also
resided in Christ Jesus. (Phil. 2:5)
The believer with spiritual autonomy is no
longer as vulnerable to pressure as he was upon first entering spiritual
adulthood. He now has greater ability to concentrate so that he can apply Bible
doctrine more consistently in adversity as well as in prosperity.
3. IMPERSONAL
LOVE FOR ALL MANKIND. The consolidation of impersonal love is the most
dramatic difference between spiritual self-esteem and spiritual autonomy.
Christian integrity enables the believer to treat all people on the basis of
his own virtue rather than borrow their strength or depend on their merits or
attractiveness.
4. COGNITIVE
SELF-CONFIDENCE. In spiritual self-esteem the knowledge factor was called
epistemological rehabilitation, the process of renewing the mind with the
hundreds of doctrines the believer had metabolized over the years in spiritual
childhood. In spiritual autonomy the knowledge factor is cognitive
self-confidence, which involves a more complete understanding of doctrine from
having utilized divine problem-solving devices under providential preventive
suffering. The spiritually autonomous believer knows that doctrine works. He
has greater confidence in God and in his own ability to recall and accurately
apply doctrine without distorting either the doctrine or the application.
5. GRACE
ORIENTATION TO LIFE. While spiritual self-esteem also includes grace
orientation, spiritual autonomy involves a deeper appreciation for the grace
policy which God administers to all believers. Grace totally excludes human
effort, human strength, human merit, human ability. Human advantages do not
contribute to the execution of the protocol plan of God. The Christian way of
life is a supernatural way of life demanding a supernatural means of execution.
The spiritually autonomous believer understands his total dependence on divine
omnipotence. Orientation to God’s grace frees him from the last vestiges of
legalism. With spiritual autonomy he does not abuse the freedom that grace
gives him. Instead, he uses that freedom to comply with God’s will, purpose,
and plan for the Church Age. He utilizes available divine omnipotence to
perpetuate his spiritual growth.
6. DOCTRINAL ORIENTATION TO REALITY. The utilization of divine omnipotence keeps the believer on the path of reality and avoids any arrogant drive toward unreality. Because arrogance and subjectivity have been reduced to a minimum by providential preventive suffering, the spiritually autonomous believer is able to habitually utilize available divine power. In dramatic contrast to the neurotic or psychotic Christian, he enjoys the full effectiveness of all divine problem-solving devices. Spiritual autonomy is the epitome of sanity and mental stability.
7. GREATER DECISIONS FROM A POSITION OF
STRENGTH. Right
Ihilking (Bible doctrine) and right motivation (personal love for God)
lead to right decisions. In each successive stage of spiritual adulthood, the
believer makes a higher percentage of good decisions. More good decisions mean
more right actions, fulfilling the principle that a right thing must be done in
a right way in order to be right. In contrast, a right thing done in a wrong
way is wrong, and a wrong thing done in a right way is also wrong. A wrong
thing done in a wrong way obviously is wrong. Specifically, all spiritual
momentum and advance is a right thing done in a right way. This is the essence
of divine protocol. The basis for good decisions is the perception and
metabolism of Bible doctrine; the good decision itself is the application of
doctrine.
8. PERSONAL
CONTROL OF ONE’S LIFE. The spiritually autonomous Christian understands and
accepts his own limitations. He also recognizes that Ihe grace provision of
invisible assets has removed all limitations to his advance to spiritual
maturity, which is the ultimate objective. The advancing believer understands
that he cannot manipulate others and at the same time maintain control over his
own life. No one can tamper with the decisions of others and be objective in
his own decisions. The spiritually autonomous Christian, therefore, refrains
from interfering in the lives of other people. Spiritual autonomy restrains
jealousy, possessiveness, defensiveness, and the inordinate desire to dominate
others. Spiritual autonomy remains righteous without becoming self-righteous, and
moral without entering into moralistic orgies of crusader arrogance.
9. A
PERSONAL SENSE OF DESTINY. In spiritual autonomy the Christian becomes
increasingly aware of his own destiny within the protocol plan of God. God is
his destiny. God has designed a powerful plan for blessing him to the maximum,
a plan that enables his life to glorify Jesus Christ both now and forever. Once
a believer is free from possessiveness and from seeking to control others, he
can concentrate on exercising his God-given prerogatives within the framework
of his own royal priesthood. He has learned to respect the privacy of others.
He has become tolerant of the flaws and foibles of those whom he would
ordinarily resent. His impersonal love means that he can interact with others
from the high ground of Christian integrity while concentrating on the
fulfillment of God’s purpose for his own life.
10. COMMAND
OF SELF. As the powerful extension of spiritual self-esteem, spiritual autonomy
stabilizes the believer’s self-control, self-restraint, poise, and
self-regulation. His soul is so inculcated with Bible doctrine that, under the
filling of the Holy Spirit, divine viewpoint is sovereign over his life. He is
not controlled by emotion or by the subjective aberrations of others.
Consequently, in command of himself, the believer has a quality of
communication with others that avoids inordinate ambition and competition.
11. QUALIFICATION FOR MOMENTUM TESTING. Because
God never places more pressure on a believer than he can bear, spiritual
autonomy is a prerequisite for momentum testing. By achieving spiritual
autonomy, the believer is ready to proceed into the next phase of his advance
to spiritual maturity.
12. ATTAINMENT OF A NEW PHASE OF THE UNIQUE
LIFE. The modus vivendi of the
believer with spiritual autonomy is described by the phrase “Christ [is] at
home in your hearts,” that is, in the thinking portion of the mentality of the
soul (Eph. 3:16—17).
SPIRITUAL AUTONOMY AND THE COMPLETION OF VIRTUE-LOVE
Spiritual autonomy is not an isolated virtue.
It is an integral part of a greater, compound virtue, called virtue-love, all
parts of which have now been introduced so that the overall concept may be
presented.
Spiritual autonomy marks the attainment of Gate
6 of the divine dynasphere and the consolidation of virtue-love. As the
combination of Gates 5 and 6, virtue-love creates marvelous capacity for life.
Furthermore, energized by divine omnipotence through the believer’s residence
in the divine dynasphere, virtue-love also becomes the most versatile
problem-solving device in the protocol plan of God.
Now remain faith [the faith-rest drill], hope
[confidence in promised blessings], and love [virtue-love], these three, and
the greatest of these [is] love. (1 Cor. 13:13)
Faith-rest and hope are useful methods of
problem solving that become operational in spiritual childhood. These
two systems of applying Bible doctrine to experience continue to be effective in
spiritual adulthood.
Virtue-love, however, is greater than
faith-rest or hope because it expresses strength that belongs exclusively to
spiritual adulthood. Virtue-love solves problems in the believer’s
relationships with God and with others. In Gate 5, personal love for God is virtue-love directed toward God. This is
the highest motivation in life. Personal love for God automatically gives the
believer spiritual self-esteem. Providential preventive suffering then
strengthens spin -tual self-esteem, developing spiritual autonomy in Gate 6.
This becomes the inner strength that manifests itself in impersonal love for
all mankind, or virtue-love directed
toward others.
The significance of
virtue-love can hardly be overemphasized. Although believers of previous
dispensations were commanded to love God and man (Matt. 22:35—40), virtue-love
is unique to the Church Age. Sustained by the power of the filling of the Holy
Spirit, fueled by a depth of doctrinal resources never available before the
canon of Scripture was completed, designed to follow the precedent of the
glorified Christ, virtue-love is an integral part of the operational divine
dynasphere. It is a problem-solving device far more effective than even the
considerable divine assets available to the heroes of the Old Testament.
More than a problem-solving
device toward God and man, virtue-love is also the believer’s capacity for
life, love, and happiness. Virtue-love equips him to enjoy life while facing
all categories of momentum testing. Without this tremendous system of virtue,
no member of the royal family could advance the final distance into spiritual
maturity and the maximum glorification of Jesus Christ.
This multifaceted, composite virtue is
discussed in detail in Christian Integrity.[33]
Here we will summarize and note how impersonal love completes the
construction of virtue-love.
VIRTUE-LOVE DEFINED
Gates 5 and 6 of the divine dynasphere
represent a single virtue, divided according to its objects and presented to
indicate the sequence in which this overall virtue is acquired. Personal love
for God comes first. As personal love for God increases, the believer’s
attitude toward self improves: Spiritual self-esteem becomes spiritual
autonomy. Finally, as this inner strength becomes established in his soul, he
is able to deal more consistently with others from impersonal love.
As previously noted, impersonal love is defined
by contrast to personal love. Both of these categories of love can be
illustrated in the sentence “I love you.” In personal love, the emphasis is on
the “you,” on the attractiveness, character, intelligence, and personality of
the object of love. Personal love depends on rapport with the object.
Obviously, personal love is exclusive. Only a few people receive any particular
believer’s personal love, which requires a degree of intimacy, knowledge,
trust, and reciprocation. For compatibility to exist, the “I” and the you must
perceive one another as fulfilling each other’s norms and standards.
Impersonal love, on the other hand, is entirely
a function of the “I,” the subject of the sentence, the one who loves. What is
his character? Does he possess virtue? The term impersonal love acknowledges that no compatibility, familiarity,
reciprocation, or intimacy of any kind is required between the subject and
object. Impersonal love is the spiritually autonomous believer’s unconditional
attitude toward everyone he meets. It
is the expression of his integrity, which is manifested by tolerance, patience,
compassion, courtesy, and generosity. Impersonal love excludes prejudice,
hypocrisy, insensitivity, and rudeness.
The believer’s impersonal love is inherently
virtuous because it can exist only when he has virtue. By contrast, personal
love for another human being has no virtue in itself and does not necessarily
involve virtue of any kind. Any irresponsible fool can fall in love. Falling in
love requires no intelligence, talent, ability, or integrity. Personal love
depends on the object rather than the subject of love; the one who loves may be
deceived in his judgment of the object or may fantasize qualities in the
object which do not exist. Personal love is often a problem-manufacturing
device with no inherent problem-solving capability.
There are two sources of virtue in personal
love. For believers and un-believers, adherence to the laws of divine
establishment can support personal love. For believers, attainment of spiritual
autonomy creates the impersonal love that sustains personal love. The only
category of personal love that is inherently virtuous and does not need to be
sustained by impersonal love is the believer’s personal love for God. By the
very perfection of His essence, God is eternally worthy of the Christian’s
love. The very idea of tolerance toward perfect God is ludicrous and
blasphemous.
Therefore, the believer’s personal love for
God, which is inherently virtuous, and his impersonal love for all mankind,
which is also virtuous in itself, constitute the composite strength of
character which I call virtue-love.
GENERAL CATEGORIES OF LOVE
The value of virtue-love becomes dramatically
clear when we understand that there are three general categories of human love:
1. PSEUDOLOVE,
2. VIRTUE-DEPENDENT LOVE (personal love for man),
3. VIRTUE-LOVE (personal love for God; impersonal
love for man).
Pseudolove is arrogance hidden behind a facade
of emotion or hypocrisy of words. Pseudolove uses others for
self-gratification, for personal advancement, or as props to hold up one’s
weaknesses. Much that is passed off as genuine love is not love at all. A
notorious cause of human suffering, pseudo-love is removed by spiritual growth
in the divine dynasphere, which results in virtue-love and capacity for
virtue-dependent love.
Virtue-dependent love includes romance and
friendship. In romance especially, but also in friendship, a person tends to
idealize the object of love. But no one is perfect. An image of perfection
imposed on anyone is certain to cause disappointment and frustration. Reality
inevitably emerges. Even if the object of love is treated as a person and is
not expected to meet unattainable standards, still his or her independence,
vacillations, foibles, and flaws of the old sin nature will periodically strain
the relationship. But this is only half the problem.
Actually, the difficulties in personal love
arise from far greater complications than those caused by the volatility of
one who is loved. The person who loves is also changeable and imperfect. His or
her own quirks, instabilities, and sin nature collide with the imperfections
and fluctuations in the object of love. The intimacy and honesty of personal
love, by their very nature, multiply the odds against a successful
relationship. In personal love, each party’s problems are compounded by the
other person’s problems. If a person cannot handle his own problems, he will
never be able to deal with the problems of someone with whom he is intimate.
Apart from spiritual autonomy, personal love is an uncontrollable,
unsustainable problem maker.
Personal love between imperfect human beings is
perpetually in a state of flux. Alterations in emotions, moods, physical
health, intellectual preoccupations, perceptions, misperceptions, reactions to
external influences and demands—all these conspire to disrupt the relationship.
Petty irritations continually intrude. In the eyes of the one who loves, the
object of love may change from being attractive to unattractive to attractive
again, from responsive to reactive, from charming to annoying. Beneath the
emotional turbulence inherent in personal love, however, impersonal love
remains as constant as the spiritually autonomous Christian’s own character.
The complex difficulties inherent in romance
and friendship can be overcome. Wonderful relationships can be sustained, but
the prerequisite is virtue. Romance and friendship are virtue-dependent. Each
individual must bring his or her own virtue into the relationship.
For the believer, God has provided the system
by which to acquire and maintain this individual virtue. The system is the divine dynasphere, the believer’s royal
palace, the protocol plan of God. The virtue is found in Gates 5 and 6, called virtue-love.
By the time a believer reaches spiritual autonomy, he has the full exercise of virtue-love as the key problem-solving device of the entire divine dynasphere. Virtue-love—toward God and others—is the strength of character that enables him to continue his spiritual advance. With virtue-love he can pass through the valley of momentum testing, which is the next category of suffering for blessing, and advance to the high ground of spiritual maturity.
MOMENTUM TESTING
No ASCETICISM IN SUFFERING FOR BLESSING
ALTHOUGH THIS STUDY FOCUSES ON ADVERSITY in the life of the believer in
Jesus Christ, suffering is not the
basic characteristic of Christianity. Instead, spiritual autonomy gives the
believer capacity to enjoy life in spite of any adversity that comes his way.
His happiness does not depend on environment, possessions, or people. He can
appreciate the pleasant details of life and cope with the disasters because he
is not enslaved to circumstances. The problem-solving devices of the protocol
plan of God enable the believer to equate prosperity and adversity, living and
dying.
Metabolized doctrine in the believer’s soul
causes him to personally love God. That ever-increasing love produces
contentment and happiness, which he brings with him into every situation.
Indeed, sharing the happiness of God in spiritual adulthood is the most
effective problem-solving device in the protocol plan of God. The believer
advances by applying Bible doctrine under pressure, but it is the doctrine he
applies, not the suffering he endures, that causes his growth.
Christianity is not a religion of suffering.
Bible doctrine explains suffering, and metabolized, applied doctrine alleviates
suffering in the soul. There is no asceticism in the protocol plan of God.
Despite false teaching to the contrary, suffering for its own sake is not a
legitimate Christian objective.
Tragically, many Christians never learn the
doctrine of suffering. To their way of thinking, adversity creates an aura of
spirituality. Presumptuously claiming to follow Christ in His sufferings, they
attach importance to their own pain as if it brought them closer to God. They
distort their lives to fit a crippling false doctrine: They assume God honors
self-sacrifice and commands them to suffer. This malignant idea breeds
arrogance, destroys capacity for life, and blasphemes the character of God.
Legalism, asceticism, and a martyr complex
impose unnecessary suffering on believers, but such self-induced misery has no
place in divine protocol. The saving work of Christ eliminates all human works
for salvation (Eph. 2:8—9); rebound by grace excludes all penance (1 John 1:9);
the marvelous doctrines of royal privilege and opportunity expose the arrogance
of self-abnegation, self-flagellation, self-mutilation (Gal. 5:12).
God retains sovereign control over suffering in
the protocol plan, which He will administer only to the right believer at the
right time and to the right degree. God, not self, administers suffering for
blessing. In other words, the believer must not look for trouble. On the
contrary, he is to utilize divine provisions for problem solving. Even divine discipline exists for the purpose of blessing,
but ascetic Christians ignore God’s purpose and cling to suffering as an end in
itself. Their misguided, false attempts to earn God’s approbation incur only
divine wrath. These legalistic believers reject God’s grace, refuse to utilize
the invisible assets of divine omnipotence, and instead function in Satan’s
cosmic system under religious evil.[34]
Under unusual circumstances a Christian may
suffer for his beliefs. Truth arouses animosity in those with hardened negative
volition (Matt. 10:34—36), but the believer should not provoke animosity just
to prove his loyalty to the truth. Such suffering merely feeds a perverse form
of arrogance. The antagonism a believer endures is neither an indication of
spiritual growth nor a proof of his effectiveness as a witness for Christ.
Every Church Age believer is an ambassador of Jesus Christ in the devil’s world
(2 Cor. 5:20). He is in the world but not of the world, and
he is commanded “not [to] love the world, nor the things in the world” (1 John
2:15). However, neither is he to
cause unnecessary suffering by making himself persona non grata.
The Christian’s commission as royal ambassador
does not call upon him to be obnoxious and to cause resentment in order to
claim that he “suffers for Jesus.” The spiritually autonomous believer is
motivated by love for God, not by a desire to prove himself to God or man.
Furthermore, the Bible doctrine in his soul is far too great a treasure to be
flaunted before the enemies of the truth (Matt. 7:6). He finds opportunities to
present the Gospel in order to pass on the good news. His purpose is neither to
gain God’s approbation nor to expose himself to the world’s hatred (John
15:18—21).
Second Corinthians 6 teaches that we are to
give “no cause for offense in anything, in order that the ministry be not
discredited” (2 Cor. 6:3). The function of the divine dynasphere (2 Cor.
6:6—7) and the attainment of spiritual autonomy give the believer excellence,
quality, and class as a royal ambassador of the Lord Jesus Christ. With
spiritual autonomy the royal ambassador can surmount “endurance, afflictions,
hardships, distresses, beatings, imprisonments, tumults, labors,
sleeplessness, and hunger” if and when such testings occur (2 Cor. 6:4—5). Whether
in prosperous or adverse circumstances (2 Cor. 6:8), his love, loyalty, and
happiness are related to the Lord whom he represents.
SUFFERING IN FOUR CATEGORIES OF MOMENTUM TESTING
Spiritual autonomy not only gives the believer
capacity for life as Christ’s representative on earth but also prepares him for
the final approach to spiritual maturity. In order to accelerate the
believer’s momentum to the final objective of maturity, God periodically
inserts momentum testing among the advancing believer’s blessings. Four
categories of momentum testing characterize Christian suffering in the advance
from spiritual autonomy to spiritual maturity:
1. PEOPLE TESTING,
2. THOUGHT TESTING,
3. SYSTEM TESTING,
4. DISASTER TESTING.
The believer with spiritual autonomy does not
fear this formidable catalog of suffering. He has previously passed a warm-up
exam for each of these tests. Now that his spiritual self-esteem has become
spiritual autonomy, providential preventive suffering has prepared him for the
four categories of momentum testing he is about to encounter.
At this stage in his spiritual life, the
believer should not be caught off guard by suffering. The pain will not be less
than before. In fact, the suffering may be more intense, but he has the
problem-solving devices necessary to take suffering in stride.
PEOPLE TESTING
People testing challenges the believer from two
antithetical directions: approbation and antagonism. In either case, the
danger lies in relinquishing spiritual autonomy and turning over control of
one’s life to someone else. A person the believer loves or admires may
inordinately influence his life and happiness. Anyone he hates definitely
usurps control.
Personal love in the human race is
virtue-dependent. Lacking inherent virtue, it relies on the integrity of
impersonal love as a problem-solving device. This very dependence on
virtue-love makes every personal love relationship a test of the believer’s
faithfulness to divine priorities. Will he overemphasize the object of love to
the point of compromising his personal sense of destiny in the protocol plan of
God? Or will he integrate his human relationships into a consistent, balanced
Christian life?
Personal love emphasizes the object of love,
but if a believer elevates the human object of his love above God, he fails the
people test. In his desire to please the woman he loves, a man may turn over
control of his life to her. He makes himself a slave, living by her whim rather
than by the strength of his own soul. Ironically, as a slave he renounces all
possibility of pleasing her. He ceases to be the man to whom she originally was
attracted. The same may be true of a woman. Although a wife lives under her
husband’s authority, she should not renounce her responsibility for her own
life out of her desire to please him.
Personal love does not require either party to
surrender his or her autonomy to the other. God has a unique plan for each
believer. Each is a royal priest before God and remains an individual. In a
personal love relationship both the subject and the object must maintain
integrity and contribute virtue-love if the relationship is to have hope of
success.
The key to passing the people test is that
people emphasis must not take precedence over God emphasis. In other words,
among the many legitimate activities and involvements in the believer’s life,
Bible doctrine must receive first priority. Human relationships are important
in any normal life, but the Christian’s relationship with God in the divine
dynasphere enables human personal love to succeed. Therefore, the believer must
learn to say no when even legitimate activities challenge the top priority of
doctrine.
A believer may make his own choices in the
selection of his friends and loved ones, but thereafter they will make many
decisions for him unless he maintains his spiritual autonomy.
Be not deceived; evil friends corrupt good
morals. (1 Cor. 15:33)
He who walks with wise men will be wise,
But the friends of fools will suffer evil.
(Prov. 13:20)
Personal love may not sound like a particularly
unpleasant momentum test. Everyone wants to be in love. Personal love, however,
is a problem-manufacturing device with no inherent problem-solving capability.
When a person reveals his soul to someone he loves, the intimacy between one imperfect
person and another creates vulnerability to suffering. Some of the greatest
anguish in life comes from personal love. Personal love can avoid becoming misery
and slavery only when accompanied by the virtue of impersonal love. Spiritual
autonomy, therefore, is the inner strength that makes personal love a marvelous
blessing.
Like personal love, antagonism can also cause the
believer to surrender the control of his life to someone else. He may be
driving down the freeway when another motorist cuts in front of him. The
immediate reaction may be anger at that discourteous so-and-so, but anger is
ridiculous in this situation. Suddenly the believer is upset and irritated; his
whole attitude is distorted by this petty incident. He has turned over the
custody of his happiness to a total stranger. If he refuses to recover from the
mental attitude sin of anger through rebound, he may escalate his initial
reaction into a foolish and potentially violent feud with the other driver.
Any time a believer reacts to people with
jealousy, bitterness, vindictiveness, or implacability, he immediately grants
them control over his life. In an irrational attempt to regain control, he may
vent his antagonism in gossip, maligning, false accusation, or even physical
violence. But by attacking the person to whom he has surrendered his happiness,
the believer attacks his own happiness. Each antagonistic reaction carries him
deeper into self-induced misery.
When other people control a believer’s life,
whether or not they want control or even realize they have such influence, he
blames them for his discontentment. But blaming others for self-induced misery
cuts off the possibility of solution and, under the law of volitional
responsibility, intensifies the suffering. With spiritual growth, the believer
becomes aware of this pattern of unhappiness. He uses rebound for forgiveness
of the sins involved, but the specific solution to people testing is impersonal
love, in which the believer’s own inner strength is the basis for toleration of
others. Impersonal love is crystallized as an active component of virtue-love
only after the believer has attained spiritual autonomy.
Ultimately, the solution to all momentum
testing is the believer’s happiness. Happiness as a problem-solving device is
the monopoly of God and His plan. The believer cannot depend on people for happiness;
he must depend on God. The believer must follow divine protocol to avoid undue
influence from those he loves and to keep from falling into hatred toward those
who irritate him. Spiritual momentum in the protocol plan of God will bring the
believer to spiritual autonomy where his contentment is stabilized and where he
can utilize impersonal love as a solution to his problems with people.
THOUGHT TESTING
Thought determines the believer’s life. Thought
has such a powerful effect on the believer’s success or failure in the
Christian life that thinking must be considered a major momentum test. In all
stages of Christian growth the believer will face the pressure of thought
conflicts in his soul.
Human viewpoint will conflict with divine
viewpoint. False concepts will challenge Bible doctrine. Arrogance will intrude
upon humility. Expedients of all kinds will compete with the protocol plan of
God. Fear will paralyze reason. These are essentially private conflicts which
the believer must resolve in his own soul. Quandaries, confusions, and
unanswered questions motivate the positive believer to apply the resources of
Bible doctrine he has learned. Concentration on doctrine accelerates his
spiritual growth.
Thought testing may exist when circumstances
are overtly prosperous and tranquil. A person is not always what he appears to
be on the surface; the real person is the thought content of his soul.
For as he [a person] thinks within himself, so
is he. He says to you, “Eat and drink!” but his heart [the place of thought] is
not with you. (Prov. 23:7, NASB)
Because a believer is what he thinks, a thought
can make or break him, depending on the nature of the thought. If his thought
is consistent with Bible doctrine, he advances in the protocol plan of God. If
his thought is contrary to doctrine, he is distracted from his true destiny in
life. His mental attitude toward life is the function of his thinking, the
composite of all he knows and believes.
Prayer illustrates the importance of thought in
fulfilling the believer’s private responsibilities before the Lord.[35]
Each member of the royal family is a priest with the tremendous privilege
of representing himself before God.
With privilege comes
responsibility. God has established the protocol which the believer must follow
in using prayer. The believer’s prayers must be consistent with God’s essence,
objectives, and modus operandi. Hence,
accurate and careful doctrinal thinking is
the basis for effective prayer. When his prayers reflect God’s own thoughts and
desires, the believer can be confident of receiving affirmative answers (John
15:7).
Jesus explained that wrong and sloppy thinking
guarantees failure in prayer.
And when you are praying, do not use meaningless
repetition as the Gentiles do, for they think that they will be heard for their
many words. (Matt. 6:7)
Rational thinking is the essential human
activity that distinguishes man from animals. Like the angels, man was created
with a soul capable of rational thought. Therefore, the mentality of the soul
is the battlefield of the angelic conflict. When the believer thinks evil, he
is evil. He resides in Satan’s cosmic system. From evil thinking comes evil
motivation; from evil motivation, evil actions.
And Jesus, knowing their thoughts, said, “Why
are you thinking evil in your hearts?” (Matt. 9:4)
In contrast, thinking that is consistent with
the truth has enormous repercussions for good. Salvation itself is appropriated
by a right thought, by non-meritorious positive volition toward the Gospel of
Jesus Christ.
What do you think about the Christ? (Matt.
22:42a)
Mankind’s great enemy is a thought called arrogance.
Arrogance can inflate or deflate man’s opinion of himself. He thinks he is
better or worse than he actually is. Both self-aggrandizement and
self-denigration distort and deny reality, which is the realm in which God’s
plan is effective. God’s grace deals with us as we are, but an egocentric
believer who does not live in objective reality will never use God’s grace
provisions to advance in the protocol plan.
For if anyone thinks he is something
[arrogance] when he is nothing, he deceives himself. (Gal. 6:3, NASB)
There is a grim irony in arrogance. A person
who thinks more of himself than he has a right to think is actually depriving
himself of his greatest advantages, the benefits that come with the
fulfillment of God’s plan for his life.
For I say through the grace of God which has
been given to me, to everyone who is among you, stop thinking of self in terms
of arrogance beyond what you ought to think, but think in terms of sanity for
the purpose of being rational without illusion, as God has assigned to each one
a standard [of thinking] from doctrine. (Rom. 12:3)
Arrogance is illusion, unreality, and when
perpetuated, arrogance becomes insanity. The preventive is the truth of Bible
doctrine.
Therefore let him who thinks he stands take heed
[of Bible doctrine] lest he fall. (1 Cor. 10:12, NASB)
The divine mandates that the believer must obey
in order to consistently pass thought testing are summed up in Romans 12:2.
Stop being conformed to this age, but be transformed
by the renovation of your thought, that you may prove what the will of God is,
[namely] the good, the well-pleasing, and the complete. (Rom. 12:2)
“The renovation of [one’s] thought” is
accomplished over a period of time by giving Bible doctrine number one
priority, by organizing one’s life around the daily perception of the Word of
God. “The good, the well-pleasing, and the complete” is the protocol plan of
God, executed in the palace of the divine dynasphere. Only in the divine
dynasphere can the believer receive all the blessings God has prepared for
him—in prosperity or adversity.
The paragon of right thinking is the humanity of
Jesus Christ, who constantly lived and functioned inside the prototype of the
divine dynasphere.
Keep on having this mental attitude in you,
which was also in Christ Jesus. (Phil. 2:5)
Our Lord’s mental attitude of humility was manifested
by His total conformity to the plan of the Father. Humility, which is
obedience to divine authority and orientation to God’s grace, should be the
attitude of every member of the royal family of God.[36]
Humility excludes false solutions to thought
testing. What are some of the pseudosolutions which genuine humility avoids?
RATIONALIZATION is self-justification while
blaming others for one’s own failures and sufferings.
ANGER attacks a problem with temper and
tantrums, which manifest total irresponsibility. Unjustified anger ignores the
problem, diverting attention instead to self, and attempting to cower people
and control them with threats or violence. Power lust and approbation lust are
often expressed through anger, which arises from feelings of inferiority that
are temporarily assuaged by revenge or by injuring those who challenge one’s
inflated opinion of self.
DEFENSE MECHANISMS attempt to insulate the
believer’s mind from overpowering pressures. But such sociopathic functions as
drug abuse, lasciviousness, and drunkenness merely compound the original
problem by divorcing the believer from reality.
DENIAL ignores the problem in the blind hope
that it will go away. Believers who plead with God for miracles often fall
into this false system of problem solving.
SUBLIMATION reacts to frustration by finding a
new outlet for pent-up emotions. A bored believer may seek happiness in social
life, sex, or a pursuit of money when he actually needs to develop love for God
through Bible doctrine. Most sublimation is directed into activities that are
moral and normal but which have been given a false priority above Bible
doctrine and the plan of God.
Worship and Mental Combat
Paul depicts thought testing as a battle in the
soul. But this is a battle for which God has devised brilliant strategy and
tactics. He has powerfully armed and amply supplied the believer to win this
inner warfare against erroneous thinking.
For the equipment and weapons of our warfare
[are] not human attributes but attributes of power by means of God [the
utilization of divine omnipotence in the divine dynasphere] against the destruction
of fortifications [Satan’s multifaceted systems of false
thinking], assaulting and demolishing speculations
and every obstacle of arrogance against the knowledge of God, even making a
prisoner of every thought to the obedience of Christ, holding in readiness
[doctrine in the soul] to punish all deviation when your obedience has been
fulfilled [obedience to the mandates of God’s protocol plan resulting in
spiritual adulthood]. (2 Cor. 10:4—6)
Although divine viewpoint thinking searches out
and destroys false human viewpoint, the destruction of incorrect ideas and
attitudes is not the ultimate victory in thought testing. Victory lies in
possessing the true perspective, thinking with true ideas, understanding and
applying true doctrines.
Jesus therefore was saying to those Jews who
had believed Him, “If you abide in My word [Bible doctrine], then you are truly disciples of Mine;
and you shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free.” (John
8:31—32, NASB)
In other words, worship of God is a mental
attitude.
God is a Spirit, and those who worship Him must
worship in Spirit [the filling of the Holy Spirit, Gate 1 of the divine dynaspherel
and in truth [knowing and thinking Bible doctrine, Gate 4]. (John 4:24)
All aspects of worship are based upon accurate,
doctrinal thinking. In the Eucharist the believer concentrates on Christ,
remembering the doctrines that reveal His person and saving work.[37]
Music praises God in doctrinal lyrics. Giving is a mental attitude, and
the privilege of contributing to the Lord’s service is extended to believers
who understand God’s grace (2 Cor. 9:7—8).[38]
But by far the most important form of worship is concentrating on the teaching
of God’s Word.
As a result of victories on the battlefield of
thought testing, the believer deepens his personal love for God, shares the
happiness of God, and acquires inner beauty. This inner beauty, which Paul
describes as “sanity of mind” or “stability of mind,” characterizes the
believer in spiritual adulthood (1 Tim. 2:9—10, 15b; 1 Pet. 3:3—4).
SYSTEM TESTING
A system, as the term is used here, is an
organization composed of people under the authority
of other people, which functions according to a policy designed to fulfill a specific objective. Human society is a web of systems. Every individual
belongs to many of these organizations, formal and informal. There are business
corporations, military services, ecclesiastical organizations, athletic teams,
professional associations, universities, governmental departments, marriages,
families, and many other systems. All of these are characterized by:
1. PERSONNEL UNDER AUTHORITY,
2. THE OBJECTIVES OF THE
ORGANIZATION,
3. POLICY OF THE MANAGEMENT.
There are good and bad systems, which may be
successful or unsuccessful. The personnel—in authority and under authority—may
be accomplished or incompetent. Objectives may be legitimate or dubious, lucid
or ill-defined. Policy may encourage people to excel or may oppress them.
Problems inevitably exist in the complex of interlocking and overlapping
systems that constitute human society. All these organizations involve people,
no two of whom are alike and not one of whom is perfect. With so many old sin
natures jostling against one another and expressing themselves day after day,
no wonder system testing is an inescapable form of suffering that poses a
major challenge to the Christian’s spiritual advance.
What is a believer to do when he is treated
unfairly by someone in authority over him? How should he respond to bias and
favoritism that promote people who do inferior work? What if he has a
personality conflict with his boss? Or how does he maintain his motivation and
integrity when policies serve someone’s personal interests rather than
strengthen the organization, when they conflict with normal living, or when they
seem arbitrary and stupid? How does he cope with conflicting, vague, or
impossible objectives?
The dynamics and problems of organizations have
been studied and written about by many distinguished authorities. Most problems
boil down to arrogance, expressed in incapacity, laziness, distraction by
wrong priorities, and ignorance. The purpose of this study of Christian
suffering is not to diagnose the weaknesses of particular systems and prescribe
organizational remedies. Instead, the objective is to describe the believer’s
mental attitude and modus operandi as
a result of utilizing divine problem-solving devices. Spiritual autonomy
enables him to survive and benefit from system testing.
Quit or Cope
Two courses of action usually are open to the
believer when confronted with system testing. He can quit or he can cope with
the pressure, using the dynamics of available divine omnipotence. Certainly
there are times to separate oneself from an organization. If a system’s
objectives or policies are clearly evil, the believer should disassociate
himself from it. This would apply to groups like the Communist Party, the Nazi
Party, certain apostate churches and cults, criminal organizations, and
paramilitary groups that undermine the authority of government through civil
disobedience or terrorism.
Separation is required in extreme cases, but
quitting because of pressure is often a poor decision from a position of
weakness. If the believer succumbs to the pressure, if he quits on relatively
mild provocation, he has flunked the system test.
If you falter in times of trouble,
How small is your strength. (Prov. 24:10)
If the believer perseveres in a situation even
when circumstances are less than perfect, and continues to do a good job, he
will be vindicated and promoted spiritually by the Lord. The vindication comes
from residence in the power of the divine dynasphere. The believer’s royal
palace is strong enough to weather any storm, if he will remain inside and use
his divine assets.
Spiritual autonomy gives the Christian the
power to put the problem in the Lord’s hands and continue to function without
an arrogant reaction. Bitterness, implacability, self-pity, hatred, jealousy,
and revenge do not need to control the believer’s life simply because problems
exist in a system to which he belongs.
By remembering the component parts of spiritual
autonomy, the believer discovers the assets he needs in facing system testing.
Spiritual autonomy is:
1. IMPERSONAL LOVE FOR ALL MANKIND
and
2. Strengthened SPIRITUAL
SELF-ESTEEM derived from
3. PERSONAL LOVE FOR GOD, which is
the result of
4. BIBLE DOCTRINE in the soul.
The believer will need all these qualities when
confronted with system testing.
In spiritual autonomy the believer is motivated
by his love for God. In any system to which he belongs, he does his job “not as
pleasing men but unto God” (1 Thess. 2:4). He does not rely on the organization
to furnish his motivation because he is self-motivated. The organization
cannot destroy motivation that it did not create in the first place. Only the
believer himself can destroy his own motivation through negative volition to
the protocol plan of God. With personal love for God as his motivational virtue,
the spiritually autonomous Christian can contribute to the organization even
when it may treat him unfairly. Needless to say, he does the best possible job
regardless of injustice, unfair criticism, or job discrimination. He does not
complain or join in organizational conspiracies.
Man is frequently unfair, but God is always
fair. Man’s systems are flawed, but God’s protocol plan is perfect. Human
beings in authority may be despicable, but God is always worthy of respect.
The spiritually autonomous believer’s personal love for God motivates
impersonal love for mankind, which enables him to be tolerant of the
weaknesses and failures of others. When he is a victim of unfair leadership,
unjust management, or an inefficient system, he deals with personality
conflicts on the basis of impersonal love. In other words, he takes the
attitude that the people who inflict system testing on him are simply
contributing to his spiritual advance. Since he loves God, God is working “all
things together for good” in his behalf (Rom. 8:28).[39]
The inventory of Bible doctrine in the
believer’s soul enables him to submit to authority and be an asset to any
organization. That same doctrine strengthens him to endure system testing and
through his professionalism to be a stabilizing influence for others who also
may suffer from the organization’s pettiness, shortsightedness, or ineptitude.
In the epistle to the Colossians, Paul states
the principle, then illustrates from a variety of systems, and finally presents
the correct application of doctrine to system testing.
And whatever you do in word or deed, do it all
in the name of the Lord Jesus, giving thanks to Him through God the Father.
Wives, submit to the authority of your husbands as is fitting in the Lord.
Husbands, love your wives and stop being bitter against them.
Children, obey your parents in everything, for this pleases the Lord.
Parents, do not embitter your children, or they will become discouraged.
[Children, lacking inner resources, are adversely affected by too much system
testing from unfair, inconsistent parents]. Labor, obey management in
everything, not with eye-service as men-pleasers but with virtue of heart
[doctrine in the thinking of the soul], respecting the Lord.
Whatever you
do, keep functioning from [your own] soul as to the Lord [spiritual autonomy]
and not to man, since you know that you will receive the reward of your
inheritance [your focus extends beyond the objectives of any human
organization]. You serve the Lord Christ. Anyone who does wrong will receive
the consequences of his wrong, and there is no partiality [under the law of
volitional responsibility]. (Col. 3:17—25)
The doctrine of God’s impartiality applies to
system testing.[40] After
the believer has used the appropriate problem-solving devices, he places his
case before the supreme court of heaven. God is the perfect judge. There is no
reason to complain and whine about unfairness.
The believer is highly immature if he
entertains the illusion that fallen, totally depraved human beings will always
be enlightened and fair. This is the devil’s world. Injustice and
discrimination are the norm under Satan’s arrogant administration. Rather than
focus his attention on the stupidity, cowardice, and evil of mankind, the
spiritually autonomous Christian will regard human weaknesses in the context of
God’s plan.
God is always fair to the believer. God has
furnished powerful and effective divine assets, and He intends for the
believer to bear the testing that He does not remove. When separation from a
flawed system is not justified, spiritual autonomy gives the believer the
strength to put the case before God, leave it there for divine solution, and
cope with the situation as unto the Lord.
DISASTER TESTING
People testing, thought testing, and system
testing may exert an insidious pressure on the believer. He must be alert to
recognize these challenges to his spiritual advance. When he has identified the
nature of the test, he then can apply the appropriate problem-solving devices
and pass the test.
Disaster testing, however, is anything but
subtle. The problem is not to identify the threat but to endure the shock and
to maintain poise for decision-making under extreme duress.
There are two categories of disaster testing:
1. PERSONAL DISASTER,
2. HISTORICAL OR NATIONAL DISASTER.
A personal disaster may be physical pain caused
by injury, disease, handicap, or genetic weakness. It may be mental anguish,
caused by loss of loved ones, reputation, success, employment, money, or
property. The privations of hunger, thirst, or exposure to heat or cold may be
classified as personal disasters. Arrogance spawns personal disasters: Disdain
for authority breeds criminals who trample the rights, privacy, and property of
their victims. Those who break the law must suffer from the administration of
justice (Matt. 26:52; Rom. 13:4).
An historical disaster is a situation that
brings grief to many people. A large number of people may suffer from the
weather in heat and drought or in extreme and prolonged cold. Blizzards,
hurricanes, tornadoes, and floods cause widespread damage as do powerful
earthquakes, tidal waves, or volcanic eruptions. Insects or plant diseases may
kill crops. Epidemics can decimate a population.
The cycles of a free economy or adjustments in
governmental policy may cause immediate hardships for large portions of
society. Injustice victimizes many people where self-aggrandizement corrupts
the integrity of leadership. When a nation declines, the evils of crime,
terrorism, and drug abuse inflict terrible suffering upon the entire society.
Arrogance, revenge, greed, inordinate ambition, and power lust pit group
against group, nation against nation, ultimately unleashing the violence of war
with all its attendant suffering.
How does the spiritually autonomous believer
deal with a disaster that affects his entire nation? For example, how can he
pass the test of economic depression?
Throughout the centuries during which the Bible
was written, the Jewish economy was agricultural. Famine was tantamount to
depression. Hence, I will use the term “economic depression” in translating
“famine” in certain passages of Scripture.
The economic health of a client nation to God
is a rough index of the nation’s spiritual condition. Economic prosperity is
promised for nations that follow the laws of divine establishment concerning
economic freedom.
‘If you walk in My statutes and keep My
commandments so as to carry them out, then I shall give you rains in their
season, so that the land will yield its produce and the trees of the field will
bear their fruit. Indeed, your threshing will last for you until grape
gathering, and grape gathering will last until sowing time. You will thus eat
your food to the full and live securely in your land.’ (Lev. 26:3—5, NASB)
Economic recovery accompanies spiritual
recovery in the client nation. But when the economy is chronically depressed,
the nation is usually in spiritual decline. A client nation declines
spiritually when the “remnant,” the pivot of growing and mature believers in
that nation, shrinks while the number of believers who reject the plan of God
increases. Furthermore, when the remnant becomes too small to counterbalance
the human viewpoint influence of negative believers, God punishes the client
nation with collective divine discipline.
Five cycles of discipline are administered to
the client nation whose believers refuse to recover their spiritual momentum.
The second cycle of discipline is economic recession (Lev. 26:18—20); the
fourth cycle is economic depression (Lev. 26:23—26; Deut. 28:15, cf.,
28:23—24). The malaise of economic depression often is the weakness that brings
on the fifth cycle, military conquest by a foreign power (Lev. 26:27—35; Deut.
28:25—26).[41]
Even while the nation suffers under divine
discipline, God never disregards the faithfulness of individual believers.
Under the disaster test of economic depression, the spiritually autonomous
believer uses all the problem-solving devices of spiritual adulthood. He
directs his hope toward doctrine, his
personal love toward God, his impersonal love toward mankind, and his
acquired divine happiness toward
himself. With these powerful divine assets he can not only survive the storm
but even enjoy it—with total confidence in God’s plan for his life.
Abram failed to use any problem-solving devices
in economic depression, but the Lord still supplied his every need (Gen.
12:10—13:1). By neglecting to use the doctrine he knew, Abram manufactured
unnecessary pressure for himself and was unable to enjoy God’s provision as he
could have.
The proper attitude in economic disaster is
described by Peter.
These [momentum tests of all kinds] have come
so that your faith [the application of Bible doctrine in utilizing God’s
problem-solving devices]—of greater worth than gold, which perishes even though
refined by fire—may be proved genuine and may result in praise, glory, and
honor when Jesus Christ is revealed [the Rapture or resurrection of the Church
as a preliminary to the Judgment Seat of Christ, where eternal rewards will be
based on spiritual growth]. Though you have not seen him, you love him; and
even though you do not see him now, you believe in him [use the assets of the
divine dynasphere] and are filled with an inexpressible and glorious joy. (1
Pet. 1:7—8, NIV)
In disaster testing, the spiritually adult
believer uses the greatest of all problem-solving devices, the happiness of
God, which is described here as “inexpressible and glorious joy.” God shares
His happiness with the believer first in spiritual self-esteem, then more
powerfully in spiritual autonomy, and most effectively in spiritual maturity.
The believer inculcated with the thinking of God is happy or content in
whatever circumstances he finds himself and can therefore cope with any
pressure in life.
Knowledge of Bible doctrine gives the believer
a sense for historical trends so that he is alert to pending economic
disasters. Common sense in preparation for economic depression is illustrated
by Joseph, the prime minister of Egypt. Joseph understood the importance of
liquidity, or its ancient equivalent in grain, and stored up reserves for use
in lean years (Gen. 41:46—57). Inflation as a cause of depression is described
as a factor in the fourth cycle of discipline (Lev. 26:26). When depression is
divine discipline, only the spiritual recovery of the believer can deliver the
client nation. As go believers, so goes the nation.
If disaster comes, whether the sword of
judgment [war] or disease or economic depression, we will stand in Your
presence before the temple that bears Your name [where doctrine was taught to
the Jews by means of ritual] and will cry out [pray] to You in our distress.
Then You will both hear us and deliver us. (2 Chron. 20:9)
God protects the growing believer in disaster
testing. The spiritually autonomous believer has the privilege of
understanding these doctrines and of appreciating the One who protects and
delivers him.
In economic depression He [God] will ransom you
from death, and in battle from the power of the sword. (Job 5:20)
Who shall separate us from the love of Christ?
Shall disaster or anguish or persecution or economic depression or privation or
danger or sword? . . . But in all these things we win the supreme victory
through Him who loves us. (Rom. 8:35—37)
PAUL’S MENTAL ATTITUDE: CURSING TURNED TO BLESSING
When a believer suffers momentum testing, he is
closing in on the objective of the Christian way of life. Spiritual maturity
is the next step. In people testing, thought testing, system testing, or
disaster testing, the Christian’s mental attitude can be characterized by eager
anticipation and stimulation despite the pain he suffers. Metabolized Bible
doctrine enables him to see how close he is to achieving maturity.
Paul himself is an example of the believer’s
attitude when beset by momentum testing after a major personal failure. He had
reached spiritual self-esteem, which is vulnerable to arrogance, and had
successfully faced providential preventive suffering so that he gained
spiritual autonomy. Then, in a resurgence of arrogance, he assumed that his own
plan for his life was better than God’s plan. In defiance of the doctrine he
knew (Rom. 11:2—5, 13; Gal. 2:7), the warnings of other people (Acts 21:10—14),
and his own common sense, Paul abandoned his thriving ministry to the Gentiles
in the Aegean Quadrangle and returned to Jerusalem.
Paul blended arrogance with sentimentality,
producing a disastrous result. He remembered his celebrity as a brilliant young
Pharisee and wished to go back and have an impact for Christ among his old
associates. He failed miserably. His unbelieving countrymen were adamantly
negative to the Gospel, as they had previously opposed Christ, and the
legalistic Jewish Christians were negative to doctrine. To gain an audience
with the Jews, Paul went so far as to compromise his integrity, taking a
blasphemous religious vow in the Temple (Acts 2 1:23—26).
Beginning with a riot in the Temple and an
assassination plot against him, a two-year imprisonment ensued, which carried
Paul to Rome. Paul quickly recognized his failure and rebounded so that the
purpose of this long period of suffering changed from cursing to blessing. In
the midst of suffering, he regained his spiritual momentum. In fact,
providential preventive suffering rapidly strengthened his spiritual
self-esteem into spiritual autonomy. In Philippians 3, Paul describes himself
retrospectively: He expresses the viewpoint of spiritual self-esteem in verse
10 and the perspective of spiritual autonomy in verse 11. The beginning of his imprisonment
was momentum testing. From a position of spiritual maturity, he recalls what
his attitude was when he had not yet arrived at maturity but was well on his
way. As a mature believer Paul was remembering the grace of God that had
delivered him from his own self-induced misery and had accelerated his advance
to maturity.
Paul had initiated a sequence of suffering with
his own arrogant decisions, but God converted cursing into blessing as soon as
Paul used rebound and reentered his palace of the divine dynasphere. The
apostle did not languish in his failure. He evaluated his situation long enough
to learn his lesson, then gratefully pressed forward in the plan of God.
MOMENTUM TESTING IN PHILIPPIANS 3
Paul opens Philippians 3 by repeating a warning
that he himself had disregarded in his Jerusalem fiasco. Believers must beware
of religion with all its emotional appeal, self-righteousness, coercion, and
potential violence. In particular, Paul cites his own aristocratic background,
zeal, and fame in Judaism. Religion had channeled his intellect and energy, had
flattered and promoted him, had given him tremendous “confidence in the flesh”
(Phil. 3:4). Through his personal faith in Christ and inculcation with Bible
doctrine, Paul had renounced his old, misplaced confidence in man. His power
lust and his self-righteous zeal to impose his own legalism on others had been
replaced by spiritual autonomy. Instead of self, Christ was now the focus of
his attention. Personal love for God had superseded arrogance as the foundation
of his attitude toward himself.
But whatever things were gain [profit] to me,
those things [his status symbols in Israel] I now consider loss for the sake of
Christ. More than that, I conclude all things to be loss compared to the
surpassing greatness of knowing Christ Jesus my Lord, for the sake of whom I
have suffered the loss of all things [his Jewish celebrity] and conclude them
[to be] excrement that I may gain Christ. (Phil. 3:7—8)
“Gain[ing] Christ” is a synonym for fulfilling
the protocol plan of God. Paul expresses his desire to advance in the
operational divine dynasphere all the way to Gate 8, spiritual maturity, just
as the humanity of Christ set the precedent for the royal family by attaining
maturity in the prototype divine dynasphere.
In verses 9—11, Paul inserts a parenthesis,
explaining how to “gain Christ.”
That I may be found in Him [as a member of the royal
family, in union with Christ] not having a righteousness of my own from the Law
[no salvation by keeping the Mosaic Law] but that [divine righteousness]
acquired through faith in Christ, that righteousness from God on the basis of
faith. (Phil 3:9)
To “gain Christ” a person must first believe in
Christ. At the moment of faith alone in Christ alone, God permanently imputes
His own absolute righteousness to every believer, eliminating any need to earn
God’s approbation with the human righteousness of religion or of good deeds.
Man appropriates salvation only according to divine protocol: “by grace are you
saved through faith [in Christ];. . . not of works, lest anyone should boast”
(Eph. 2:8—9).
After salvation the believer must continue to
follow divine protocol. Human works cannot earn salvation, nor can human good
works earn God’s love or blessings after salvation. God’s grace policy is
consistent. The believer lives the Christian way of life by following God’s
mandates, not by striving to fulfill his own legalistic idea of what ought to
please God. As a teaching aid, the divine dynasphere consolidates God’s
mandates, making His grace policy understandable, systematically presenting the
means by which we “grow in grace and in knowledge of our Lord and Savior Jesus
Christ” (2 Pet. 3:18).
That I may know Him and the power of His
resurrection and the fellowship of His sufferings, having become like [Him]
with reference to His death. (Phil. 3:10)
In Philippians 3:10 Paul emphasizes suffering,
but he begins by stating the importance of postsalvation epistemological
rehabilitation related to spiritual self-esteem. Although Paul is in spiritual
maturity as he writes, he is giving us the benefit of his experience in
spiritual self-esteem. Therefore, he begins verse 10 with the infinitive of
purpose of the verb ytvdGlcw (ginosko), “to
know.” The infinitive of purpose indicates the objective or purpose of the
action of the main verb, which is found in verse 8, “I conclude all things to
be loss.., that I may know Him.”
Paul reached this conclusion through
postsalvation epistemological rehabilitation and cognition of the doctrine of
spiritual adulthood. Knowing Christ, or occupation with Christ, is one of the
characteristics of spiritual self-esteem. From the viewpoint of spiritual
self-esteem, Paul now turns his attention to the power of God in resurrection.
Jesus Christ experienced two unique deaths on
the cross. The substitutionary spiritual
death of Christ provides eternal salvation for the human race. The physical death of Christ involved a
unique trichotomous separation of body, soul, and spirit which set the stage
for a demonstration of divine power in resurrection.
Our Lord’s body went into the grave (Luke
23:50—53). His human spirit went into
the presence of the Father in heaven (Luke 23:46; John 19:30). And His soul was
taken by the Holy Spirit into Paradise, which is a compartment of Hades in the
heart of the earth (Luke 23:43; Acts 2:27, 31).[42]
In the resurrection of Christ from His unique physical death, two categories of divine power were displayed. The omnipotence of God the Father restored our Lord’s human spirit from heaven to His body in the grave. The Father thereby became an agent of the resurrection of Christ (Acts 2:24; Rom. 6:4; Eph. 1:20; Col. 2:12; 1 Thess. 1:10; 1 Pet. 1:21). The omnipotence of God the Holy Spirit restored Christ’s soul from Hades to His body in the grave. Hence, the Holy Spirit also became an agent of Christ’s resurrection (Rom. 1:4; 8:11; 1 Pet. 3:18).
So vital is the issue of power in the life of
Christ, and so magnificent is the doctrine of divine omnipotence, that our
Lord’s first advent can be characterized as a great power experiment. In this use of the word, an experiment is a
demonstration of a known truth. Here the known truth is Bible doctrine related
to the total availability of divine power to the humanity of Christ in
hypostatic union.[43]
The great power experiment of the hypostatic union demonstrates the
infinite power of God the Father and God the Holy Spirit in sustaining the
humanity of Christ throughout His first advent.
The great power experiment of the hypostatic
union is extended as the great power experiment of the Church Age. The power
that raised Jesus Christ from the dead is now available to every member of the
royal family for the execution of the protocol plan of God. For the Church Age
believer, an experiment is not only a demonstration of known truth, but also an
operation undertaken to discover some unknown principle or effect. While the
delegation and distribution of divine power is well known to God, this
magnificent grace provision is unknown to the believer until discovered in the
New Testament and communicated by the pastor under the ministry of God the
Holy Spirit. When the believer’s soul is inculcated with Bible doctrine, yet
another definition of “experiment” applies. The great power experiment of the
Church Age is the tangible result of a policy, the unique divine policy of
making divine omnipotence totally and equally available to every member of the
royal family.
One of the results of the baptism of the Holy
Spirit at salvation is the creation of a new spiritual species, the royal
family of God (2 Cor. 5:17). The purpose of creating this new spiritual
species is to enable the Church Age believer to utilize divine power, which is
made available in three categories:
1. The OMNIPOTENCE OF GOD THE FATHER related to
providing our portfolio of invisible assets,
2. The OMNIPOTENCE OF GOD THE SON related to
sustaining the universe and perpetuating human history,
3. The
OMNIPOTENCE OF GOD THE HOLY SPIRIT related to empowering the spiritual life in
the divine dynasphere.
Never before in human history has so much
divine power been made available to so many believers as in the great power
experiment of the Church Age. The utilization of this divine omnipotence is the
basis for the believer having invisible impact during the Church Age. There are
three categories of impact:
1. PERSONAL
IMPACT from blessing by association with the mature believer,
2. HISTORICAL
IMPACT from blessing by association with the pivot of mature believers in a
client nation to God,
3. INTERNATIONAL
IMPACT from blessing by association for nonclient nations through spiritually
mature missionaries sent out from a client nation.
This briefly explains what Paul means when he
declares that his purpose is to “know Him and the power of His resurrection.”
Paul now addresses the subject of suffering as he continues to describe his
purpose in life: “and [that I may know] the fellowship of His sufferings,”
(Phil. 3:10) referring to our Lord’s suffering for blessing during His first
advent.
As an extension of the great power experiment
of the hypostatic union into the Church Age, three categories of suffering for
blessing are available to every believer who reaches spiritual adulthood.
1. PROVIDENTIAL
PREVENTIVE SUFFERING challenges the believer’s spiritual self-esteem,
forestalls arrogance, and serves as a warm-up for momentum testing.
2. MOMENTUM
TESTING exercises the believer’s spiritual autonomy through people testing,
thought testing, system testing, and disaster testing.
3. EVIDENCE
TESTING demonstrates the divine dynamics of spiritual maturity and glorifies
God to the maximum.
These unique systems of suffering for blessing
were first experienced by the humanity of Christ in the prototype divine
dynasphere. These same systems of suffering for blessing are now available to
accelerate the momentum of every spiritually adult believer as he advances
inside the operational divine dynasphere. “The fellowship of His sufferings”
describes the Church Age believer’s utilization of spiritually adult
problem-solving devices. The consistent application of these problem-solving
devices equates adversity and prosperity, living and dying.
Paul cites the supreme example of our Lord’s
suffering when he speaks of “having become like [Christ] with reference to His
death.” The Greek compound verb summorfizw
(summorphizo), in the passive voice,
means “to take on the same form as, to be conformed with, to become like.” The
spiritually adult believer takes on the same form as Christ during His substitutionary
spiritual death on the cross. The spiritually adult believer produces the
action of the verb through the omnipotence of the Holy Spirit in the divine
dynasphere and through sharing the happiness of God as a problem-solving
device.
While Jesus Christ was being judged for the
sins of the world, He utilized these same two factors to remain on the cross in
a state of impeccability.
Christ... through the eternal Spirit [the
omnipotence of the Holy Spirit in the prototype divine dynasphere] offered
Himself without blemish to God. (Heb. 9:14b)
Who [the humanity of Christ] because of the
present exhibited happiness [utilization of divine happiness as a
problem-solving device], endured the cross [substitutionary spiritual death],
despising the shame [of coming into contact with sin and judgment in a state
of impeccability]. (Heb. l2:2b)
The final three hours in which Jesus hung on
the cross were the most agonizing for any man in the history of the human race.
Even the anticipation of such pain caused our Lord horrible anguish in
Gethsemane (Malt. 26:38—39). Arrested, unjustly tried, tortured to the point of
extreme debilitation, nailed to a cross, He suffered all without complaint
(Mark 15:2—5; Acts 8:32—35). Then, when imputed with the awful burden of human
sin and judged by the justice and omnipotence of God, Jesus broke the dignity
of His silence and screamed with pain (Matt. 27:46). How did the humanity of
Christ endure the Father’s judgment? At any moment Jesus could have shouted
“Enough!” and stepped down from the cross. What kept Him there until the last
sin of the last member of the human race was judged and salvation was provided
for all?
In the midst of His unspeakable anguish, the
humanity of Christ persevered on the cross in the power of the Holy Spirit
inside the prototype divine dynasphere and in the exercise of divine happiness
as a problem-solving device.
The same power that sustained Jesus on the
cross is now available to every member of the royal family. As a result of
Christ’s strategic victory on the cross, four dynamic problem-solving devices
were made available to every Church Age believer who achieves spiritual
adulthood through residence, function, and momentum inside the divine
dynasphere.
1. TOWARD
GOD: personal love for God as the motivational virtue of spiritual self-esteem.
2. TOWARD
PEOPLE: impersonal love for all mankind as the functional virtue of spiritual
autonomy.
3. TOWARD
DOCTRINE: hope as the goal orientation of spiritual adulthood.
4. TOWARD
SELF: sharing the happiness of God.
While all four of these problem-solving devices
were used by the humanity of Christ on the cross, sharing the happiness of God
is emphasized in Hebrews 12:2. When we utilize these divine problem-solving
devices, we are using the resources that sustained our Lord’s humanity in
purchasing our so great salvation.
God was glorified by Christ’s strategic victory
in the angelic conflict. God is also glorified when members of the royal family
win tactical victories as they utilize divine assets under pressure en route to
spiritual maturity.[44]
At maturity the believer acquires capacity to receive special blessings
and to pass evidence testing, both of which glorify God to the maximum.
The pattern of maximum glorification of God
continues in every generation of the Church Age until the royal family is
completely formed. When complete, the entire royal family is resurrected at
the Rapture of the Church. This terminates the great power experiment of the
Church Age. Having discussed the resurrection of Christ in Philippians 3:10,
Paul turns his attention in verse 11 to the resurrection of the Church, the
concluding event of the Church Age. The power that raised Jesus Christ from the
dead is the same power that will resurrect the royal family of God (1 Cor.
6:14).
If by any means I will arrive with reference to
the exit-resurrection [the Rapture of the Church], that one from the dead.
(Phil. 3:11)
Two enclitic particles in the Greek, translated
“if by any means,” indicate that Paul did not doubt the fact of the Rapture but was wondering about the manner in which he will participate. Two
possibilities existed: Paul would be either physically dead or physically alive
at the moment of resurrection. He would be either among “the dead in Christ”
who “shall rise first” or among those “who are living, who remain” on earth at
the time of the Rapture, who “shall be caught up [Latin, rapto] together with them in the clouds to meet the Lord in the
air, and so we shall always be with the Lord” (1 Thess. 4:16—17).
God the Father will be the agent of
resurrection for “the dead in Christ,” those Church Age believers who die
before the Rapture occurs. God the Holy Spirit will be the agent of
resurrection for “those who are alive” at the time of the Rapture.
Paul’s speculation is rhetorical, for the
benefit of the readers, because he seemed to understand that he would receive
resurrection out from the dead. By the time he wrote “I have finished the
course” in 2 Timothy 4:6—8, he was certain that the resurrection would occur
after his death. In writing to the Philippians, therefore, Paul was
acknowledging the two possibilities regarding the Rapture as a means of
teaching the doctrine of the imminency of the Rapture.
“Rapture” derives from the Latin rapto. “to seize and carry away,” the
Vulgate translation of “caught up” in I Thessalonians 4:17. The technical theological
term “Rapture” describes the resurrection of the royal family of God at the end
of the Church Age. During the Church Age, God is forming a royal family to
complement the new royal title awarded to Jesus Christ as a result of the
cross. When the royal family is complete, the Rapture will occur. At the
Rapture every Church Age believer, whether dead or still living, whether winner
or loser, will receive his resurrection body (1 Cor. 15:50—53; Phil. 3:20—21).
At that moment, the Church as a spiritual building is transformed into a
spiritual temple (Eph. 2:20—22). The Rapture achieves ultimate sanctification
for every member of the royal family (Eph. 5:26-27).[45]
“Imminency” means to be impending, and is also
used as a technical theological term. The imminency of the Rapture recognizes
that no prophecy must be fulfilled before the resurrection of the Church
occurs. The next eschatological event will be the Rapture itself. In the
biblical statements that Christ is coming soon, the word “soon” connotes
imminency (Rev. 22:7, 12, 20).
The Church Age is unique in many respects,
among them the fact that this is the only dispensation devoid of prophecy. The
Church Age began with the Day of Pentecost, AD. 30, which was prophesied (John
14:17; Acts 1:5, 8), and will conclude with the Rapture, which was also
prophesied. There is no intervening prophecy between these termini of the
Church Age.
Although members of the royal family can look
beyond the Rapture to events of the Tribulation and Millennium, no event of
prophecy occurs during the Church Age. Consequently, we must evaluate history
in terms of historical trends, such as those illustrated in the local churches
of Revelation 2—3. The emphasis in the great power experiment of the Church Age
is not the visible impact of prophetic events but the invisible impact of
individual believers who utilize divine omnipotence.
The doctrine of the imminency of the Rapture is
illustrated by the principle that “no one knows the day or the hour” (Malt.
24:36). There will be no advance warning of the Rapture, which might have
occurred in Paul’s day, may take place today, or may not happen for another
thousand years. Therefore, the believer should not search for eschatological
significance in historical events. Instead, he should concentrate on the
execution of the protocol plan of God (1 Cor. 1:4—8; 1 John 3:2—3). Distortion
of the imminency of the Rapture causes instability from foolish speculation
concerning the time of the Rapture (James 5:7—8).
The verb katantaw (katantao) in Philippians 3:11 means to
arrive at something, as one would reach the destination of a journey. This
entire journey will occur in a moment of time, the moment of resurrection for
the completed royal family of God. Katantao
appears in the subjunctive mood, which implies a future reference qualified
by an element of contingency. The future event is the Rapture; the element of
contingency will exist in every generation as believers do not know whether
they will be resurrected with the dead or with the living. Paul speaks for the
entire royal family as he dramatizes the imminency of the Rapture.
One of the primary results of applying the
doctrine of the Rapture is increased confidence. The believer can face his own
death in the certainty that one day he will receive his resurrection body in
“conformity with the body of [Christ’s] glory according to the exertion of His
power that enables Him to bring everything under His control” (Phil. 3:21).
Furthermore, the believer gains confidence regarding Christian loved ones and
friends who have died, “that [he] may not grieve as do the rest [of the world]
who have no hope” (1 Thess. 4:13). The doctrine of the Rapture removes fear
and, therefore, constitutes one application of hope as a problem-solving
device.
Therefore, comfort each other with these doctrines
[of the Rapture]. (1 Thess. 4:18)
Paul was a mature believer when he wrote
Philippians, but for our benefit he wrote parts of chapter 3 from the viewpoint
of his experience in the early stages of spiritual adulthood. Philippians
3:9—11 views the Christian way of life from the perspective of spiritual
self-esteem. Verses 12—14 represent the attitude of spiritual autonomy. Paul’s
retrospection ends with verse 15, where he describes the thinking of a mature
believer.
In spiritual adulthood, suffering for blessing
accelerates growth. This does not exclude prosperity from the believer’s life.
Overt prosperity poses difficulties of its own and is actually a form of
momentum testing. The spiritual adult will face distractions in prosperity and
in adversity, just as he will share the happiness of God through the
utilization of divine assets—in prosperity or in adversity. The principle is
that periodic suffering for blessing is a means of spiritual momentum whereas
inner prosperity, regardless of circumstances, is a result of momentum.
With Philippians 3:11 Paul closes the
parenthesis begun in verse 9. He has finished describing how to “gain Christ”
(Phil. 3:8). We gain Christ, or advance to spiritual maturity, through the
three stages of sanctification: positional, experiential, and ultimate
sanctification.
Sanctification is the work of God in making
each member of the royal family like Jesus Christ. Positional sanctification is union with Christ through the baptism
of the Holy Spirit at the moment of salvation. Paul expressed this initial
stage of sanctification in verse 9, “that I may be found in Him.” Experiential sanctification is the
execution of the protocol plan of God on earth, as we follow our Lord’s
precedent in the prototype divine dynasphere through our residence in the
operational divine dynasphere. This second stage of sanctification is
described in verse 10, “that I may know Him and the power of His resurrection
and the fellowship of His sufferings.” Ultimate
sanctification is the possession of a resurrection body like the
resurrection body of Jesus Christ. This final stage of sanctification is
anticipated in verse 11, “I will arrive with reference to the
exit-resurrection [the Rapture].”
Having closed the parenthesis, Paul resumes in
verse 12 from where he left off: “I have suffered the loss of all things and
conclude them excrement that I may gain Christ” (Phil. 3:8).
Not that I have already received [spiritual
maturity, or have gained Christ] or have already accomplished [maturity], but I
keep on pursuing [the objective] that I may overtake it [spiritual maturity],
for which I also was [pursued and] overtaken by Christ Jesus. (Phil. 3:12)
According to Paul’s autobiographical
retrospection, when he attained spiritual autonomy his mental attitude was
genuine humility. The great apostle did not rest on his laurels or become
arrogant about his spiritual stature. Instead, he recognized that he had not
reached the final objective. He had not yet fulfilled the protocol plan of God
by advancing to spiritual maturity. No believer attains spiritual maturity
until in the status of spiritual autonomy he passes the four parts of momentum
testing: people testing, system testing, thought testing, and disaster testing.
Many years earlier, Paul had passed the first
category of suffering for blessing: Providential preventive suffering, which is
a warm-up for momentum testing. With arrogance effectively checked, spiritual
autonomy gave him the ability to accurately evaluate his own spiritual status.
Objective self-evaluation is necessary to avoid the hazard of living in the
past and bogging down before achieving the goal.
The danger of losing spiritual momentum was
familiar to Paul. In fact, he is describing his second attainment of spiritual autonomy. The first time he reached
spiritual autonomy, he lost his spiritual impetus and retrogressed in the plan
of God. By learning the hard way, Paul came to understand the wisdom of the
Roman maxim: Qui non proficit deficit. “He
who does not go forward goes backward.”
Paul’s failure began when he ignored the will
of God and assuaged his own sentimentality by returning to Jerusalem. He
compromised his integrity, incited the fanatical hatred of the religious Jews,
and endured two years of incarceration in Caesarea before being transported as
a prisoner to Rome. Paul suffered intensely. Initially, divine discipline
motivated rebound, followed by momentum testing which accelerated Paul’s
renewed spiritual advance. As a result of suffering for blessing, Paul arrived
in Rome as a mature believer.
During the two years in Caesarea and in the
shipwreck on the coast of Malta, Paul passed all four parts of momentum
testing. We can trace his momentum testing. People testing included the vicious attitude of Ananias, the high
priest (Acts 23—24) and the rejection of the Gospel by King Herod Agrippa II,
his sister Bernice, and the court that attended them (Acts 25—26). System testing frustrated Paul through the malfunction of
Roman justice under Felix and Festus, the two successive procurators of the
Roman province of Judea (Acts 24:22—25:12; 26:32). Thought testing challenged Paul’s mental attitude when he had to
face the unthinking panic of passengers and crew during the storm at sea (Acts
27:31—44), when he was bitten by the poisonous snake after saving everyone’s
life in the shipwreck (Acts 28:3—6), and when he was rejected by the Jews upon finally
reaching Rome (Acts 28:23—31). Disaster
testing threatened Paul’s life in the assassination plot against him in
Jerusalem (Acts 23:12—14) and in the storm and shipwreck (Acts 27).
While still a prisoner in Rome, Paul wrote
Philippians in the status of spiritual maturity. This fact is implied in the
increments of momentum testing that he passed prior to reaching Rome. His
spiritual status is confirmed by comparing the Greek verb teleiow (teleioo),
translated “or have already accomplished
[maturity]” in verse 12, with its cognate noun teleioj (teleios),
translated “as many as are mature” in
verse 15. Paul had completely recovered from his failure. As a mature believer
living entirely within the will of God, he embarked on his fourth missionary journey
after his acquittal by Caesar. Paul’s evidence testing began during his first
Roman imprisonment and probably continued during part of the fourth missionary
journey through the Roman provinces of Asia, Gaul, and Spain (Phil. 2:23—24;
Philemon 22; Rom. 15:24, 28).
In looking back over his recent recovery, Paul
remembered that when he was still in spiritual autonomy he knew he had not
“already achieved” maturity. He also recalled being keenly aware that he was
closing in on the goal. Consequently, he took the offensive in his advance to
the high ground of spiritual maturity. “I keep on pursuing [the
objective],” he wrote. Refusing to be discouraged, Paul would not be hindered
by past failure. He had learned to rebound and keep moving. His aggressive action
in spiritual autonomy took the form of persistence in positive volition, the
accumulation of metabolized doctrine, the utilization of divine omnipotence,
and the use of problem-solving devices in momentum testing. He thus followed
the example that the humanity of Christ had established during the Incarnation
for every Church Age believer.
Steadiness of Purpose
Paul interjects a classical Greek grammatical
construction as an expression of purpose and expectation. His purpose is “to overtake,
to seize, to attain” the objective of spiritual maturity, and he confidently
expects to fulfill that purpose. He anticipates his advance to spiritual
maturity through the valley of momentum testing. In other words, Paul in
spiritual autonomy knows that suffering is coming. He knows the pattern. Just
as spiritual self-esteem plus providential preventive suffering equals
spiritual autonomy, so also spiritual autonomy plus momentum testing equals
spiritual maturity. Rather than be caught off guard and victimized by
suffering, he takes an aggressive approach to adversity.
When Paul writes “I keep pursuing [the
objective] in order that I may overtake [it],” (Phil. 3:12) he uses military
terminology. He steadily advances by his continual reception, retention, and
recall of Bible doctrine. He moves forward by using the problem-solving
devices of hope in doctrine, personal love for God, impersonal love for all
mankind, and sharing the happiness of God within himself. He presses on,
knowing that God will accelerate his advance through the suffering of momentum
testing.
No arrogant illusions remain in Paul’s
thinking. He may be pursuing the goal, but he always remembers whose goal it is
and in whose power he is able to attain this goal. He returns to square one,
the first step into the Christian way of life, the perspective of salvation by
grace. The objective that he concentrates on overtaking is the same goal “for
which [Paul] also was [pursued and] overtaken by Christ Jesus.” Jesus Christ’s
objective has become Paul’s objective. That goal is the maximum glorification
of God.
For Paul’s advantage Jesus Christ pursued and
overtook Saul of Tarsus, as Paul was then known, on the road to Damascus. Our
Lord’s purpose in inflicting the pain of blindness on that young, overzealous
Pharisee was that Saul might believe in Christ. Likewise, God’s purpose in
imposing momentum testing on the great apostle was that Paul might fulfill the
protocol plan of God by attaining maturity. The intended (and accomplished)
result of administering suffering to Paul was glorification of God to the
maximum.
Philippians 3:12 documents the fact that
spiritual maturity is the objective of the Christian life. Paul is not
practicing false humility by declaring that he has not reached the goal. In
this retrospective verse, he recalls that when he was in spiritual autonomy he
knew that he had not yet arrived at spiritual maturity. He possessed the
strong self-esteem that belongs to the believer in spiritual autonomy, but he
entertained no illusions about himself. He accurately evaluated his spiritual
life and recognized his need to keep pursuing the objective. A believer who
overestimates himself hinders his own advance; a believer who evaluates himself
objectively perpetuates his momentum and eventually reaches maturity.
Brethren [fellow members of the royal family],
I do not evaluate myself as having overtaken [obtained the objective], but one
thing [I do]: forgetting what [is] behind and straining forward toward what
[is] ahead, I press on toward the goal for the prize [blessings in time and
eternity for the mature believer] of that upward call [the saving ministry of
the Holy Spirit, designated “efficacious grace,” which converts the believer’s
faith into salvation] from God [the Father as author of the protocol plan] in
Christ Jesus [union with Christ as the basis for spiritual royalty]. (Phil.
3:13—14)
The Greek verb Paul uses to describe his
self-evaluation is logizomai (logizomai) which has a prominent place
in Greek philosophical discourse. This verb connotes nonemotional thinking
according to strict logical rules, apprehension of something actually present,
the representation of facts as they are.
There are two objective standards for self-analysis
available to every member of the royal family of God:
1. Perception, metabolism, and application of
BIBLE DOCTRINE,
2. The doctrine of SUFFERING.
The believer’s attitude toward Bible doctrine changes
as a result of postsalvation epistemological rehabilitation. Doctrine in the
soul creates a desire for more doctrine. Initially the immature Christian
listens to Bible teaching for a variety of motives that carry over from his
life as an unbeliever, but gradually human viewpoint is replaced by divine
viewpoint. The believer’s academic discipline and concentration on the Word of
God become stronger as he develops personal love for God, the highest
motivation in life.
The spiritually adult believer approaches the
perception of doctrine with a new mental attitude. He concentrates on the Mind
of Christ (1 Cor. 2:16) because he is occupied with the person of Christ
(Phil. 1:21) and has begun to share the happiness of God (John 15:11). The
believer knows that he has attained spiritual adulthood because his
perception, metabolism, and application of doctrine cease to be a means to an
end and instead become ends in themselves. He takes genuine pleasure in the
Word of God. The perception of Bible doctrine is the highest form of worship.
The Christian’s second standard for objective
self-evaluation is the doctrine of suffering. This spiritual yardstick must be
used with caution because many variables are involved. The overt circumstances
of life have a wide variety of causes. Comparing the experience of one
believer to that of another is never precise. Two believers may experience
similar disasters, but in one case the pressure is suffering for blessing while
in the other it is divine discipline. The difference lies in the spiritual
advance or retrogression of the believer, not in the overt circumstances of
life. Therefore, no suffering in itself conclusively indicates a Christian’s
spiritual status. Furthermore, the blend of adversity and prosperity is unique
in every life by divine design. Yet even prosperity can have at least three
legitimate sources: blessing by association, logistical grace, or escrow
blessing. Of these three sources, only escrow blessings are connected with a
specific spiritual status. Blessing by association can prosper anyone in the
periphery of a mature believer, and logistical grace 15 guaranteed to every
believer, whether winner or loser.
Neither adversity itself nor prosperity itself
is necessarily a sign of spiritual progress. In fact, Paul’s self-evaluation
emphasizes the stage of growth he has not
attained rather than the stage he has
attained.
A believer can use suffering as a barometer of
spiritual growth only in the sense that pressure forces him to apply the Bible
doctrine in his soul. His ability to utilize the doctrinal inventory in his
soul under stress indicates his level of advance. If he falls apart in every
crisis, he has a long way to go before reaching spiritual maturity. If his
occupation with Christ, reliance on doctrine, and utilization of divine
omnipotence enable him to take suffering in stride, he is making progress in
spiritual adulthood.
From Paul’s experience of the reality of
doctrine under momentum testing, he knew that he had reached spiritual autonomy
and was closing in on spiritual maturity. The purpose of this self-knowledge
is not to compare oneself with other Christians but to motivate continued
momentum in the protocol plan of God. There is no substitute for Bible doctrine
as the only measure and standard for self-analysis in the plan of God. The
successful application of doctrine under pressure demonstrates the efficacy of
divine provisions, and as a result, increases the advancing believer’s personal
love for God and spiritual self-esteem.
Following Paul’s self-evaluation, he uses
ellipsis in an idiom of concentration—an abbreviated interjectional clause—to
eliminate the negative and emphasize the positive. “But [I concentrate on] one
thing” indicates that he has blotted out, forgotten, or disregarded past
failures and is pressing on to maturity as the final objective. Paul used
rebound and rapidly recovered from his Jerusalem fiasco. By “forgetting the
things ~which are] behind,” Paul demonstrates a principle that applies to
every believer.
Recalling
past failures causes bitterness, self-pity, and a guilt complex, and
hence further involvement in Satan’s cosmic system. When remembered and pored
over, failures compound current problems and hinder advance in the protocol
plan of God. God has a purpose for every believer, and that purpose is to
rebound and keep moving. Paul’s retrospective exposition is designed to
encourage believers to confess their sins to God, to keep short accounts with
Him, to forget past failures, to concentrate on present momentum in the divine
dynasphere. The Christian must not handicap himself. Past punitive suffering,
whether self-induced misery or divine discipline, must not hinder his execution
of divine protocol in present suffering for blessing. All believers periodically
fail; only losers allow past failures to hinder their current progress in the
protocol plan of God.
On the one hand, Paul forgets past failures,
and on the other hand, he ~‘stretches out or strains forward toward the goal or
finish line.” In Philippians 3:13—14 Paul uses an athletic analogy. Just as an
Olympic class runner maintains his form in spite of physical agony, so also
the believer continues to follow divine protocol in the midst of suffering.
Paul has rounded the final turn of spiritual autonomy and is sprinting down the
home stretch toward spiritual maturity. Just as the athlete drives for the
finish line, so also the believer concentrates on the objective, unhindered by
distractions, as he undergoes momentum testing. “Straining forward” and
“pressing on” portray the aggressive mental attitude of the believer who has
nearly reached spiritual maturity. His goal is the maximum glorification of God
which will become a reality in his life in spiritual maturity.
God glorifies Himself by distributing the
special blessings He created for each believer in eternity past, but only the
mature believer has the capacity to receive these fabulous blessings. Blessings
for time and eternity are the “prize,” the goal, the purpose for which the
believer was saved.
The “upward call from God” refers to the
ministry of God the Holy Spirit at the instant an individual first believes in
Christ. Every member of the human race is born spiritually dead, unable to
comprehend spiritual things and totally incapable of a relationship with God.
We have a spiritually dead understanding and a spiritually dead faith. The
ministry of the Holy Spirit is necessary, first, to make the Gospel clear and,
second, to make our faith in Christ effective for salvation. In itself our
faith has no power to save us; the Holy Spirit must take our faith and make it
effectual or effective in establishing an eternal relationship with God (John
16:8—11; Rom. 10:14).
We receive no credit even for believing in Christ;
all glory belongs to God. We are saved exclusively by the power of God. The
“upward call” is the work of the Holy Spirit in the lucid presentation of the
Gospel. This call is designated common
grace because it is extended to every individual. The Holy Spirit’s
ministry in converting the believer’s faith into eternal salvation is called efficacious grace. In every case where
common grace is not followed by faith in Christ, efficacious grace does not
occur. The work of God the Holy Spirit in common and efficacious grace is
emphasized as a gift from God (Eph. 2:8). The divine purpose in saving us is
that we might reach the goal and attain the prize of spiritual maturity.
Spiritual maturity, divine blessings, and the glorification of God form the
complete package awarded to the spiritual winner.[46]
Therefore, as many as [are] mature, let us keep
on thinking this [aggressive mental attitude under pressure], and if you think
differently on some point, even this God will reveal to you. (Phil. 3:15)
Paul has completed his retrospective exposition
and now writes from his current status of spiritual maturity. He infers from
the preceding verses, which describe spiritual self-esteem and spiritual
autonomy, that in every generation a certain number of positive believers will
continue their momentum until they attain spiritual maturity. These magnificent
Christians represent a special group. Once they understand the objective of the
Christian way of life, they do not waver. Instead, they organize their lives
and priorities for the purpose of glorifying God to the maximum. As a result of
passing that portion of momentum testing classified as thought testing, the
mature believer has fulfilled the biblical mandates related to divine viewpoint
mental attitude (Rom. 12:2—3; Phil. 2:2).
‘Let us keep on thinking” refers to an action
that began in the past and continues into the present. The same process of
utilizing metabolized Bible doctrine in the power of the divine dynasphere,
which enables the believer to attain maturity, is the means of facing maximum
suffering for blessing after reaching maturity. Paul is urging readers, at
every stage of spiritual growth, to join him in the system of thinking that
leads to spiritual maturity. A dynamic and powerful mental attitude is required
for the mature believer who is facing evidence testing.
Failing a Test
Philippians 3:15 warns the believer that even
after he fulfills the protocol plan of God by reaching spiritual maturity, he
must not let up. He must continue to utilize available divine omnipotence and
cognition of doctrine. By acknowledging that the mature believer might ‘~think
differently on some point,” Paul assumes that spiritual maturity has its
vulnerabilities which could result in failure to pass evidence testing. The
believer cannot approach evidence testing with a cocky attitude or with a
propensity toward self-pity and bitterness. Indulgence in some form of
arrogance causes even the mature believer to fail under pressure.
The ability to think under pressure perpetuates
the believer’s momentum through each stage of spiritual adulthood. The
spiritual winner thinks; the spiritual loser emotes without thought. Courage is
thinking under pressure; cowardice is failing to think under pressure—and
falling apart emotionally. Under suffering for blessing, the believer’s content
of thought is the Bible doctrine he has metabolized over many years. Right
thinking from metabolized doctrine and the right motivation from personal love
for God create the positive determination and esprit de corps needed to fulfill the protocol plan of God.
No matter how far a believer advances in God’s
plan, he is still human. No believer on earth is perfect; we are all prone to
failure, especially under the pressure of suffering for blessing. Failure can
come from a lack of doctrine or from a particularly difficult thought test. The
believer may have resisted or rejected the specific principle of doctrine that
he now needs under pressure. More likely, however, he has learned the doctrine but
has become disoriented by fear or emotionalism under momentum testing.
When a believer “thinks differently,” that is,
when his endurance flags and he is unable to think clearly, he may flunk any
test connected with suffering for blessing. The solution after failure is to
rebound and keep moving, as Philippians 3:13 commands. Immediate rebound keeps
the believer from losing ground. Although he fails to advance, he retains his
current level of spiritual growth, ready for another administration of testing
at the proper time.
The spiritually adult believer learns quickly
from failure. When his attitude has wavered or when he has made a wrong
application of doctrine, he uses rebound to reenter the divine dynasphere.
Inside his invisible palace he either draws upon the doctrine he already knows
to make a correct application or he is receptive to learning the doctrine he
previously may have resisted. “God will reveal” the truth through the
perception and application of Bible doctrine accurately and faithfully taught
by the orthodox pastor. God reveals the truth through intermediary means. There
is no direct communication from God during the postcanon period of the Church
Age.[47]
After the canon of Scripture was completed, direct divine revelation
ceased, placing emphasis instead on the power of Bible doctrine resident in the
royal believer’s soul.
Although provision is made for failure, the
purpose of momentum testing is not failure but success.
However, as a result of what we have attained,
keep advancing in ranks by means of the same [system of spiritual momentum
inside the divine dynasphere].[48]
(Phil. 3:16)
Paul has shifted from an athletic to a military
analogy. The verb stoixew (stoicheo) connotes marching in ranks. Members of the royal family are executing
a powerful plan when they obey the mandates of the divine dynasphere. The
objective of this plan is no less than to demonstrate the eternal glory of God.
This verse establishes that there are stages of spiritual adulthood, stages in
the fulfillment of God’s protocol plan.
“What we have attained” is spiritual self-esteem when the believer is undergoing providential
preventive suffering. “What we have attained” is spiritual autonomy when undergoing momentum testing, as is Paul in
this context. “What we have attained” is spiritual
maturity when the believer receives evidence testing.
The same system that the believer uses to pass
providential preventive suffering and momentum testing must also be used to
pass evidence testing. “Advancing in ranks” is a most significant translation.
Far too many Christians fall out of ranks and become casualties in the angelic
conflict. They are losers who fail to execute the protocol plan of God and fail
to glorify Him in the great power experiment of the Church Age. We must remain
in ranks, which is tantamount to the following:
1. Residence, function, and momentum inside the
DIVINE DYNASPHERE,
2. Consistent
and prompt use of REBOUND to avoid prolonged residence in Satan’s cosmic
system,
3. AVOIDANCE OF DISCOURAGEMENT by any failure
or setback in any category of suffering for blessing,
4. Consistent use of the PROBLEM-SOLVING
DEVICES of spiritual adulthood, and
5. Unrelenting perception, metabolism, and
application of BIBLE DOCTRINE.
The believer advances in ranks from one stage
of spiritual adulthood to the next. As he progresses, he scores tactical
victories in the angelic conflict. This spiritual warfare will come into
dramatic focus in the final category of suffering for blessing. Spiritual
maturity puts the believer in position for the most significant and beneficial
of all suffering for blessing: evidence testing that glorifies God to the
maximum.
Chapter 9
SPIRITUAL MATURITY
THE CHARACTERISTICS OF SPIRITUAL
MATURITY
A CATEGORICAL DESCRIPTION OF SPIRITUAL MATURITY indicates the happiness
and inner strength related to this final stage of spiritual growth. These
characteristics mark the highest attainment of the Christian way of life. The
purpose of this summary is not to establish a model of behavior for the
immature believer to legalistically imitate. Instead, these characteristics,
when compared to the previously described characteristics of spiritual self-esteem
and spiritual autonomy,[49]
enable the advancing believer to accurately anticipate the marvelous
benefits of faithful persistence in the protocol plan of God.
1. MAXIMUM CONTENTMENT. Sharing the happiness
of God is the highest of all problem-solving devices in the protocol plan of
God (Phil. 4:11—13). The advancing believer began to share the happiness of God
upon entering spiritual adulthood in Gate 5 of the divine dynasphere. Now in
spiritual maturity at Gate 8, his “happiness [is] fulfilled” or complete (John
15:11). Suffering, which would normally be difficult, becomes relatively easy
through residual happiness in the soul.
Happiness is a mental attitude which equates
adversity and prosperity, living and dying. Maximum capacity for happiness enables
the mature Christian to face every challenge in his experience. God strengthens
the believer through metabolized Bible doctrine and suffering for blessing so that His own shared happiness may be
tested, developed, and completed in the believer’s soul in adversity as well
as in prosperity. God shares His happiness with the believer for the believer’s
own benefit; therefore, happiness is the problem-solving device directed toward
self.
2. MENTAL STABILITY. Bible doctrine saturates
the mature believer’s thinking. He has maximum application of doctrine to every
experience. Cognizance of doctrine enables him to give divine viewpoint
precedence over empirical experience. Consequently, his mental attitude is
stabilized by the doctrine he knows rather than destabilized by the
circumstances of his life. The mature believer views his life in the light of
God’s plan, which gives him tremendous confidence regarding time and eternity.
This confidence in God’s ability to provide for him and to bless him in any future
contingency is the biblical definition of “hope” (Rom. 8:24—25). Hope is the
mature believer’s problem-solving device directed toward Bible doctrine and
related to his mental stability.
3. MAXIMUM USE OF VIRTUE-LOVE AS A
PROBLEM-SOLVING
DEVICE. Virtue-love includes personal love for God as motivational
virtue (Gate 5 of the divine dynasphere) and impersonal love for all mankind as
functional virtue (Gate 6). The mature believer has maximum use of both
categories of virtue-love. Therefore, he is occupied with the person of Christ
(Phil. 1:21). Furthermore, because virtue-love for God motivates virtue-love
toward others, personal love for God in spiritual maturity becomes the dynamic
basis for resolving all kinds of problems. Virtue-love is the problem-solving
device directed toward God, toward self, and toward other people.
4. COGNITIVE INDEPENDENCE. The mature believer
can think and apply doctrine for himself from the truth stored within his own
soul. As a result of postsalvation epistemological rehabilitation and
persistence in the perception of doctrine, the mature believer has a superior
understanding of the mechanics of the protocol plan by which he attained
maturity. The mature believer understands God’s plan for his life and can face
his problems with clarity of thought.
5. MAXIMUM
GRACE ORIENTATION TO LIFE. Orientation to the grace of God characterizes the
mature believer’s thinking, motivation, decisions, and actions. He understands
that the principle of grace in salvation is parlayed into the policy of grace
after salvation. The believer is saved under the principle of grace; he lives
under the policy of grace. Rather than superimpose his own opinions on God’s
wisdom and generosity, he is delighted to do things God’s way. He is free from
the fanaticism, legalism, emotionalism, self-effacement, and asceticism which
result from ignorance, arrogance, and habitual cosmic involvement.
6. MAXIMUM DOCTRINAL ORIENTATION TO REALITY.
Capacity for prosperity and the ability to apply doctrine to experience give
the mature believer spiritual common sense. Spiritual common sense is an astute
outlook on life that can penetrate confusing, complicated situations and
discern the key issues. The mature believer is realistic. He is not easily
deceived. He has the wisdom to synthesize the situation and identify the best
course of action and the courage to do a right thing in a right way.
7. THE GREATEST DECISIONS IN LIFE FROM A
POSITION OF MAXIMUM STRENGTH. Every decision by a mature believer can be a
great decision. He has a full, practical understanding of the mechanics of
God’s protocol plan so that he can relate his decisions to the invisible but
real assets that God has provided. Because he has established the right scale
of values, the mature believer consistently makes right decisions. For him,
doctrine takes number one priority.
8. MAXIMUM CONTROL OF ONE’S LIFE. No one who
tampers with the lives of others can at the same time control his own.
Therefore, the mature believer does not seek to coerce or manipulate others. He
is not possessive with those whom he loves and thus avoids the pitfall of
jealousy. He does not give expression to power lust. Instead, he fully utilizes
the privacy of his priesthood; God is the focus of his life. Personal love for
God motivates impersonal love for others.
He eliminates false applications from his life:
no competitiveness from arrogance, no comparativeness from subjectivity, no
conspiracy from inordinate ambition. In other words, he neither demands
superiority over everyone else, nor derives his self-esteem from comparisons
with others, nor demeans others in order to elevate himself. He controls his
own life by faithfulness in the execution of God’s protocol plan. God has
control over his life. Because his thoughts, motives, decisions, and actions
are consistent with God’s plan, the believer lives in a state of sharing the
happiness of God. He makes decisions with the full understanding that he bears
the responsibility for their consequences.
9. MAXIMUM
DYNAMICS IN LIVING. The mature believer has an unwavering personal sense of
destiny. He knows that God has a purpose for his life; he understands God’s
purpose; he applies his understanding of God’s plan to the particular
circumstances of his life, whether good or bad. Self-command, poise,
self-restraint, and self-control are established traits of his character. He
recognizes that he continues to fulfill his destiny by executing the protocol
plan of God. This results in a life of maximum spiritual production. The
mature believer will have far greater production in a short period of time than
will a legalistic believer over a long Christian life.
10. ESCROW BLESSINGS. The first stage of the
maximum glorification of God in spiritual maturity is the distribution of
escrow blessings. In eternity past God created an inheritance of special
blessings for each believer (Eph. 1:3; 1 Pet. 1:4). These blessings are the
“prize of that upward call from God” described in Philippians 3:14. The
distribution of these unique blessings demonstrates the matchless grace of God
and glorifies Him in the angelic conflict. He placed this unique treasury on
deposit, as if in escrow, to be distributed to the believer when he acquires
the capacity to enjoy God’s “greater grace” (James 4:6).
The believer gains capacity to receive,
utilize, and enjoy his escrow blessings through the execution of the protocol
plan of God resulting in spiritual momentum and the attainment of spiritual maturity.
Capacity for blessing is a characteristic of spiritual maturity; therefore, the
distribution of escrow blessings is also a characteristic of maturity.
11. QUALIFICATION
FOR EVIDENCE TESTING. The second stage of the maximum glorification of God in
spiritual maturity is evidence testing. Never before in history has God made so
much of His omnipotence available to the believer as in the Church Age, and
never before in the believer’s lifetime does he have greater exercise of God’s
power as in spiritual maturity. These tremendous divine dynamics are necessary
for the final increment of suffering for blessing. As a result of reaching
maturity and achieving maximum utilization of his problem-solving devices, the
dynamics of the believer’s life are manifest in both living and dying, in both
prosperity and evidence testing—under the consistent utilization of divine
omnipotence.
12. ATTAINMENT
OF THE FINAL PHASE OF THE UNIQUE LIFE. Spiritual maturity is characterized by
that phase of the unique life described as “Christ [being] glorified in [the]
body” (Phil. 1:20—21). This glorification of Christ occurs through escrow
blessings and evidence testing.
THE GLORIFICATION OF GOD IN SPIRITUAL MATURITY
There are two stages in the maximum
glorification of God by the believer on earth. Both are exclusive privileges of
spiritual maturity.
1. God is glorified when the believer attains
SPIRITUAL MATURITY, Gate 8 of the divine dynasphere. At this point the believer
begins to receive distribution of the ESCROW BLESSINGS that God created in
eternity past.
2. God is glorified when the mature believer
passes EVIDENCE TESTING.
Every Church Age believer belongs to a unique
plan designed by God in eternity past. The objective of this plan includes
blessing for the believer ‘~beyond all that [he can] ask or imagine” (Eph.
3:20). God is glorified by distributing these blessings to the believer in
time.
The first thing God ever did for us is the
means of glorifying Him: He created the believer’s blessings before He created
the believer. “Before the foundation of the world” (Eph. 1:4), God the Father
tailored fabulous blessings specifically for each individual Christian and, as
it were, deposited those blessings in escrow.
Worthy of praise and glorification is God, even
the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who [the Father] has blessed us with every
spiritual blessing in the heavenlies in Christ. (Eph. 1:3)
God’s plan for blessing the believer may be
compared to an escrow contract. An escrow is a deed, bond, or other agreement
by which one person conveys some form of property to another person. Rather
than being conveyed directly, however, the property is deposited with a third
party, to be delivered when the intended recipient fulfills certain conditions
set forth in the terms of the escrow agreement.
Just as an escrow agreement has three parties,
so also Ephesians 1:3 mentions three parties: God the Father, Jesus Christ,
and the believer. God the Father is the grantor.
In eternity past He created each believer’s blessings for time and for
eternity and deposited them with Jesus Christ, who acts as a depositary or escrow officer. Each
believer is the grantee of an escrow
contract from God.
If you have believed in Christ, you are the
grantee of blessings that stagger the imagination. However, part of divine
wisdom is the principle that capacity for blessings must precede the conveyance
of blessings. God, therefore, designed the protocol plan to produce that
capacity which makes the distribution of blessings meaningful, enjoyable, and
glorifying to God.
Blessing does not begin at spiritual maturity.
As part of His logistical grace policy, God has designed a system of lesser
blessings which He distributes during the entire earthly experience of the
believer.[50] This
means that logistical grace is not simply a vehicle for sustaining the
believer’s life on earth but is a system of providing undeserved blessing whose
enjoyment can be surpassed only by the ultimate distribution of escrow
blessings for time. Furthermore, whatever capacity we have for blessings in
time is far exceeded by our escrow blessings for eternity. Between the
logistical blessings of spiritual childhood and early spiritual adulthood and
the escrow blessings of the eternal state is this fantastic grace provision of
God for the believer who executes His plan, purpose, and will by the attainment
of spiritual maturity. Obviously, God is glorified when any believer executes
this plan, and as a sign of His pleasure He conveys escrow blessings for time.
The path to these magnificent blessings
involves undeserved suffering. These blessings come through suffering as well
as through prosperity.
The believer who attains spiritual maturity is
classified as a winner. The question arises as to what happens to the escrow
blessings of the Christian who is classified as a loser, the believer who fails
to attain spiritual maturity. To illustrate the biblical answer to this
question, we again return to the analogy of the escrow agreement. In the state
of Texas, escrow contracts are irrevocable. From the date the contract is
signed, the property in escrow cannot be retrieved by the grantor, and the
contract cannot be canceled. Likewise, the believer’s escrow contract with God
is irrevocable (1 Pet. 1:4). The only reason a believer’s escrow blessings are
not delivered to him is his failure to fulfill the conditions of the escrow
agreement. The only condition the believer must fulfill is to advance to
spiritual maturity. When he fails, he becomes a spiritual loser. The loser’s
escrow blessings still belong to him irrevocably, but they will remain
undistributed, on deposit in heaven forever as a memorial to lost opportunity
and as a monument to the eternal bounty of God’s grace. While the believer
cannot lose his salvation, he can lose the conveyance of escrow blessings for
time and eternity.
Escrow blessings are called “spiritual” in
Ephesians 1:3, not because they are ethereal and intangible, but because God is
emphasized as their source (John 4:24a). Escrow blessings may include material
prosperity and temporal success as well as invisible impact and the spiritual
strength of maturity itself. The characteristics of spiritual self-esteem,
which are strengthened in spiritual autonomy, become stronger in spiritual
maturity and constitute fabulous blessings in the inner life. In addition to
this marvelous stability and capacity of soul, Jesus Christ as the depositary
commences with the conveyance of escrow blessings for the mature believer’s
life on earth.
A treasury of blessings for time and eternity
has your name on it. Your personal blessings are irrevocable, “imperishable,
and undefiled and will not fade away”; neither you nor anyone else can cancel
them (1 Pet. 1:4). The location of the deposit is “in the heavenlies”; no
repository could be more secure (Eph. 1:3). The date of the deposit is “before
the foundation [creation] of the world”; no other fortune has an older heritage.
The depositary is Christ; no one could be more personally interested in
delivering your blessings to you. The creator and grantor of your blessings is
God the Father; there is no greater giver.
He [God the Father] who did not spare His own Son,
but delivered Him up for us all, how will He [the Father] not also with Him
[Christ, the escrow officer] freely give us all things [our escrow blessingsl?
(Rom. 8:32, NASB)
Because God is glorified by blessing the
believer, the purpose of the believer’s life is to receive escrow blessings.
What must he do to receive them?
Grace excludes all human works. Therefore, the Christian’s
responsibility under the conditions of the escrow contract is to utilize the
assets of the divine dynasphere and advance to spiritual maturity. Only in
maturity does he have the capacity to receive the marvelous blessings that God
has placed on deposit for him.
Suffering plays an essential role in advancing
the believer to maturity. After he reaches maturity, and after he has received
many escrow blessings, suffering then makes a unique and specialized
contribution to the maximum glorification of God. Undeserved suffering in the
life of the mature believer furnishes evidence in a courtroom drama that has
been unfolding since long before human history began. In the appeal trial of
Satan, a summary of which follows, God calls mature believers to the witness
stand to testify concerning His matchless grace. Evidence testing is Satan’s
attempt to discredit their testimony.
Like escrow blessings, evidence testing is the
privilege of the mature believer and the final category of suffering for
blessing. Evidence testing follows the pattern of all suffering for blessing
in that “God is faithful, who will not allow you to be tested beyond what you
are able” to bear (1 Cor. 10:13). Only spiritual maturity has the strength and
divine viewpoint to endure, benefit from, and even enjoy evidence testing. In
short, God can glorify Himself to the maximum through escrow blessings and
through evidence testing only in the lives of mature believers. This is another
reason spiritual maturity is the objective of the Christian way of life.
SUFFERING, HAPPINESS, AND
THE ESSENCE OF GOD
SUFFERING POSES NO THREAT to the plan of God. The pain of adversity is
real, but even the most horrible suffering loses its dread in the light of the
grace of God. In fact, the protocol plan of God incorporates suffering and uses
adversity for the purpose of blessing the advancing believer. Suffering
tests his understanding and application of doctrine. As he passes each test, he
confirms and deepens his love for the Lord Jesus Christ and hones his use of
the problem-solving devices for spiritual adulthood.
God loves every believer with His infinite,
personal love. Nothing “shall be able
to separate us from the love of God, which is in Christ Jesus our Lord” (Rom.
8:39). God never desires any harm to come to any member of the royal family.
Yet suffering exists; believers face severe pain of body and anguish of soul.
This study of suffering has explained from Scripture how and why Christian suffering coexists with God’s love for the believer. Most Christian suffering is self-induced misery under the law of volitional responsibility. Believers defy God’s desires and bring harm on themselves. They ignore the precise protocol of God’s plan, and such ignorance and arrogance merely complicate the problems of living in the devil’s world.
Apart from persistent self-induced misery, all
suffering in the Christian way of life is designed by God for the believer’s
benefit. Even unbearable divine discipline is a gracious attempt to restore
the believer to the divine dynasphere. Indeed, the fact that ignoring and violating the protocol plan of God cause self-induced misery
demonstrates by contrast that learning and
executing divine protocol bring
blessing. No degree of suffering can destroy the blessing of life in the palace
of the divine dynasphere.
Through suffering God reveals His marvelous
power to sustain and bless the believer who follows divine protocol and
utilizes his royal assets. Suffering focuses the attention of the believer,
who is imperfect and prone to distractions. Adversity compels him to remember,
apply, and thus more fully understand the Bible doctrine in his soul.
Suffering accelerates his spiritual growth. Suffering helps him see the essence
of God.
Suffering is inevitable for the believer on
earth. Every Christian must prepare himself to meet and conquer adversity as
part of advancing to spiritual maturity. To be ready for suffering when it
comes, he must give first priority to learning, metabolizing, and applying
Bible doctrine, as consistently taught by a theologically orthodox pastor. Each
believer must receive, retain, and recall the Word of God in the power of the
Holy Spirit in the divine dynasphere.
The purpose of this book is to delineate
systematically and comprehensively the divine viewpoint regarding Christian
suffering. In the midst of adversity, the spiritually adult believer shares the
happiness of God as a consequence of thinking divine viewpoint and
consistently utilizing the omnipotence of God. We must think as God thinks and
regard adversity in the light of His marvelous objectives for our lives. By
perception of the doctrines pertinent to suffering, we gain access to the
problem-solving devices that convert suffering into blessing. Each
problem-solving device is efficacious because of its relationship to the essence
of God.
REBOUND is based on divine justice and faithfulness. Because
God judged all the sins of the human race at the cross, He is always consistent
in forgiving our sins when we name them to Him (1 John 1:9).
The FAITH-REST DRILL depends upon God’s omnipotence, immutability, veracity, and
faithfulness, which stand behind all
His promises. Furthermore, His integrity and
omniscience guarantee that God is
rational and that true conclusions can be reached logically from doctrinal
premises.
HOPE as a problem-solving device also depends
on divine veracity. Hope is our
absolute confidence that God is true to His word. Divine veracity is manifested
in pertinent biblical doctrines that cause us to anticipate future blessings
that will glorify God to the maximum.
PERSONAl LOVE FOR GOD focuses on His absolute righteousness, the divine attribute that
is the object of His own personal love. Only
when directed toward perfect God does our personal love become a virtue in
itself.
IMPERSONAL LOVE FOR ALL MANKIND is modeled
after God’s impersonal love for the
fallen, degenerate, spiritually dead human race. God never feels threatened by
sinful man. He saved us because of His own integrity,
not because we deserved salvation. Therefore, impersonal love for the
entire human race based on our Christian integrity follows the pattern of divine self-esteem and divine love as expressions of the
integrity of God.
Finally, the believer’s HAPPINESS as a
problem-solving device is sharing the very happiness
of God. The believer enjoys God’s happiness as a consequence of learning,
metabolizing, and applying Bible doctrine. He thinks God’s thoughts and shares
his viewpoint concerning Christian suffering.
By inculcating our souls with the thinking of
God as revealed in the Scripture, by applying His truths to the circumstances
of our lives, by executing divine protocol in the power of His omnipotence, we
come to appreciate who and what God is. We grow in our respect for the one
“worthy of praise and glorification.” Our resultant contentment is the most
powerful solution to the frustrations, the difficulties, and the heartaches
that we cannot avoid. No suffering in life is too great for the plan of God.
DIVINE
JUDGMENT IN CONTRAST TO DIVINE DISCIPLINE
GOD’S DEALINGS WITH UNBELIEVERS
IN TIME
AN ESSENTIAL DISTINCTION must be understood concerning God’s punitive
actions against man during the course of human history: Divine discipline is not the same as divine judgment. Discipline is reserved for
believers; judgment is for unbelievers but may affect all categories of the
human race and fallen angels as well. The believer suffers only in time, never
in eternity (Rev. 21:4). He is disciplined in time—individually and
collectively—but his appointment with eternal judgment was canceled when he
believed in Christ (Heb. 9:27; Rom. 8:1). The unbeliever suffers in time and in
eternity. He may face individual and collective divine judgment in time; he
will receive individual judgment throughout eternity.
Because God deals with unbelievers as well as
with believers, the doctrine of divine judgment toward unbelievers on earth
reveals God’s justice and grace and also explains a tremendous amount of
worldwide suffering. Like discipline to the believer, divine judgment in time
to the unbeliever is administered in progressive stages:
1. JUDGMENT BY PAIN
2. JUDGMENT BY DEATH
3. JUDGMENT BY FINESSE
Judgment by pain and judgment by death are the
progressive stages of divine judgment in time. Finesse judgment presents a
principle by which Jesus Christ controls history despite Satan’s rule over the
world.
JUDGMENT BY PAIN
The first stage of divine judgment, judgment by
pain, is an expression of God’s grace to the unbeliever, just as warning
discipline expresses God’s grace to the believer. Evangelism is the objective
of all judgment by pain. On the cross Jesus Christ paid for the salvation of
every human being who will ever live, whether or not that person ever believes
in Christ (1 John 2:2). Our Lord has accomplished completely all the work of
salvation; nothing remains for an individual to do but to accept the work of
Christ on his behalf. The way of salvation is simple and plain: “Believe in the
Lord Jesus, and you shall be saved” (Acts 16:31).
Because God will never violate man’s free will,
He must wait for positive volition before He can actually apply salvation to
any individual. In grace, God has already gone to the farthest extreme—the
judgment of His own Son. With the work fully accomplished, God continues to do
all that is possible to bring the unbeliever to eternal salvation.
Normal evangelism involves the presentation of
the Gospel. God has an obligation to supply Gospel information to all who are
receptive and desire to know Him when first they become aware of His existence.
Their positive volition at the point of God-consciousness usually remains
positive at Gospel hearing. They believe in Christ with no greater stimulus
than a clear presentation of true Gospel information. But for others, who are
indifferent or antagonistic to their first awareness of God—negative volition
at Godconsciousness—God still repeatedly extends the opportunity to be saved.
The Lord is not slow about His promise [to
judge unbelievers], as some count slowness, but is patient toward you, not
wishing for any to perish but for all to come to repentance [change of mind
about Christ]. (2 Pet. 3:9, NASB)
When normal evangelism fails, God shifts gears
into crisis evangelism. Crisis evangelism involves judgment by pain. As with
discipline to the recalcitrant believer, judgment by pain to the negative
unbeliever is designed to shock him into temporary objectivity. The pain proves
his inherent weakness, his need of a relationship with God, and provides a
lucid moment in which the Gospel can be considered.
The salvation of the Apostle Paul is a dramatic
example of crisis evangelism. Saul of Tarsus, as Paul was known during his
meteoric career as a Pharisee, was a zealous persecutor and murderer of
Christians. Only when struck blind on the road to Damascus did he objectively
consider the Gospel of Christ. Judgment by pain was responsible for the
salvation of the greatest believer who has ever lived.
JUDGMENT BY DEATH
If repeated judgment by pain fails to bring the
unbeliever to faith in Christ, judgment by death becomes the only alternative.
Judgment by death against unbelievers who have hardened their volition against
God is divine protection of the human race. The evils of cosmic influence must
be restrained; therefore, following a period of grace before judgment, God
removes the cancer from society in order to preserve believers and perpetuate
mankind.
The Pharaoh of the Exodus, Amenhotep II,
suffered increasingly intense pain in the plagues against Egypt. By
persistently rejecting the message of Moses, Pharaoh “hardened his heart” (Ex.
8:32). His obstinance through the first five plagues locked him in the cosmic
system beyond any possibility of escape so that he was incapable of right
decisions. For him, faith in Christ, who is the God of Israel, had become
impossible; he had shackled his own volition (Rum. 2:5; 2 Cor. 4:3—4).
When further grace becomes pointless, God
normally removes the unbeliever from this life. However, God did not remove
Pharaoh but “allowed [him] to stand . . . in order to proclaim [God’s] name
through all the earth” (Ex. 9:16). Following the fifth plague. “God hardened Pharaoh’s heart” by allowing
him to continue making negative decisions (Ex. 9:12; Rom. 9:17—18). Pharaoh’s
deceitful negative volition presented an opportunity for God to evangelize the
world through further displays of divine power (Ex. 7:3; 11:9; Josh. 2:9—10).
In the final divine exploitation of Pharaoh’s stubbornness, God administered
judgment by death as the tenth plague.
Pharaoh was not merely a private individual; he
ruled an empire. His negative volition typified the obstinance of many of his
subjects, who shared his rejection of salvation and applauded his decisions to
retain the Jews as a race of slaves. The tenth plague killed the eldest son of
every household in Egypt that joined Pharaoh in rejecting the message of Moses.
God’s action was not indiscriminate genocide.
Many Egyptian families believed in the God of Israel and survived that night
of judgment, and many joined the Exodus as the “mixed multitude” of Gentiles
(Ex. 11:3; 12:38). Furthermore, the Egyptian infants who died before reaching
the point of God-consciousness, which is also the age of accountability,
received automatic salvation (2 Sam. 12:23).[51]
Pharaoh himself did not die in the tenth plague but was allowed to release the
Jews and then precipitate yet another crisis, at the Red Sea, which again
glorified God (Ex. 14:13—18).
Judgment by death was the extreme measure taken
by God to remove individual negative unbelievers and in doing so to demolish
hardened opposition to the Exodus. God’s promises to Israel and to mankind
hinged on the national freedom of the Jews through whom would eventually come
all client nation concepts, the Mosaic Law, the written canon of Scripture, and
above all the Messiah, the Lord Jesus Christ. God was protecting the human race
and the Jews and advancing His plan of grace by administering judgment by
death.
JUDGMENT BY FINESSE
The third category of divine judgment
demonstrates the genius of Jesus Christ in controlling history despite the fact
that Satan rules the world. In finesse judgment, our Lord uses evil to destroy
evil.
Arrogance cannot tolerate arrogance; one form
of evil despises another form of evil. An intense, human-good crusader cannot
abide an insouciant rounder. The libertine regards the religious reformer with
contempt. One form of prejudice despises another form of prejudice. The Nazi
hates the Communist. Each is hostile toward the other. The very multiplicity
of gates into the cosmic system, which successfully appeals to the weaknesses
of so many different kinds of people, is the system’s ultimate flaw. The
greatest destroyer of evil is evil.
For the wrath of man shall praise Thee. (Ps.
76:10a, NASB)
The sons of Sceva were sorcerers who traveled
throughout the region around Ephesus discrediting Paul and promoting themselves
at his expense (Acts 19:13—20). Thoroughly evil men, these exorcists claimed to
cast demons out of the possessed.[52]
Although they were permanent residents of the cosmic
system, these unbelievers tried
to use the names of Christ and Paul in incantations aimed at exorcising a
demon from a young man. The evil demon perfectly squelched the arrogance of
these evil charlatans:
“I recognize Jesus and I know about Paul, but
who are you?” (Acts 19:15b)
The demon then attacked the Sons of Sceva so
that they fled wounded from the house. As a result ~‘the name of the Lord Jesus
was being magnified” (Acts 19:17) in the vindicated doctrinal ministry of Paul.
The principle of finesse judgment applies to
nations as well as to individuals. An evil nation is often permitted power in
history for the sole purpose of being used by God to judge another evil
nation. Israel is God’s chosen nation, but in 721 B.C., again in 586 B.C., and again in A.D. 70, God’s
client nation had degenerated into evil as its citizens lived perpetually in
the cosmic system. The pivot of mature believers had shrunk; the spin-off of
cosmic believers was dragging down the entire nation. On each of these three
occasions, God raised up an evil empire to punish Israel. Evil1 destroyed
Evil2. In 721 B.C. the Assyrian Empire destroyed the Northern
Kingdom of Israel. In 586 B.C. the
Chaldean Empire destroyed the Southern Kingdom. In A.D. 70 the Roman Empire
destroyed religious, pharisaical, rebellious Judea.
Finesse judgment of collective groups is not reserved strictly for degenerate client nations. As foretold in prophecy, God will destroy the worldwide religion of the Tribulation, which will be sponsored by Satan, with an attack by a rival political entity, also sponsored by Satan (Rev. 17:16—17). God’s objective will be achieved by Satan when the devil betrays one part of his own cosmic system in a treacherous ploy to increase the power of another part.
[1] Thieme, The Integrity of God (Houston: R. B. Thieme, Jr., Bible Ministries, 1988), 105—12. Hereafter, cross-references to my books will cite only author, title, date of publication (in the first reference), and page(s).
[2] Unless indicated, Scripture references are my translations, representing more literally the original Hebrew or Greek text. References marked KJV are quoted from the Authorized King James Version; NASB, from the New American Standard Bible; and NIV, from the New Intematjonal Version. Bracketed commentary reflects Bible class lectures (available on tape from R. B. Thieme, Jr., Bible Ministries, Houston) or correlates the quotation with b the topic at hand.
[3] Thieme, Christian Integrity (1984), 9—12.
[4] Webster’s Third New International Dictionary, s.v. “protocol.”
[5] Thieme, The Plan of God (1992).
[6] Thieme, The Faith-Rest Life (1961).
[7] Thieme, The Integrity of God, 142—45, 165—84.
[8] Satan’s objective is to use mankind to prove his own superiority over God. The devil’s multifaceted policy for achieving this goal is called the cosmic system. His diverse tactics express one strategy, which either encourages human arrogance or sponsors human antagonism to God. See Thieme, Christian integrity, 158—70.
[9] Thieme, Rebound and Keep Moving! (1993).
[10] Theme, Christian Integrity, 102—09.
[11] Thieme, The Integrity of God, 1—4.
[12] Thieme, The Integrity of God, 57—77.
[13] The cosmic system is Satan’s evil policy toward mankind. See Thieme, Christian Integrity. 158—70.
[14] Thieme, Freedom through Military Victory (1996).
[15] Although not judged at the cross, human good and evil were rejected (reserved for future judgment), and errors in human discernment did not enter into the exclusive work of God. See Thieme, The Integrity of God, 105—12.
[16] Thieme, Isolation of Sin (1976).
[17] Thieme, Christian Integrity, 32—35.
[18] U.S. Congress, Senate, Medal of Honor Recipients, 1863—1978, 96th Cong., 1st sess., 14 February 1979, 928.
[19] James Bond Stockdale, “Dignity and Honor in Vietnam,” Wall Street Journal, April 16, 1982.
[20] Thieme, Prayer (1975).
[21] Thieme, The Integrity of God, 95, and Christian Integrity, 94—96.
[22] Lewis Sperry Chafer, Systematic Theology, 8 vols. (Dallas: Dallas Seminary Press, 1947), 2:100.
[23] See Appendix, “Divine Judgment in Contrast to Divine Discipline.”
[24] The “times of the Gentiles” extend from the destruction of the Jewish state in AD. 70 until Christ will restore Israel at His Second Advent. See Thieme, The Divine Outline of History: Dispensations and the Church (1989), 8, 68.
[25] Thieme, Daniel Chapters One through Six (1996).
[26] Nathaniel Branden, Honoring the Self (Los Angeles: Jeremy P. Tarcher, Inc., 1983), 1.
[27] During the Age of Israel, the preincarnate Jesus Christ as the Shekinah Glory dwelt in the Tabernacle or Temple (Ex. 25:21—22; Lev. 26:11—12; Ps. 91:1; Heb. 9:5). The Shekinah Glory appeared as a cloud by day or a pillar of fire by night, as well as a bright light over the ark of the covenant. The presence of the Shekinah Glory guaranteed God’s promise of temporal and eternal blessings to Israel. In the present Church Age the believer’s body is the temple of the Shekinah Glory (John 16:13—14; 17:22; Cot. 1:27).
[28] Thieme, The Integrity of God, app. A, “The Doctrine of Divine Essence,” 231—56.
[29] Thieme, Christian Integrity, 9—12.
[30] Thieme, The Blood of Christ (1979), 13—14.
[31] Nathaniel Branden, Honoring the Self, 4.
[32] Thieme, Divine Outline of History, 97—100.
[33] Theme, Christian Integrity, 112—38.
[34] Thieme, Christian Integrity, 169.
[35] Thieme, Prayer.
[36] Thieme, Christian Integrity, 60—82.
[37] Thieme, The Blood of Christ, 3 1—34.
[38] Thieme, Giving: Gimmick or Grace? (1990).
[39] Thieme, The Integrity of God, 172—89.
[40] Thieme, The Integrity of God, 42—46.
[41] The five cycles of national discipline are delineated in Leviticus 26:14—39. See Thieme, Daniel Chapters One through Six, 5n.
[42] Thieme, Victorious Proclamation (1977).
[43] In theological terminology, the hypostatic union is the God-Man, the Lord Jesus Christ. See Thieme, Christian Integrity, 193—96.
[44] Strategic and tactical victories are described in Christian Integrity, 175—77.
[45] Thieme, Christian Integrity, 49.
[46] Thieme, The Integrity of God, 126—64.
[47] Thieme, Canonicity (1973).
[48] The King James Version adds “let us mind the same thing,” but this phrase is not found in the best manuscripts.
[49] See pages 67—69, 87—90.
[50] Thieme, Christian Integrity, 55—57.
[51] Thieme, The Integrity of God, 67.
[52] Thieme, Satan and Demonism (1996).