Douglas Wilson’s Letter from Moscow

Betting With Real Money

Douglas Wilson
Blog and Mablog
November 12, 2014
I want to answer two very basic questions. Let’s all wish me luck. First I want to define marriage — what is marriage anyhow? — and I want to explain why the answer to this first question is any business of the civil magistrate. The two matters are wound tightly together, as we shall see.

I have defined marriage before in at least a couple of places.

“A common error among Christians holds that if the sexual act is completed, then the couple are married ‘in God’s sight.’ Many destructive complications occur in contemporary culture because we have adopted the idea that people can be married in God’s sight without being married. It is hard to say where this idea originated, but it has caused a lot of damage . . . Marriage is scripturally defined as a sexual relationship within the boundaries of a covenant commitment that has been formally ratified. The sexual relationship by itself does not constitute marriage” (Her Hand in Marriage, pp. 28-29).

“The first is that you must have an explicit covenant surrounding a sexual relationship. Not everyone who is sexually united is married, and not everyone who has exchanged vows is married. The covenant exists when the two elements are there together: covenant vows surrounding a covenant union” (For a Glory and a Covering, p. 33).

Thus far the assertions. Why do I believe that the two essential elements in a marriage are sexual union (of the sort that could result in pregnancy) and a publicly recognized covenant? To use the language of the philosophers, these are necessary conditions but not sufficient conditions. A necessary condition means that without it you do not have the thing in question. A sufficient condition means that with it you will have the thing in question, of necessity. Thus the presence of oxygen is a necessary condition for a blazing fire but not a sufficient condition.

You cannot have a marriage without old school heterosexual copulation and you cannot have a marriage without a covenant. Nevertheless you can have a covenant without a marriage and you can have sexual intercourse without a marriage.

If a covenant alone can constitute a marriage, then homosexual marriages are marriages, not mirages. If sexual intercourse alone can constitute a marriage, then a man who has visited every woman in five brothels is married to all of them, and all of them are married to every john who has ever been with them — which is absurd. Yet Paul acknowledges that the “one flesh” union occurs in an encounter with a prostitute, which is why doing so is such a significant sin. “Or do you not know that he who is joined to a prostitute becomes one body with her? For, as it is written, “The two will become one flesh”” (1 Cor. 6:16, ESV). But those Corinthian men who were still visiting temple prostitutes are rebuked and told to stop it and walk away. They are not told that they are actually married to all the women they have been with. They are part of a one flesh union with these women, but are not married to them. They had no business partaking of a one flesh union without marriage, but it has happened now, and the solution is repent and flee. Run away. Two verses later Paul tells these men precisely what to do. “Flee fornication” (1 Cor. 6:18).

But if sexual union by itself creates a “marriage in God’s sight,” then a man could continue to visit the prostitute to whom he is now married. A man could continue to maintain and visit his mistress and so on. This is not what repentance looks like, and because repentance looks like breaking it off entirely, we see that sexual union by itself does not constitute a marriage.

So what is my basis for saying that a covenant is also necessary? The answer is simple — the Bible teaches that a man’s wife is his wife by covenant. “But you say, “Why does he not?” Because the Lord was witness between you and the wife of your youth, to whom you have been faithless, though she is your companion and your wife by covenant” (Mal. 2:14, ESV). This is speaking of men who were being treacherous to the terms of that covenant, but it speaks of the marriage relationship as having been established by covenant. The same thing is true of a treacherous wife. “Which forsaketh the guide of her youth, And forgetteth the covenant of her God” (Prov. 2:17). Marriages are formed by covenant, and they are a covenant that surrounds an inaugural act of heterosexual intercourse, to be followed by many more such acts.

If a personal covenant between persons –sans sex — were sufficient to establish a marriage, then David and Jonathan were married (1 Sam. 18:3). If sexual activity of any description between two persons is sufficient to establish a marriage, then this world would be a literal pandemonium of marital relations. But Paul tells men to flee the prostitutes, which ought not to be understood as fleeing your “wives.”

Now a covenant is a solemn bond and it is publicly enforceable. Covenants have sanctions. When Billy is whispering to Suzy in the back seat of a car that he will love her forever and a day, that is not a covenant. That is what Suzy’s mother described, later that same evening, as a sweet-talking lie. A covenant is made in the public eye, and the surrounding society stands to witness to the terms of the covenant and to ensure that it will be kept. Different cultures have different customs that establish a covenant bond — God once made a covenant with Abraham by cutting animals in two and passing between the pieces. We don’t have to do that at our weddings. The particular form the marital covenant takes does not matter — what matters is that the society within which the covenant is being established recognizes the speech/act in question (“I now announce that  you are husband and wife”) and recognizes any attendant symbols (“with this ring I thee wed”). Other societies can accomplish the same reality with a different set of words and symbols. That is fine. What has to be constant, however, is the fact of sexual intercourse and the mutual and public obligation of both parties to each other.

What about Adam and Eve? Were they married by this definition? Yes, they became one flesh (Gen. 2:21), and their union was recognized by the whole world. In fact, at their wedding, the entire human race was present. Moreover, their union was the paradigmatic union for all subsequent marriages, meaning their union had to be a marriage as well (Gen. 2:24; Matt. 19:5).

So then, what business does the magistrate have in all of this? There are three aspects to this answer. The first concerns what ought to be when a society is well-ordered in the sight of God. The second concerns what the church ought to do when they are ministering in a culture that is not at all well ordered. And the third has to do with the current propensity of many Christians to give up the good fight far too early.

First, one of the most obvious things about sexual intercourse is that, while it is much more than just an economic transaction, it is also at least that — an economic transaction. Feminists have made cheap points off of this reality by describing marriage as glorified prostitution. Actually, the comparison runs the other way — prostitution is a gross parody of marriage.

Marriage is a sublime and wonderful thing, but there are monetary realities necessarily involved in it. Urgent young men with screaming hormones and medium-sized paper route need to be told that a woman is expensive, son. We even get our word economy from the Greek word for household.

Sex necessarily involves issues of property and custody of children, and inheritance, and houses, and cars, and so on. These things cannot be separated from the way God designed sex to function. Marriage therefore needs to be recognized by the magistrate so that everybody beforehand has a good grasp of how these things are going to be adjudicated. We need to agree on the rules beforehand. We need to understand what the weights and measures actually are. I would rather abandon the language of marriage licenses — as though the state has the authority to tell John and Mary, an ordinary couple, whether or not they can get married. But we need something like marriage registrations, and the magistrate has the authority to refuse to receive or file them under certain circumstances (non licet), as when a brother and sister try to file one, or two homosexuals, or a man and his llama.

What does and does not constitute a well-thought-out sexual union is very much in the interest of the civil magistrate — because the magistrate will have to sort out the ones that were not well-thought-out also. Should a one-night-stand biological father have to pay child support? How about if she lied to him and said that her tubes had been tied? How about if they agreed beforehand that she would have an abortion if she needed to, and then she changed her mind? Should a husband have the right to veto an abortion, contra Roe v. Wade? Whenever men and women have sex, they are betting with real money. Disputes will inevitably arise. Since the magistrate is authorized by God to deal with all property issues (Rom. 13:4,9), the magistrate therefore has a solemn obligation before God to know what a real marriage is. The magistrate is the one, the only one, who can effectively police the property-related boundaries of a sexual union.

The second thing is that of course the church should supply whatever accountability they can when the culture has abandoned its appointed role. But this will always be a makeshift affair. Suppose you have a society where slaves are not legally permitted to marry, but a Christian man and woman who are slaves want to marry. It is appropriate for them to exchange vows in the eyes of the church, and for the church to bless their sexual union. But if that man later abandons his wife and children, and runs away, and the most the church can do is excommunicate him, there are still injustices that need to be rectified — and which only the magistrate is authorized to fully rectify. When men and women wrong each other with marriage as the instrument of their sin, there are certain things that cannot be put right unless physical coercion is involved. The church does not have, and ought not to have, that kind of power. The magistrate does, and under such circumstances ought to wield it. And when the magistrate acts in coercion, we should all want their standard to be biblical. Otherwise, everybody is hosed.

This means that when the church sets up “covenant marriages,” over against our current same sex parodies, as we ought to be doing, we may only do this as a testimony against the magistrate abandoning his God-given function, and we should do this as a way of calling the magistrate back to his duties. If the church acquiesces in the idea that marriage is merely a matter of private, religious conviction, then this only means that the church has joined the magistrate in the general dereliction.

And last — I will be brief with this one — to have as many Christians as we have in this country throwing up their hands in despair, saying that maybe the “definition of marriage” is not a concern of the magistrate anyway, is a testimony to our loser eschatology. Loser eschatology is a particular kind of future orientation that pampered Christians have developed for themselves — but the only thing that ever gets fulfilled is its own prophecies, tailor-made for all Christians who have no stomach for a fight. But nothing biblical gets fulfilled by them.

Standing Ground

Ten Tenets of Covenantal Apologetics

Justin Taylor

From Scott Oliphint’s Covenantal Apologetics: Principles and Practice in Defense of Our Faith (pp. 47-56):

  1. The faith that we are defending must begin with, and necessarily include, the triune God-Father, Son, and Holy Spirit—who, as God, condescends to create and to redeem.
  2. God’s covenantal revelation is authoritative by virtue of what is, and any covenantal, Christian apologetic will necessarily stand on and utilize that authority in order to defend Christianity.
  3. It is the truth of God’s revelation, together with the work of the Holy Spirit, that brings about a covenantal change from one who is in Adam to one who is in Christ.
  4. Man (male and female) as image of God is in covenant with the triune God for eternity.
  5. All people know the true God, and that knowledge entails covenantal obligations.
  6. Those who are and remain in Adam suppress the truth that they know. Those who are in Christ see truth for what it is.
  7. There is an absolute, covenantal antithesis between Christian theism and any other, opposing position. Thus, Christianity is true and anything opposing it is false.
  8. Suppression of the truth, like the depravity of sin, is total but not absolute. Thus every unbelieving position will necessarily have within it ideas, concepts, notions, and the like that it has taken and wrenched from their true, Christian context.
  9. The true, covenantal knowledge of God in man, together with God’s universal mercy, allows for persuasion in apologetics.
  10. Every fact and experience is what it is by virtue of the covenantal, all-controlling plan and purpose of God.

How the Kingdom Comes

Transformation Through Conversion

“I will drive them out before you little by little, until you become fruitful and possess the land.” (Exodus 23: 30)

God told the Israelites that their Biblical culture would come “little by little”.  It did not come suddenly, or overnight.  It came gradually.  The covenantal society . . . can only come about the same way.  That is, if it is to survive, it must come about from the bottom up. . . . It can only successfully come about (and stick) if it takes holy at a grass roots level through evangelism

The expansion of the Gospel from Jerusalem to Rome serves as an example.
  Jesus says at the beginning of Acts, “You shall receive My power when the Holy Spirit has come upon you; and you shall be My witnesses both in Jerusalem, and in all Judea and Samaria, and even to the remotest part of the earth.”  (Acts 1:8)  This verse summarises the spread of the Gospel from one part of the world to the rest.  It began in Jerusalem, and ended up in Rome.  The method was little-by-little evangelism, just like the land of Canaan.

Yes, Acts parallels the Book of Joshua.  Joshua is the account of the conquest of the land; Acts is the story of the conquest of the world.  But there is one striking contrast.  Joshua took the land by use of the sword, even though it played a secondary role.  None of the Apostles used the sword to spread the Gospel.  Why the difference?  Joshua, although a type of Jesus Christ, was under the Old Covenant.  The Old Covenant was a covenant of the flesh, graphically portrayed in the sacrament of circumcision.  And, if anything, the Old Testament teaches that the kingdom of God could not be established by the flesh, meaning the sword.  The garden of Eden was sealed off by a “flaming sword” (Genesis 3: 24), prohibiting re-entrance.  Man could not return to that particular garden by a carnal weapon because his sword could not stand against God’s.

Even David, a great man of God, was unsuccessful in creating God’s Kingdom.  He was a man of war, so was not allowed to build the Temple (I Kings 5:3).  . . .

The New Covenant Kingdom is created by the Spirit.  God has conquered Jericho by His might, to be sure.  But the Holy Spirit had not come in all of His historical fulness.  Christ had not yet come in history.  Israel needed to use the sword, but Israel ultimately failed.  The Church succeeded.  In Acts, the Spirit of God went forth and created the beginnings of a Christian world from the bottom up

The instrument the Spirit used was evangelism, witnessing.

Ray Sutton, That You May Prosper: Dominion by Covenant (Tyler, Tx: Institute for Christian Economics, 1978), p.202f.

Faith-Lines Versus Blood-Lines

Turbo-Charged Bloodlines

Bloodlines are very important.  Any Christian who doubts this should turn to the opening chapters of the Gospels of Luke and Matthew and read there the bloodlines of the Lord Jesus Christ, King of the world.  Who your ancestors were, your blood lines of descent are clearly material–both genetically and spiritually.  The Kingdom of God is constructed around bloodlines.

The Unbelieving world is deeply ambivalent about bloodlines.
  On the one hand, the ultimate sin for many is racism–making race or bloodlines the ultimate, determining reality of life and culture.  Yet for secular humanists, most of whom are materialists, believing that the only reality, the really real, is matter–electrons, protons, neutrons and quarks–race has to be the most profound determinate of human being, since “Nature” or genetics, or molecular structures, are all determinative.

The secular world is, on the one hand, implicitly and fiercely racist–yet, on the other, emphatically opposed to it, believing it to be an anathema.  The modern secular world is just arrogantly stupid.   

The Christian, however, believes strongly in the significance of bloodlines, but ironically not because of blood.  Genetics and blood are not the all-constitutive reality.  God is.  Therefore, genetics and blood and descent, and whakapapa are highly influential and very important because God has created and made them–and made them to be determinative.  But not all determinative.  It turns out that faith is far more fundamental, constitutive and determinative.  But as soon as true faith in God and His Christ is present, bloodlines become more important than ever.

As someone once said, whilst it is true that blood is thicker than water, faith is thicker than both.  How does this work?  It works because the God in whom we believe enters a solemn covenant, sealed by His holy oath, not just with the one who believes, but with his children and descendants.  The covenant, embracing descendants, enhances the significance–the eternal significance–of bloodlines.  When God swore to Abraham, “I will be a God to you and to your children after you” (Genesis 17:7) and Abraham believed God and it was reckoned to him as righteousness (Genesis 15:6),  God’s promise and oath, and Abraham’s faith in God and therefore in His promise and oath, suddenly made bloodlines much, much more important.

Now, it is faith which makes bloodlines determinative, not the reverse.  This is immediately apparent, because the sign of entering into covenant with God was extended to all of Abraham’s household, estimated to number around about one thousand souls at the time–including those born in the household, and those who had been bought as household servants.  All of the males were circumcised–thus indicating their acceptance of, and submission to, Abraham’s God (Genesis 17: 27; on the numbers in the household, Abraham could muster 318 armed and trained men from his extended household, Genesis 14:14).  From that point on, their bloodlines also became important and constitutive.

The women Ruth, of Moab and Rahab (and her household) of Canaan–not originally of the bloodline of faith–were added into it when they became believers in the God of Israel  (Hebrews 11:31).  Faith always remained more important than blood. Faith established the significance of bloodlines, not the reverse.  Consequently, when Israel rebelled and disbelieved and broke God’s covenant, bloodlines did not save them: they were eventually cut off and cut out (II Kings 17:18).

Modern pietistic evangelicals have sought to disconnect faith and bloodlines.  They discount the latter as now unimportant.  They understand that in the New Covenant, the importance of bloodlines has lapsed.  It is now faith, and faith alone.  They have broken apart the foundation of faith and the superstructure of bloodlines. They are badly mistaken.  By divorcing faith and bloodlines they effectively cut themselves off  from the Scriptures, from culture, from humanity, and from the Scripture itself.  So much of Scripture becomes meaningless or irrelevant to them.

Transformation of culture and the salvation of the world cannot be achieved without the creational power of bloodlines (otherwise known as the conditioning power of nature and nur ture) being subjected to, and turbocharged by,  faith.  A faith which has no bloodline power is a culturally impotent faith; it cannot save the world.  It flies in the face of , “for God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten son . . . . “.  A faith that ignores the covenant promise to bloodlines is alienated from the redemptive power and scope of God and His Christ.

>Fathers Are Critical

>Great Hope, Huge Responsibilities

The Covenant of Grace is the engine block of redemption: it is the spiritual structure which effects redemption and the salvation of the world.  God deals with us and relates to us within the terms and structures of the covenants He made with Noah, Abraham, Moses and Israel, David and so on–all of which were precursors of, or preludes to, the one Covenant–the Covenant made in the Blood and Body of Christ.

Central to that Covenant is the dynamic of children inheriting the promises and faith of their believing, covenant-keeping fathers.  The Covenant is thus a covenant with us and with our descendants.  This, in turn, is founded upon the promise of God: “I will be a God to you, and to your children after you.”  (Genesis 17:7)  For our part, our duty is to respond in faith to these promises, and act in accordance with them.  Thus, we raise our children not to be “little deciders for Jesus” but we command them to believe, obey, and walk in the commandments of their God.  Thus, God says of Abraham, our father:  “For I have chosen him, in order that he may command his children and his household after him to keep the way of the Lord by doing righteousness and justice; in order that the Lord may bring upon Abraham what He has spoken about him.” (Genesis 17: 19)  Faithful, covenant keeping fathers no more allow their children a choice as to whether they would believe and follow the Lord than they would allow their children to choose whether they would cross a busy street with their eyes shut.  Both lead to death. 

Commanding one’s children and household to keep the ways of the Lord is a duty placed upon every husband and father–the God appointed head of the household.  As that duty towards children is carried out, and as indeed, children are taught and trained to walk after the Lord and keep His Covenant, so the Lord brings about His promises.  And the promise is that Abraham (and his descendants) will become great and that all the nations of the earth will be blessed in him (Genesis 17:18).

Right at this point you have a distinction in the Church of our Lord.  There are many, many fellow believers who have not yet heard, nor reckoned with this reality.  For one reason or another they have not heard of the Covenant of Grace as the engine block of their salvation, nor reckoned with the fact that they have inherited the promises made to Abraham and are, in fact, children of Abraham (Galatians 3:29).  Sadly, they have not yet understood that God has made promises to them and their children; consequently they do not understand that they must command their children to walk in all the ways of the Lord.  To these brethren, the Great Commission begins afresh and again with each generation.  There can be no progress of redemption upon the earth. Everything goes back to “Go” with each new generation.  They sadly believe that each child born to Christian parents is not in any way differently related to God than an infant born in an unbelieving house of idolatry that has never heard the Gospel.  Both alike are children captive to the Devil. 

The Covenant of Grace, together with its intergenerational promise from God, to both fathers and their children, makes the task of discipling all the nations of the earth not only possible, but inevitable.  Thus, it is vitally important that every Christian household comes to understand the promises that God has made to us about our children, and the consequent required obedience that rests upon us, the parents, to command our children to walk in the ways of the Lord.

In this regard, fathers are critical. It is fathers, as heads of households, who must lead, not only by example, but by command.  When fathers fail to obey and fulfil their duties to their children, more often than not children grow up disbelieving and rebelling against the God of their father and their mother.

To illustrate, consider the following post by Justin Taylor:  

A Father’s Role in His Children Going to Church When They Are Adults

Robbie Low, writing in Touchstone (June 2003), points to an interesting 1994 study in Switzerland about the connection between the churchgoing habits of fathers and mothers and the effect on their children when they are grown.
Here’s a summary:

In short, if a father does not go to church, no matter how faithful his wife’s devotions, only one child in 50 will become a regular worshipper. If a father does go regularly, regardless of the practice of the mother, between two-thirds and three-quarters of their children will become churchgoers (regular and irregular). If a father goes but irregularly to church, regardless of his wife’s devotion, between a half and two-thirds of their offspring will find themselves coming to church regularly or occasionally.

A non-practicing mother with a regular father will see a minimum of two-thirds of her children ending up at church. In contrast, a non-practicing father with a regular mother will see two-thirds of his children never darken the church door. If his wife is similarly negligent that figure rises to 80 percent!

The results are shocking, but they should not be surprising. They are about as politically incorrect as it is possible to be; but they simply confirm what psychologists, criminologists, educationalists, and traditional Christians know. You cannot buck the biology of the created order. Father’s influence, from the determination of a child’s sex by the implantation of his seed to the funerary rites surrounding his passing, is out of all proportion to his allotted, and severely diminished role, in Western liberal society.

A mother’s role will always remain primary in terms of intimacy, care, and nurture. (The toughest man may well sport a tattoo dedicated to the love of his mother, without the slightest embarrassment or sentimentality). No father can replace that relationship. But it is equally true that when a child begins to move into that period of differentiation from home and engagement with the world “out there,” he (and she) looks increasingly to the father for his role model. Where the father is indifferent, inadequate, or just plain absent, that task of differentiation and engagement is much harder. When children see that church is a “women and children” thing, they will respond accordingly—by not going to church, or going much less.

Curiously, both adult women as well as men will conclude subconsciously that Dad’s absence indicates that going to church is not really a “grown-up” activity. In terms of commitment, a mother’s role may be to encourage and confirm, but it is not primary to her adult offspring’s decision. Mothers’ choices have dramatically less effect upon children than their fathers’, and without him she has little effect on the primary lifestyle choices her offspring make in their religious observances.
Her major influence is not on regular attendance at all but on keeping her irregular children from lapsing altogether. This is, needless to say, a vital work, but even then, without the input of the father (regular or irregular), the proportion of regulars to lapsed goes from 60/40 to 40/60.

You can read the whole essay here.

>Meditation on the Text of the Week

>Streams of Mercy, Never Ceasing

But the lovingkindness of the Lord is from everlasting to everlasting on those who fear Him, and His righteousness to children’s children, to those who keep His covenant and who remember His precepts to do them.
Psalm 103: 17-18

Psalm 103 is one of the best loved Psalms amongst the faithful. It speaks of the mercies of God, the forgiveness of sins, His redemption of His people, and His pardon. It speaks of all of these in such exuberant terms. It declares that these wonderful blessings from God’s hand are not rare, scarce or niggardly, but abundant, full, rich and overwhelming. God does not bestow His mercy or His favour as one might add a smidgin of spice to a meal. He pours it out in a profusion that overwhelms and astounds.

We are told that as high as the heavens are above the earth, so vast is His lovingkindness towards those who fear Him. As far removed as the east is from the west, so far has He removed our sins from us. His compassion is such that He always keeps in mind that we are as weak children, like ephemeral dust. He never forgets nor grows impatient with the frailty of our human condition. (Psalm 103: 12—14)

The profuse abundance of His mercies and goodness manifests itself in one particularly glorious way. The frailty of our lives means that they are soon over. We are little more than a temporary flowering of a wild plant. It blooms in beauty, but within hours is fading; the wind blows and there is suddenly nothing left. (Psalm 103: 15) But God’s mercy upon us has not ceased, even though we have ceased to be upon earth. His mercies flow to our descendants who remain upon the earth after us, to our children and their children. The fact of God’s grace overflowing also to one’s children and to their grandchildren is a central part of the abundance and outpouring of overwhelming richness of God’s mercy. It is so great that it cannot be contained or restrained to one generation—as our text declares.

We find this truth to be a “mouth-stopper”. The everlasting aspect of the mercies of God is not just that we as individuals depart this planet at death and are ushered into the presence of God. Now this is certainly true as Scripture elsewhere plainly declares. But that is not what the Psalmist has in view here. The “everlasting” nature of God’s mercies has to do with their flowing down not just to me, but to children’s children, to my descendants.

Now, of course, this necessitates that one’s children and grandchildren in their day and generation are faithful, repentant believers, who fear God and keep His covenant, and who remember His precepts and commandments so as to keep them. (Psalm 103:18). For God’s mercies and pardon and forgiveness flow only to those who believe upon Him and entrust themselves to Him. But such faithfulness and such responsiveness is also a gift from God. It comes about as children and grandchildren are first regenerated by the Holy Spirit, then are granted the gift of faith.

When God draws near to a people and overwhelms them with His goodness and love there are inevitable and indubitable signs of His presence. One of the clearest evidences is found in one’s children and children’s children walking faithfully before the Lord, keeping His covenant. It is a clear indication that we have been overwhelmed by His grace and lovingkindness.

Now, here is a strange thing. If parents believe God and receive with humility the promises contained in our text, it will affect everything they do with their children and grandchildren. They will always expect and require faithful and believing responses on the part of their offspring. They will not tolerate the works, attitudes, or fruits of unbelief. They will discipline their children unto fear and reverence of the Lord. These become the very streams and riverbeds created by God along which His mercies pour down upon our descendants.

And we, for our part, cry out with David, “Bless the Lord, O my soul—and all that is within me bless His holy name.”

>The Techtonic Plates Shift in Geo-politics

>Things Have Changed and We Are Responsible

We have posted several articles on the emergence of China as a leading, if not increasingly dominant global political power.

China recently executed a British citizen convicted of drug trafficking. It is claimed that he suffered from a bi-polar mental disorder and so was an easy mark for recruitment as a drug mule. The British government has reacted angrily to the execution. China abrasively told the UK government to “pull its head in”.

Chinese stridency–previously uncharacteristic–reflects how rapidly the balances of global political power have shifted. Consider the following report from Christopher Bodeen, published in the NZ Herald.

Beijing’s insistence in carrying out the death sentence reflects both the communist government’s traditional distrust of foreign interference and its newfound power to resist Western pressure.

“We express our strong dissatisfaction and opposition to the British accusation,” Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Jiang Yu told reporters at a regularly scheduled news conference. “We urge the British side to correct its wrongdoing to avoid causing damages to bilateral relations.”

Note carefully the tone and frame of this response by the Chinese Foreign ministry. The implication is clear–if Britain does not shut up, it will be the worse for them. Not for China.

What is now dawning on the West (far too late, of course) is that they have little or no leverage any longer over China.

But with its rising global economic and political clout, China appears increasingly willing to ignore Western complaints over its justice system and human rights record. And as it relies more and more on China’s cooperation to solve global problems – from the recession to climate change – the West has few ways to exert pressure on Beijing.

China’s leaders “feel freer than their recent predecessors to disregard world pressures,” said Jerome Cohen, an expert on China’s legal system at New York University School of Law.

Whereas in the past, the West may have held out its approval as a carrot for China to improve its record on human rights, analyst Kerry Brown said now countries like Britain are now the ones eager to maintain good relations.

“There is a feeling that we have very limited leverage on China. We have to pick our territory where we can have an impact,” said Brown, a China expert at the Chatham House think tank. “It’s becoming more complicated by the day.”

Clearly a new age has dawned–at least in a global geo-political sense. The Scriptures say that the borrower becomes the lender’s slave. The twin debts racked up now for decades in the UK, the US, and Europe of balance of payments deficits and fiscal deficits are a direct outcome of the politics of consumption, of using other peoples’ money to sustain an unsupported living standard. This has meant, in a nutshell, that China has funded the sybaritic self-indulgence of the West. With the “developed” world deeply in hock to China, the latter is now making it clear that the West must now learn to dance to China’s tune, not the reverse.

Moreover, the West has manufactured a pseudo-global crisis: man caused global warming. The unintended consequence of this has been a self-imposed monastic-like restriction upon economic growth and energy exploitation in the West. The self-imposed nonsense of needing to reduce emissions of carbon-dioxide has resulted in the self-abnegation of the West before China. The West is now little more than a mendicant friar pleading for a little consideration.

The point is that there was nothing inevitable about this development: it has been entirely self-caused. When the electorates in the West decided that it was OK for their governments to borrow and steal to sustain a standard of living to which they were not entitled, the outcome was inevitable. It was all going to collapse. It was just a matter of time.

The once mighty West is well on its way to becoming little more than a whimpering lap dog. Unbelief has no-one to blame but itself. When a nation decides to break the Covenant of Grace, the fall of the curses of that Covenant becomes inevitable. The only real long-term hope is that men and women throughout the West turn back to the God of the fathers, humbling themselves before Him.

>Meditation on the Text of the Week

>Singing a New Song

Now, if we have died with Christ, we believe that we will also live with Him.
Romans 6:8

The Pauline phrase “in Christ” and its parallels has provoked a voluminous library of writings. Theologians have used the phrase “mystical union” to speak of this relationship–a phrase which, we confess, has provoked discomfort over the years. There ought to be nothing mystical about the Christian faith, at least in the platonic sense of the word. Yet there has been a stubborn strain of platonic paganism which has been woven into the fabric of the Church down through the centuries.

The Thomist notion of the “beatific vision” is a classic example where, supposedly, one ascends towards God and reaches the point where all theology, all rational reflection, all language, well–in a word–all that is human ceases to distort and distract, and effectively one is transformed into a new being, as one sees God. Ironically and cheekily, one could suggest that Aquinas believed that as he ascended into the presence of God, he would pass from being an Aristotelian to a Platonist. But regardless, he was far too indebted to pagan Greece to be a reliable guide in these things.

On the other hand, too many Protestant theologians have similarly flirted with pagan Greek constructs and wittingly, or unwittingly, drawn upon them to distort the teaching of Scripture. Referring to being “in Christ” as a “mystical union” is just one instance.

Of course, you could probably reconstruct the idea into something more biblical. A good place to start would be to compare our union with Adam because being “in Adam” is prior to and in some senses and for a time runs parallel to our being in Christ. Before we cast ourselves up into the heavenlies, as it were, we would do well to ground ourselves in the historical.

Our union with Adam is real and palpable; its effects and fruits all too tangible. Of course we have never sat down and had a conversation with Adam; what he looked like is unknown, but the fact that we do not know whether his eyes twinkled when he smiled is irrelevant. Our union with Adam and our being in Adam has shaped the entirety of our lives; it has defined who and what we are; it has controlled our thoughts, words, and deeds; it has constructed us. Now, of course, Adam has long since departed this earth, even as Christ has long since departed, but our mystical union with Adam continues to this very day.

If we ask why and how this can be–why every human being born after Adam by ordinary generation–has been conditioned, shaped, and constructed by him, the answer is immediately to hand. This has happened by the higher decree and command of God–and His Word, after all, creates out of nothing and shapes and conditions the things that are. God decreed that Adam’s sin would be imputed to all mankind: therefore, our natures were corrupted by his first sin and its guilt, and from this all personal corruption and sinfulness has flowed. Every day we experience just how real and palpable our being “in Adam” is.

Christ comes forth as the second, new, and last Adam. Just as with the first Adam, God gives Him a people, united to Him by the decree and command of God. Just as with the first Adam, His actions and work shape entirely His people. They inherit His work; they are reshaped, reconditioned, reinfluenced, remoulded, reconditioned and remade. To be in Christ means, at root, a union where we are reconstituted after Him, such that all His actions and works are attributed to us, and consequently, we are utterly transformed over time to be like Him. Thus, His sinless life is imputed to us; His death; His resurrection; His ascension; and His session. Just as with the first Adam, these imputations affect our being from the inside out and from the outside in. They change us and transform us. The reality of the union is underscored by our text: “we have died”, we “will live” with Him. The end result is that when all is finished and completed and perfected, and when heaven has come down to earth, we will be like Him in both His death and resurrection, having been utterly and completely transformed to be like Him, for we shall see Him as He actually is.

To be in Christ means that we will have inherited all of His work, merit, and blessings because He is our covenant head; we are His people, and He has won and worked these things for us. And, we are told, eye hath not seen nor ear heard how great those blessings will be–not because they are beyond human description or conception per se, but because the greatness of them is beyond imagination at this point in our experience. When we see them and when we experience them in their fullness, when we finally know fully what He has won for us, we will be rendered speechless. But then the minds will begin to conceive, the words will flow, the hymns of praise will lift, and the songs of joy will ring out.

As we discover more and more of what our Saviour has done, and what it means to be in Him, the oft recurring phrase (or its equivalent) in heaven upon earth will be, “You are kidding!”

Thanks be to God for His unspeakable gift, even Jesus, our Lord.

>ChnMind 2:18 Households in Covenant

>Jerusalem Signified By Households-in-Covenant

The institution of the family has been under sustained attack throughout most of Church history. Prior to the Enlightenment, many of the influences which undermined the family came from within the Christian Church itself. After the Enlightenment, as the West began its long march into its post-Christian utopia, the attacks upon the family came increasingly from the institutions of society at large: the legal codes, the courts, the schools, and the increasingly influential rights-based secular philosophies.

As God’s Kingdom comes progressively upon the earth, the Spirit will restore the Family to its pivotal role within Jerusalem. Christian parents and households will once again take up place, assuming responsibilities and duties long since occluded and neglected.

Central here will be a recovery of the biblical and redemptive reality that the most basic and fundamental entity in God’s Kingdom upon earth is not the individual human heart or soul. Rather, the most fundamental “building block” is the “householded” human soul. God does not establish His covenant of redemption with isolated, atomistic, individuals—but with individuals and their households. In this regard, Abraham is very significant. God made a covenant with Abraham (Genesis 12: 1—3), but that covenant was not with Abraham as an isolated individual soul: the covenant embraced Abraham and his entire household (wife, servants, and eventually Isaac). And so it has ever been.

God’s grace and mercy flows within household walls and along household lines. As His mercy flows, the Family institution will again take up its true household responsibilities. Amongst these is the primary duty of nurturing children so that they grow in favour with God and man. It is primarily within the household-under-covenant that the faith is transmitted to the next generation and that children grow up having been disciplined in faith and obedience to our Lord.

One sign of the recovery of the Family to be what it is meant to be—one sign of the increasing presence of God’s Kingdom upon earth—is when we hear young adults say that they have always believed in Christ, and that they can never remember a time when they did not call upon Him in faith and repentance. Such Family power and experience tells us that the Kingdom is present indeed.

A second aspect of the recovery of the importance and role of the Family is when it becomes normal for parents to view their role as including a responsibility to train their children for useful service in God’s Kingdom. Nurturing requires education of the mind. For far too long Christian households have assumed they can safely leave the education of their children to the State. Of course Athens insists on its prior right and authority to educate all children in the land. But this is a gross violation of God’s proscriptions and prescriptions for the State, as we shall see in due time. It is an assault upon the Family’s integrity within the Kingdom.

Christian households, covenanted to God, must never cede their duties to educate their children to the State—or to the Church, for that matter. The Family, of course, will ordinarily employ specialist teachers or utilise schools to help them fulfill their responsibilities. But the responsibility to see that one’s children are educated appropriately and properly, and the duty to ensure that one’s children are trained for appropriate service in God’s Kingdom, cannot be delegated or denied. God has entrusted our children to us, and will require an accounting from us—not from the Education Department.

Moreover, the kind of education given by Jerusalem’s households is, in principle, radically different from the kind of education a non-Christian household, or the State, will provide. The Christian household is to teach and train its children coram Deo—before the Face of God—so that they learn of the world as it truly is. Every particle of being exists for God and is under His command. So the Word of God, the constitutional document of the Kingdom, is to be brought to bear upon all of life and all knowledge—in fact, upon the entire culture of the household. All knowing, all learning is through the prism of Scripture. God alone provides the foundation of truth and knowledge. As Augustine put it, one believes, in order to understand.

This has always been the case—and it has always been opposed and denied by Athens and all Unbelievers, who would see all knowledge and all learning through the prism of the autonomy of Man as the foundation and measure of all things. We have genuinely Christian households when the following die is being pressed upon the family:

Hear O Israel! The Lord is our God. The Lord is One! And you shall love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your might. And these words, which I am commanding you today, shall be on your heart; and you shall teach them diligently to your sons and shall talk of them when you sit in your house and when you walk by the way and when you lie down and when you rise up. And you shall bind them as a sign on your hand and they shall be as frontals on your forehead. And you shall write them on the doorposts of your house and on your gates.
Deuteronomy 6: 4—9

Thirdly, we will see the Kingdom of God coming amongst us as Christian families once again take up their responsibilities for welfare and the care of their immediate and extended households.

The Christian household-in-covenant is to impart faith, it is to teach and train, and it is to provide and protect. Jerusalem is ever marked out from Athens by its families: their dignity, their authority, and their power. Godly families are central and essential to the success and spiritual power of Jerusalem in the earth.

We will now turn, in forthcoming posts, to the role and responsibility of the state within Jerusalem.

>ChnMind 1.29 Foundations in Genesis

>Old Abe–Jerusalem’s Most Venerable Founding Father

The Covenant with Abraham

Any and every world-view inevitably has a philosophy of both the past and the future. In fact, ask a person their view of the past, their philosophy of history―whether formal or informal―and one can pretty much discern immediately whether he or she is a citizen of Jerusalem or of Athens, and if of Athens, the particular idolatry to which he is wedded.

With respect to the mind of a Christian, our view of the past and our philosophy of history is not latent; it is explicit. While Christians are profoundly future orientated, their beliefs, hopes and aspirations for the future are grounded upon certainties imbedded in the past. In particular, they are grounded upon the great redemptive, saving acts of God in His Incarnate Son, Jesus our Lord, Who was born of the virgin Mary, suffered under Pontius Pilate, was crucified, dead, and buried, Who descended into hell, but Who rose again from the dead on the third day and ascended into heaven, where He sat (and sits to this day) at the right hand of God, whence all enemies in the immaterial realms and upon the earth are being progressively placed under His feet.

But the history of Jerusalem goes back farther than the fullness of time when Jesus Christ came forth, born of a woman. His coming forth did not occur in a conceptual or historical vacuum. The framework of His advent into the human race was given two millennia previously, when God made a covenant with a wandering Aramaean, named Abram, later called Abraham.

Not only did Jesus come forth in the terms of that covenant, He came to keep and fulfil the obligations of God’s oath to Abraham and his descendants. Eventually, when Christ arose, entered the heavens and poured forth the Spirit of God upon His people, so that His salvation began to reach to the ends of the earth, including the Gentiles, He declared that those who had formerly been strangers and exiles, outside and afar off from God, were grafted into the covenant made with Abraham. Thus, Gentiles were called sons of Abraham, heirs according to promise (Galatians 3: 28,29).

Therefore, from the time of Abraham onwards, God’s dealings with man, which are both the crucible and the flame of all human history, have been according to the terms of His covenant with Abraham.

What, then, is a covenant? It is a formal structured bond, whereby God promises to act a in a certain way toward Abraham and his descendants, and swears by Himself (since there was nothing higher that possibly could be invoked) that He would perform what He had promised. Abraham for his part was commanded to live and act in a certain way towards God. Above all else, it was expected that Abraham and his descendants would trust God and believe in Him. This believing in God and His promises covenanted to Abraham resulted in Abraham and his descendants being justified or reckoned as righteous (sinless) before God, and therefore recipients of eternal life.

Thus, we are told in Genesis 15:6, as the Lord and Abraham entered into a formal covenant making ceremony, that Abraham believed in the Lord, and consequently He reckoned it to him as righteousness. And Paul the apostle of the Lord confirms that to this day both Jews and Gentiles who believe truthfully in the Lord are likewise reckoned as righteous before the Lord. (Romans, chapters 4 & 5) Being reckoned as righteous, they inherit the Kingdom of God, the recreated heavens and earth, and eternal life.

The covenant with Abraham, then, sets out the terms and conditions of all human history, the entirety of our course and our existence. This includes not only those who dwell in Jerusalem, but also all who dwell in Athens, the City of Unbelief, insofar as they are being conditioned, shaped, and dealt with in terms of God’s oaths and promises to Abraham, whether they recognize it or not. This is made evident in Genesis 12: 3 where the Lord says to Abraham: “I will bless those who bless you and the one who curses you I will curse.”

The key covenant documents with respect to Abraham in Genesis are Genesis 12:1―3; Genesis 15; and Genesis 17: 1―14. As redemptive history unfolds, these texts are augmented, enlarged, expanded, and developed. They reached their final development and augmentation in the Person and work of Christ Jesus, the Lord incarnate, Who declared that all along Abraham had looked forward and rejoiced to see Jesus day―and that he did see it (in faith) and was glad. (John 8:56)

The key elements of the covenant with Abraham include:

1. The requirement to leave his father’s house, which was a house of idol worshippers.
2. The promise that Abraham would become a great nation
3. That God would bless him and would make his name great, so that he in turn would be a blessing to others to the extent that all the families of the earth would eventually be thus blessed by the Lord.
4. Abraham’s descendants would be more numerous than the stars of the heavens.
5. The covenant would be entered into by the Lord not only with Abraham, but his descendants after him, as an everlasting covenant.

The universal reach of the covenant promise is breathtaking. In fact, Paul’s commentary upon it was that Abraham would possess and inherit not just the land of Canaan, but the whole world (Romans 4: 13) which corresponds with the risen Christ’s command to go forth and disciple all the nations of the earth.

Since the covenant with Abraham is so foundational, such that even the entrance of our Lord incarnate into human history, is according to its structures, terms, promises, and goals, it is helpful to keep in mind some key characteristics of the covenants God makes with His people.

1. God’s covenant defines His relationship to us, and our relationship to Him.
2. God’s covenant always runs in the lines of generations (which is why the families and households of Jerusalem are so important).
3. God’s covenant has always been built around the blood He provides.
4. God’s covenant has a legal aspect, but it is also a relationship far deeper and closer than anything which law could circumscribe.
5. God’s covenant is always given with conditions.
6. The Newer Covenant is the Older Covenant all grown up.
(Our thanks to Pastor Steve Schlissel of Messiah’s Covenant Community Church, Brooklyn, New York for this helpful summary.)

There are two cities in the world: the Jerusalem, the City of Belief, and Athens, the City of Unbelief. The constitutional documents of Jerusalem are the Scriptures of the Older and Newer Testaments, and in particular, her charter or founding documents are the great covenant texts which were issued first in the days of Abraham, and which were completed and culminated in the history, deeds, and revelation of the Lord Jesus Christ, King of all kings, and Lord of all lords.

These documents confirm that Jerusalem will expand and grow and fill the whole earth, as the faith of Abraham and his descendants spreads from heart to heart, parent to child, nation to nation through the agency of the life giving Spirit of the Lord. This is the essence of Jerusalem’s philosophy of history. It is the only true Universal History.

To Athens is left the detritus of a fractured world, chaotic, tumultuous, a ceaseless sea of doubt, fear, uncertainty and death. To Athenians we say, ” Come out, leave that city, for why would you prefer to die, son or daughter of Adam? The gates of Jerusalem are still wide open, though they will not always be. You would be welcomed with great joy and much celebration, for there is not one citizen of Jerusalem who has not likewise departed Athens and its living death, and walked before you through those ancient gates wherein the Lord Himself dwells.”

>Meditation on the Text of the Week

>The Evidence of God Amongst Us

For I have chosen him, in order that he may command his children and his household after him to keep the way of the Lord by doing righteousness and justice; in order that the Lord may bring upon Abraham what He has spoken about him
Genesis 18:19

One of the surest signs that a separation has taken place between the Lord and His people is when their children grow up denying the way of the Lord, and no longer walk in righteousness and justice. The heart of the covenant that the Lord makes with us is that the believer is both called and enabled to “command his children and his household after him.” When the heart of the covenant does not play out—that is when parents are unable to command their children to walk in the Lord’s ways—it is grievous indeed.

When our children grow up walking in the faith and obedience of their fathers, the Lord’s favour is upon us. As a result of successive generations of children rising in their day to serve the Lord, as their parents did before them, the promises of the Lord and the future He has laid out for His people and His kingdom will surely come to pass. Thus God’s declaration to Abraham in Genesis 18:19. Faithful children are the necessary means by which the promise is to be fulfilled.

The question of, to whom do the children belong, has become a deeply contentious issue in our day. Athens, that City of Unbelief, declares and asserts that all children ultimately belong to the State. Parents are mere temporary and easily redundant guardians, who must stand aside whenever the State makes claims upon the children. The State regards all parents to be essentially foster parents in role and function. The State believes itself to be the ultimate parent; it claims an authority higher than all parents to ensure that children are fed, housed, clothed, educated, and protected. The Unbelieving community, for its part, unanimously endorses this dogma. It is the undoubted humanist faith.

Underneath, there is a more subtle and sinister dynamic—a conspiracy in which Unbelievers are mere willing tools. The Lord has made it clear that whether His blessings and His promises come to pass is contingent, dependent upon whether His people command their children and their households after them, and whether they succeed in raising them to walk in faithful obedience. Satan, that Adversary of old, therefore seeks always to undermine parents and the Christian family. A key tactic is to have Unbelievers assert with all vigour that children belong not to parents, but to the community of Unbelief, represented by the State.

The truth, however, is this: children belong to the Lord, not to man. They are His. The Lord has entrusted children to their parents for a time, for their nurture, training, and instruction. He makes every parent responsible to ensure that these entrusted children grow up keeping the ways of the Lord. That is the reason why the Lord has chosen us, the parents, according to our text. Such is our calling and responsibility.

Since Satan is a vanquished foe, a mere paper tiger, whom the Lord Jesus cast out at the Cross, his schemes and conspiracies are powerful only amongst his willing and easily-led servants—those conditioned to Unbelief. But his schemes are empty and vanity amongst the Lord’s people, for they are animated and protected by the Spirit of God Himself—and greater is He who is in them, than he who is in the world.

Therefore, as we live in faith, as we humble ourselves before the Lord and His commandments and His righteousness and His justice, as we lift up our voices in prayer for our children, as we accept our God-given responsibilities toward the Lord’s children entrusted to us, as grandparents take up their responsibilities to their grandchildren, the Lord blesses us, and our households end up walking after us, in our steps of faith. It is part of His great promise to us: “I will be a God to you and to your children after you.”

One of our favorite movies is “A Few Good Men.” At one point, the villain, Colonel Nathan Jessup (Jack Nicholson) heaps scorn on Lieutenant Caffey (Tom Cruise)—a preppy tyro—saying, “You know what you have done? You have just weakened a country today.” So it is every time a household of the Lord raises children to walk after the Lord. The country of Unbelief has been weakened. The Kingdom of God has been magnified. Extending the promises and blessing of the Lord universally over the whole earth has been made more certain.

When godly households are manifested and intergenerational faith is revealed, it is as if the Lord has taken up the words of the poet and addressed them to the lords of Athens: “Look on My works, ye mighty, and despair.” The doom for Athens is certain:

Nothing beside remains. Round the decay
Of that colossal wreck, boundless and bare
The lone and level sands stretch far away.

>Meditation on Text of the Week

>A Glory Too Great to Bear

Let them fear Thee while the sun endures
And as long as the moon, through all generations.
May he come down like rain upon the mown grass,
Like showers that water the earth.
In his days may the righteous flourish,
And abundance of peace till the moon is no more.
Psalm 72: 5-7

It is critical to have the correct perspective on time—and in particular upon the time of God’s Kingdom. Throughout most of the twentieth century the Church remained preoccupied with the “end times.” There was a widespread expectation that the Final Advent of our Lord was nigh, that human history was about to end, and the great final battle of Armageddon was imminent. These ideas, usually tied to the fortunes of the nation of Israel in the Middle East, have now waned somewhat.

It is not uncommon for such speculations to co-incide with dates or times regarded as momentous or significant. The turn of a century is often a favorite. The end of a millennium is usually a doozy. At the close of the first millennium AD, the western church had a widespread expectation of the Final Advent. The pope of the day (Sylvester) presided over a dramatic midnight mass and maintained an all night vigil at the last day of the millennium so that he would not be asleep when the Lord returned. He (along with numerous others) was wrong.

Speculations such as these turn out to be childish fancies, driven more by Christians reading their newspapers (or historical equivalents) than the Scriptures. But they are damaging to the Kingdom in at least three critical ways. Firstly, they all necessitate a wresting and distortion of the teachings of the Scripture. Any theology or “ism” which results in a distortion of the Scripture is both evil and destructive. Secondly, it distracts God’s people from proper, diligent, faithful service. When people become convinced that the world is about to end they are likely to take their eyes off their day to day, year to year, decade to decade responsibilities to God as His servant and steward. Finally, when the speculations do not eventuate a widespread spiritual cynicism results. Those who had been seduced by the speculations risk ending up disbelieving the Bible completely. Others become deeply cynical towards their teachers and leaders.

The imminent end of the world is simply not taught in Scripture. At times when God’s people are more informed by the Bible a “long-haul” view of history comes forth. For example, in 1559 John Knox was corresponding with John Calvin, asking for advice on issues regarding the administration of baptism. Calvin’s reply and advice was based on the truth that the Covenant of Grace would continue for a thousand generations. Calvin used this fact as a premise in his discussion of the particular issue. But the “self-evident” manner in which he did indicated that for Calvin and the leading Reformers, the matter was beyond doubt.

So, let’s think this through. A thousand generations, assuming that a length of generation is around 30 years, indicates that the Covenant of Grace will last at least thirty thousand years. Now this does not indicate the eternal heavenly state, because it is measured by generations. The human race is continuing to marry and bear children. So, since we have now entered the third millennium, we have only just begun. There is roughly at least another 27 millennia to go.

Where did Calvin get this idea from? It is derived from the Ten Commandments (and parallel passages). The Second Commandment forbids making any graven image of God, then: “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, but showing lovingkindness to thousands, to those who love Me and keep My commandments.” (Exodus 20: 5,6)

The parallel passages of Exodus 34: 6,7 and Deuteronomy 7:9 confirm that when the commandment speaks of “thousands” it is not meaning merely “thousands of people” but thousands of generations. Notice the explicitness of the language: “Know therefore that the Lord your God, he is God, the faithful God, Who keeps His covenant and His lovingkindness to a thousandth generation with those who love Him and keep His commandments.”

Note that the manifestation and revelation of the glory of God’s lovingkindness and faithfulness to mankind requires a thousand generations, it is so vast and incredible. Let none be in doubt: the Lord will not short change the time so as to truncate the revelation of the extent and glory of His faithfulness and His covenant keeping.

To us, today, we find ourselves marveling at the glory of God that He would keep covenant with us today, calling us the sons and descendants of Abraham. Yet we are a mere three thousand years later. Nevertheless our mouths are stopped and our hearts almost cease beating as we consider the weight of divine glory that we, three thousand years later, would be called sons and daughters of Abraham, and therefore inheritors of His lovingkindness. What kind of God is this, we wonder? How great can He be?

Imagine the depth, extent, and weight of glory that will be evident by the time the thousandth generation has come forth. It is beyond our ability to comprehend. Eye hath not seen. Ear hath not heard.

Our Text of the Week approaches the question from a different perspective. Psalm 72 is one of the royal Psalms, extolling the reign of God’s King upon earth. Solomon himself was a type of this king. The New Covenant scriptures confirm that it is the Lord Jesus, Who comes forth as David’s greater son, Who is granted this universal throne over all the nations of the earth.

The respect, fealty, and blessedness of His reign is to last as long as the moon—“throughout all generations”. During the days of His reign the days of the righteous will flourish and there will be an abundance of peace till “the moon is no more.” The extent of His reign will cover all the nations of the earth, from sea to sea. All kings will bow to Him; all nations serve Him (Psalm 72: 10,11)

This long, glorious, extensive and universal reign is not an unhistorical reign in the the heavenly realm, for it is a characteristic of His realm that the cries of the needy are heard, the afflicted are helped, the poor and the needy receive His compassion. He rescues their life from oppression and violence; their blood is precious in His sight. There is an abundance of grain; the city will flourish like the vegetation of the earth. His Name will increase as long as the sun shines. The whole earth will be filled with His glory. In other words, the glory of this King and His kingdom comes into human history and captures it, taking it over.

As we look about the world today, the conditions and reality described in this Psalm are far from fulfillment. The Kingdom has made only a small beginning. The full glories of His throne, which will come during the realms of the sun and the moon (that is, before the time they are no more, as described in Revelation 21:23 & 22:5), have yet to be seen.

No, the earth is not about to end. The very greatness of the Lord necessitates that He has to reveal far more profoundly, far more powerfully His glory. It is intrinsic to that revelation that He show mankind the glory of a divine lovingkindness that lasts unto a thousand generations of the human race. It has only just begun. Yet, even now, we can hardly bear it. It is too wonderful for us.

And in the greatness of that revelation, the glory of the Son of Man, Who kept covenant that God’s lovingkindness might last to a thousand generations of sinful men, will shine forth as mankind has never seen it before. The glory that the apostles beheld, the glory as of an only begotten Son, full of grace and truth, will pale in comparison to the glory that is to be revealed upon the earth as His Kingdom comes.

>Youth Crime–‘Tis a Small Matter

>Youth Crime and Gin Lane

Athens has just published the latest statistics on youth crime. Overall, the youth crime rate is steady—which would appear to be good news. However, violent youth crime has risen steadily for the past three years. So—same proportional numbers, but increasingly violent. This implies growing depths of desperation, de-sensitisation and depravity.

Other statistics include:
83 percent of youth offenders are male, but the number of violent female offenders is rising.
50 percent plus are Maori
80 percent of youth offenders have drug or alcohol problems
70 percent are not enrolled in school
Most youth offenders come from dysfunctional and disadvantaged families and lack positive male role models. (NZ Herald, 9th May, 2008)

The top Youth Court judge, Andrew Becroft offered some “very simple suggestions” to combat youth crime: firstly, kids must be provided with good role models; secondly, they must be kept in some form of education for as long as possible.

The first represents a pipe dream. The second incorporates a fallacy. So much for “very simple suggestions.”

Athens has no meaningful answers or solutions. It will dance its dervishes forever around the fire—and it will temporarily feel better for the sweat and effort—but no solution or change will be at hand.

Let us deconstruct these “very simple suggestion”. The first calls for providing kids with good role models. As the Judge acknowledged, most of the youth offenders come from broken homes and have never had a good role model to which they could look. They come from blended families, where adults are constantly moving in an out of sexual relationships with one another. By the time the children are two or three, irremediable damage is done.

The parents, the two people commanded and ordained by the Living God to provide abiding values and verities (truth, honour, respect, loyalty, love, tenderness, care, order, structure, and discipline upon which one can rely) have likely changed several times. The child has probably heard endless wrangles, fights, tantrums, screaming fits, cursing, and blasphemy. It will have witnessed alcohol and drug abuse. The child will have been serially passed from adult to adult and he will have intuitively learned that he is just an objectified thing. He will have picked up that it is an appendage at best, a nuisance at worst.

In most cases, the child will have been born for the economic advantage of his mother—under the DPB, income will rise as a result of having another child.

The child’s world view will have been set by age two or three, such that everything thereafter will be interpreted according to that world-view. So, now, let’s meet the new role model which “someone” is going to provide. Immediately and instinctively the child will respond to this role model as one more transient influence in his life. Therefore, while the community or state might anoint him/her as a role model, the child already has its own view of role models, and the two views are diametrically opposed. Unless the child changes his world-view, the expectations of the community for the positive influence of the role model will be hopelessly dashed.

We would hazard a guess that whatever role models the community might provide, they will be transitory and temporary—just one more damn thing after another in the child’s life. By now the child will have learned irrevocably that this transient, temporary, changing flux of existence is the real world. Everything will be interpreted accordingly. The child grows up thinking that the world just is, it happens, whatever will be will be. There are no verities that will bind the world for the next one thousand years, around which you can build your life, structure your existence, plan for the future, or establish your line.

By the time the child becomes an adult—co-inciding with the assumption of an adult’s physical strength, exponentially increased by the opportunity to band together with peers into both formal and informal gangs—the ethos of “whatever will be will be” elides normally and naturally into sociopathic behaviour, crime, living for the moment, doing what lies at hand, and let the Devil take the consequences.

Then, let’s think about the role models Athens is going to throw up. Athens will only put forward the role models which reflect its own religious position. In order for the role model to have any chance of influencing the child he will have to have a strong, clearly defined set of principles that touch everything and which will be so clearly and strongly advanced to the child that they will have at least the prospect of counteracting the acute relativistic world view in which the child already operates.

But Athens itself is an acutely relativistic world. There are no ultimate rights or wrongs in Athens—only social conventions. So the kind of role models which Athens will approve are those who, at best, will be allowed to say to the child—do this, or don’t do that, because society likes this, but does not like that. But the child will have already worked out that the world consists of the temporary serial imposition of someone else’s prejudices or preferences. The upshot will be that the only kind of role models Athens will tolerate in the child’s life are those who will systematically reinforce the child’s world view. There is no right and wrong—there are only power complexes.

The second “simple solution” is to keep the children in education as long as possible. This is just one more tedious example of the fallacy of reductio ad educatum. This is a fallacy of relevance. Education has little or no relevance to a child who has already been so conditioned that they are un-educable. This solution represents Athens wringing its hands and in effect demonstrating that it has no solutions. The appeal to education makes middle class liberals and elites feel good because no doubt they call upon their experience of how education assisted them and developed them. But it is actually worthless. Moreover, it will make the situation far worse.

It is not hard to imagine what happens when a child with a radically relativised world-view is sent to school. Yes, you have guessed it. The child regards school as one more succession of influences that are meaningless and will pass. It is one more imposition that has no meaning or significance. It will soon be replaced by another influence or experience. School is just one more damn thing after another. From the time the child first steps foot in the school he will be disengaged.

To be educated in any sense that will result in meaningful lifetime change requires that knowledge be both structured and ordered (which in itself is a violation of the child’s world view to begin with) and which requires that the child enter into the discipline of learning to master the tools of learning that it can take on out into life. But in most cases the heart of the child is already damaged beyond repair.

To keep such a person in school will only generate a sense of frustration and anger—for increasingly the growing child will regard successive years of schooling as a waste of time and of little or no meaning. To be kept at it will only breed resentment and anger. Which is why, of course, 70 percent of children involved in youth crime are no longer attending school. Despite compulsory education laws they dropped out long ago. In truth, they were never enrolled. They may have physically spent some time in the class room, but in heart and mind they were never there.

Since Athens is so bankrupt and impotent, what does Jerusalem offer? Jerusalem represents a solution which is offensive to Athens—and which we expect Athens will resist to its dying breath.

Jerusalem says you will not redeem and restore the children unless you are first successful in redeeming and restoring the parents. But, we hear you say, the parents are too far gone. Is it not significant that the solutions being trumpeted by Athenians have clearly capitulated on this point? They assume that something must be done to counteract the already destructive influence of utterly negligent parents in the lives of children—and all their solutions sideline and ignore the parents, and represent an attempt to replace the parents in one way or another (role models, schools, etc).

But Jerusalem knows that any plans or programmes that ignore the vortex of the Covenant God has made with humanity is doomed to failure. That Covenant is not between God and individual human beings, but between God and “familiated” human beings. God deals ordinarily with people in and within families. Whakapapa is an essential construct within the the Covenant of Grace. God says to Abraham: “I will be a God to you and to your children after you.” Consequently the family is the most powerful socialising agent, for good or evil, in the life of a child. Nothing will ever change that. To change the evil socialisation effects that lead to youth crime and a host of other problems, you have to change families, which means you have to change parents.

Moreover, the change must be from the inside out; it must be root and branch. Only the liberating, transforming power of the Gospel of Jesus Christ can bring that change. But once the change has occurred, once a parent has been born again by the Spirit of God, intense and constant work on behavioural patterns needs to take place. If parents were to change in this way, within a generation the problem would have largely dissipated.

So Jerusalem suggests that Athens invite Jerusalem to provide an army of preachers of the Gospel of Christ to this terribly unfortunate underclass. Jerusalem suggests that Athens gives a Macedonian call to Jerusalem: “Come over here and help us.” Jerusalem suggests that Athens work to take away every obstacle and hindrance, and meanwhile let Jerusalem do its work without interference, rules, regulations and bureaucratic meddling. And Jerusalem also demands that Athens provide no money, no financing for this great rescue mission. We know that “he who pays the piper calls the tune” and Jerusalem serves the Risen Lord, not ungodly Athenian mammon.

Now, as noted above, we do not expect that Athens will issue that invitation. It would be too close to putting the stake into Athens own heart. But maybe Maori would consider it. We learn that at least 50 percent of youth offending is from Maori. Maybe Maori would have the humility coupled with the depth of concern to issue the call.

In the eighteenth century, the Great Awakening occurred in England and the eastern seaboard of North America. Spearheaded by the Wesleys and George Whitfield, the Great Awakening represented (in large part) the English underclass turning to Christ in response to the clear, clarion, preaching of the Gospel. Many of the converts were from Gin Lane (immortalised in Hogarth’s etching) and similar places and were people whose lives had become truly wretched—as wretched as many New Zealand underclass families have now become.


The Wesleys established weekly new convert growth groups that began training the members in methodical, disciplined Christian living. These groups helped people establish Christian disciplines such as Bible reading, prayer, fellowship, giving, thrift. This inculcation of the methods of Christian living through small groups led to them being called Methodists. But the point is that within a generation this afflicted underclass had largely attenuated, if not disappeared. The new Christians began to put their lives back together as they began to live for God, Who alone brought them hope in their degradation.

The “simple solutions” of Athens to increasingly violent youth crime are not solutions at all. They will end up being no more than cruel mockeries and will make the problems worse. The only social utility they have is that they will make Athenian social liberals feel better—but that utility is worthless on any meaningful moral or ethical scale.

Jerusalem’s answer will be mocked and spurned by Athens. But that will not deter us in the least. So it has always been. So it is likely to be for the next two or three generations. But, in the end, God’s Word will be the anvil that breaks up Athens, and a strong refuge for those desperate enough to turn to God when all else has failed.

>ChnMind 1.24 Living in the Shadow of the Great Flood

>The Real Significance of Noah

Much modern interest in Noah and the Noahic flood has centred around the historicity of the event. Did it really occur? is the question. This has been a rather tedious and pointless pre-occupation. Insofar as the discussion has been within Jerusalem, the historicity of the Great Flood has never been questioned. Of course Noah and the Flood were real, historical, space-time events. They were so real that if you had have been there, you could have plucked a whisker from Noah’s beard, and you could have rubbed your hand along the planking of the ark and received a splinter for your troubles and got your hand coated in pitch to boot.

Jerusalem, then, has been more focused upon finding corroborating evidence for a world-wide deluge which catastrophically reshaped the world, and probably the heavens as well. There is an abundance of such evidence to be found. But, within Jerusalem, the evidence corroborates, it does not prove or establish the truth of Scripture. Such is the true spiritual condition of the Believing Mind, which has come to accept that the Living God is the determiner and reference point of all truth.

But where the discussion has occurred within Athens, the historicity of the Great Flood has never been accepted—and never will be. It is excluded from the outset as being possible. Athens insists upon uniformitarianism—by which is meant that the world as it is now is the way it has always been. The search for origins and the study of beginnings must involve no more than a projection of the current knowledge of the world back in time. Even the theory of the “Big Bang”—a pathetic refuge for those who cannot find answers to the origin of the universe—has been developed on the basis of this backward looking ratiocination, moving from the present, reasoning backwards from effect to cause, assuming that the present represents comprehensive and uniform causality from the past.

This is a deeply religious position, and is pretty much universally held in Athens. The Unbelieving Mind of Athens is militantly closed to the possibility of the existence of the Living God; it cannot approach these matters with reasonableness or impartiality, for Athens stubbornly and inveterately assumes the Unbelieving Mind as the ultimate reality in the universe. It refuses to discuss anything with anyone—least of all with a Believer—unless the terms of discussion from the outset presuppose the Unbelieving Mind as the determiner of all truth. So, the Great Flood to the Unbelieving Mind is no more than a childish myth believed by the feeble-minded.

Thus, where the discussion about the historicity of the Great Flood has been intra Jerusalem and Athens it has been an utter and complete waste of time and effort. You simply do not cast pearls before swine. At Contra Celsum we are not interested in debating the historicity of Noah and the Great Flood with Athens. That debate is an Athenian device which requires that God and all His truth be subjected to, and authenticated by, the mind of Unbelieving Man. Which would be to say―it were clearly not true from the outset. We are simply not interested in defending the historicity of Noah and the Great Flood to Unbelievers using their methods and authorities which presuppose that it cannot possibly be true.

As a result of Jerusalem mistakenly wanting to “prove” to Athens that the Great Flood was an historical event, the real and substantial significance of Noah’s Flood for the entire world has been generally lost or occluded.

But let us be clear–because Athenians are slow learners–we are not saying, as do so many false citizens of Jerusalem—fellow travellers who are wolves in sheep’s clothing—that the biblical account of Noah and the Great Flood is symbolic and mythical; that it was never intended to be understood as an historical event, and that its real significance lies in the meanings and interpretations of the myths.

We most certainly assert the historicity of the Ark and the Flood. It is clearly literally and historically true because God tells us of the event and God does not lie. If God were not true, then nothing at all would have meaning. Clearly meaning does exist―we are presupposing the case as we write and you read―in which case we have already presupposed the existence and veracity of the Living God. God establishes our minds; our minds do not establish and authenticate God.

So, laying aside the sophisms and mental parlour tricks of Athens, let us return to the significance of the Flood.

God’s salvation of Noah and His subsequent covenant with Noah and his family is one of the most important passages of the Bible. The covenant God made with Noah still binds God to this day. In it we see something wonderful about God’s faithfulness to Himself, to His creation and to us.

We learn about God’s patience with sinners. We learn about judgment. We learn about God’s sovereign grace to sinners. We learn about God’s mercy in sending His servants to preach His Word that man may turn from his evil ways and live. We see God’s slowness to anger. We see His commitment to the world He has made, His love of the creation, and His faithfulness to it, despite the despoiling work of sinful men. We see how God’s covenant and plan of redemption extends to all of creation. We also learn about baptism for the first time.

All of these truths are repeated and expanded upon throughout Scripture. But we see them all displayed in “seed” form in this amazing period of Noah.

In this part of the Bible, the Lord gives us an overture to the entire epic and drama of redemption. Just as the composer of a great operatic score will use the overture to introduce all the themes of the great work that will follow, so Noah and God’s dealings with him and his family is an overture to everything that has happened since―and will happen in the future. The essence of these realities is found in God making a covenant with Noah. This is the first time in Scripture we read explicitly of God entering into a covenant with His people.

As someone once said, a covenant is a binding obligation by God to be and act in a certain way towards His people. His people are therefore obligated to respond and act in a certain way toward Him. As the Westminster Confession of Faith has it:

The distance between God and the creature is so great, that although reasonable creatures do owe obedience unto Him as their Creator, yet the could never have any fruition of Him as their blessedness and reward, but by some voluntary condescension on God’s part, which He has been pleased to express by way of a covenant.
Westminster Confession of Faith, Chapter 7:1

God’s covenants with man represent a wonderful condescension on the part of God to us. Amongst many other things, the successive covenants of God—all of which are part of one abiding covenant of grace—represent God’s giving to us a heavenly lever which we can use to call upon God to be and act a certain way toward us. “Lord, even as You have said, and covenanted, now we plead with you to act . . .”

In the terms of this great covenant with Noah (sometimes called the Noahic Covenant) we now stand. God still conditions and shapes His dealings with us and with our world in terms of this covenant. While the covenant was actually made with Noah and his family, we are heirs of it and it binds God to His people today―that is, to Jerusalem, the heavenly city. It binds God to act in certain defined ways toward His people. The rest of Scripture, from Noah onward, is the story of how God has kept Noah’s covenant with us.

The world and all human experience was fundamentally altered at the Great Flood. Herein lies its significance to us. As we develop our views about the world and the course of mankind upon the earth, as we begin to add more furniture into the Christian Mind, we must ever do so through the filter and prism of Noah and the Great Flood.

>Sabbath Meditations #4

>The Resurrected Cosmos

The Sabbath Day under the Old Covenant was celebrated weekly on the seventh day. The symbolism is significant and links back to the creation of the universe. For six days God engaged in the work of creation. On the seventh He rested.

Under the Old Covenant the duty of God’s people was to go forth and subdue the creation, be fruitful and multiply, and fill the earth. On the seventh day they rested, and celebrated. They brought all their work before the Lord for His blessing. They enjoyed the wonderful experience of deep communion with the Lord. He walked among them. In corporate gatherings they celebrated the warmth of human community together before God.

The more productive and blessed their labours in the six days previous, the more blessed their sabbath celebration. If, however, they had experienced six days of wearying struggle without much apparent progress, their sabbath was a blessed respite in which they would find solace, nurture, and new strength.

All of these realities and experiences continue to be true for believers under the New Covenant. The basic six days of labour, one day of rest pattern continues. However, there is one very significant change: the day of celebration was changed from the seventh to the first day of the week. The Gospels are all explicit: Jesus rose on the first day of the week; it was the day named subsequently by the apostles as “the Lord’s Day”, and it became the day of holy, blessed, and joyful convocation where God’s people gathered to commune with their risen Lord.

Just like the seventh day sabbath, the symbolism is very significant. In tying the sabbath institution to the first day, it was ever after to be understood as a rest which involves resurrection. This is the sabbath rest which was remains for the people of God. (Hebrews 4:9) We may put it this way. Up until the time of the sacrifice of our Lord and His being raised from the dead, the cosmos was under the realm of creation. From the time of Christ and the accomplishment of His work upon earth, followed by His entering into His perpetual work in heaven, the cosmos has been under the realm of re-creation.

Resurrection—life from the dead. Re-creating all things around the lordship of Christ. In the New Covenant, we re-create before we work. We celebrate resurrection life with Christ, before we go out to bring that life to the world. Our six days of labour are now a work of re-creation of all things into newness of life. The sabbath is a commencement, not a conclusion.

All of these things were implicit amongst the people of God under the Old Covenant, since the Old Covenant was grounded in God’s saving grace, which would be made effective and applicable in the work of Christ. But under the New Covenant these things are explicit—not just because we can far more clearly understand, see, and comprehend the salvation wrought by God in His Son—but also because the whole cosmos has now come under the reign of that grace. Now is the day of salvation unto the whole world.

The entire creation is awaiting its full resurrection into the glory God prepared beforehand. That glory will see all things being summed up in Christ, things in the heavens and things upon the earth. (Ephesians 1:10) That glory is progressively coming to pass as the Lord Jesus brings and replicates His resurrection life upon the earth. Life will be brought out of death, as far as the curse is found. The Son of God appeared—incarnate, crucified, resurrected, ascended, coronated, and enthroned—that He might destroy the works of the Devil. (I John 3:8)

The symbolism of Scripture is never empty or vain. By using and deploying the symbols of the Bible, we enter into the reality symbolised, by faith. Every Lord’s Day, when the covenant people of God cease from work and gather for celebration and worship, they not only symbolise resurrected life, they actually enter into it.

They commence the week before the Throne of God, entering into the new life, the life of God’s Spirit, Who will shape and fructify all their subsequent six days of labour. By our lives, by our work on the subsequent six days we will be bringing life out of death, recreation out of deformation, resurrection out of the grave. We who were dead in our tresspasses and sins have been made alive together with Christ. We go forth to bring that new life, and all its universal implications, to all that God has entrusted to us.

>How Classy are You?

>Jerusalem, An Upper Class City with Cultural Power

In large measure, man creates his own world. Which is to say that the world-view of an individual, or of his covenant-affinity group, largely shapes and calls into being (reifies) the world so that he actually experiences his imaginations and finds it to be the way he thought of it in the first place. Life mirrors back to us according to what we think life is like.

So, at a basic level, if a man harbours bitterness in his heart toward his neighbours, he almost certainly will experience strife, disputes, and bitternesses in his relationships with them. The world feeds back to him what his heart tells him the world is like. Pop psychologists talk about the “power of positive thinking”. We are what we think. The proverb tells us that it is the friendly man who has lots of friends. These are expressions of the same general concept.

Obviously, there are limitations to one’s ability to shape the world. We will be confronted soon enough with physical limitations and natural laws. While I may view myself to be a man who can leap buildings with a single bound, disappointment is sure to follow.

Behind all this, however, is the covenantal governance of the Living God. What we mean by this is that God governs over the world and the affairs of men in such a way that generally men reap what they sow and inherit what they invest. The covenantal governance of God has blessings and curses attached. If you keep God’s commandments and laws (whether self-consciously or unconsciously) you are likely in God’s ordinary governance of life to experience the blessings of the covenant. If you break God’s laws you are likely to experience the curses and bad consequences of your actions.

This is what is happening when we say that a bitter man experiences bitternesses. He has harboured bitterness in his heart, and consequently treated others in bitterness; he will experience bitterness at the hands of others and in his future circumstances. Such is God’s covenantal governance of the world. No-one can escape this fundamental social patterning because it is the Lord Himself Who ensures that men will experience the world as they conceive it to be—which is to say that they will reap as they sow.

There is nothing magical in this: we see it working out all the time. It is so commonplace that oftentimes we do not think about it. But we should, because it is critically important.

The divine modes of governance have two components: the first is intrinsic and is what arises from me and as a consequence my actions; the second is extrinsic and comes out of the blue, as it were. When we speak of God’s judgment and causing people to reap as they have sown we often reflexively think of the second mode—the extrinsic. We imagine notoriously evil people being struck down by lightning or some other catastrophe. We think of Sodom and Gomorrah, of Noah’s flood. We think of war, pestilence, or famine.

The Scriptures clearly teach that extrinsic judgments occur, leading to radical disjunctions of life, culture or nation. But ordinarily they occur at the end of a very long process of degenerate, inveterate wickedness and rebellion. This is clearly the case with the Canaanites, for example. Abraham was told that his descendants would be taken out of the land down to Egypt for four hundred years before they would be brought back under Joshua as God’s army to execute judgment upon the Canaanites, for, said the Lord to Abraham, “the iniquity of the Amorite is not yet complete.” (Genesis 15:16) When Noah was commanded to build the ark, God gave the human race another 120 years opportunity to repent under the preaching of Noah, before the judgment fell (Genesis 6:3).

Thus, extrinsic judgments of calamitous proportion, are rare and take a long time coming, such is the longsuffering of our gracious God. But intrinsic judgments, where individuals and groups are constantly reaping according to the way they have sown, happen all the time, constantly. This is how it pleases our Lord to keep evil restrained, weaken the influence of the Athens, and strengthen His people.

The dynamic of intrinsic judgment is so common and obvious that we do not often think about it. An individual is conditioned to think and act through his family life—whatever that might be. His family life will be reinforced through the covenant-affinity group of his family—which represents the basic motif of “birds of a feather flocking together.” As he grows to adulthood, the conditioned individual will enter covenant-affinity groups which reflect his own conditioning. These groups will reinforce his view of the world. They will powerfully call his world-view into actual experience. So, for example, if his world view is a bohemian or hedonistic “eat, drink and be merry, for tomorrow we die” his covenant affinity group will practise the lifestyle accordingly, and the whole world as they know and experience it will be a realm of living for the appetites of the moment.

Change does happen, but it is rare and isolated. Genuine conversions also occur and people are saved out of the realms of death to life. But this is not the normal pattern, apart from a special outpouring of God’s grace.

The Lord allows the world-view to be worked out through the next three or four generations. By that time, if the people have not repented and turned to the Lord, their line is likely to have died out.

The example above is extreme (although common enough in our day) to illustrate the point. However, many Athenians, by God’s goodness even to unbelievers, are shaped in families where there remains a respect for the basic institutions of life: of families; of marriage, parenthood and children; of respect for authority, life, and property; and so forth. Because of a vague or general outward conformity to God’s covenant law, they benefit from the good consequences that flow. They, too, reap as they have sown. This pattern of Athenian unbelievers who in their lifestyles are relatively more conformed “naturally” to God’s commands through their social conditioning and who, therefore, are allowed to enjoy some of the blessings of the covenant (albeit it superficially and partially) is the mechanism that the Lord employs to keep human society intact and functioning. This is critical because it allows Jerusalem to be nurtured and to grow in the meantime.

Our Lord’s parable of the wheat and the tares is vitally instructive on this point. The tares are to be left to grow in the field, lest if they were torn up, the wheat likewise would be destroyed. The social fabrics, essential to life upon earth, would be torn apart. (Matthew 13: 34—30)

So far the general construct. The Living God is a covenant making and keeping God. His Covenant with man shapes His governance over mankind. As a result of His Covenant, men reap what they sow. People who live in greater conformity to God’s Law are allowed to enjoy some of the blessings that come from (even outward) obedience. Those that set their hearts against God and imagine a totally contrary world are afflicted with the consequences of their foolishness. The most extreme and overt expressions of rebellion against God usually have the consequence of a line dying out by the third or fourth generation.

In his book, The Unheavenly City Revisited, (Boston: Little Brown and Company, 1974) Edward Banfield provides a striking example of this divine governance at work. Banfield is analysing socio-economic classes and the potential of families to move from the underclass to higher socio-economic categories. From his analysis of New York throughout the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, together with the observations and research of others, he argues, firstly, that the factors which are most important in moving people up or down the socio-economic scale are one’s world-view—one’s perspective upon life—and, secondly, within one’s world-view the most important variant is how one regards the future. In particular, it is critical whether one apprehends the future in a short term or long term time frame.

People that prosper, that move up the socio-economic scale, are likely to be those for whom the long term future is vitally important. By long term, Banfield means not only the considerations of one’s older age, but also, and equally importantly, those who contemplate their children and the grandchildren, and shape their lives out of concern for them, even though they may not yet exist.

Those who are moving down the scale to the underclasses, or who are already part of the underclass and will stay there until their line dies out, are those whose view of the future is very short term, who are seeking gratification immediately.

Banfield describes the two “ideal types” as follows: firstly, the “upper class mentality”

The the most future-orientated end of the scale, the upper-class individual expects a long life, looks forward to the future of his children, grandchildren, great-grandchildren (the family line), and is concerned also for the future of such abstract entities as the community, nation, or mankind. He is confident that within rather wide limits he can, if he exerts himself to do so, shape the future to accord with his purposes. He therefore has strong incentives to “invest” in the improvement of the future situation—i.e., to sacrifice some present satisfaction in the expectation of enabling someone (himself, his children, mankind, etc) to enjoy greater satisfaction at some future time. Future orientated culture teaches the individual that he would be cheating himself if he allowed gratification of his impulses (for example, for sex or violence) to interfere with his provision for the future.
(Banfield, p. 57)

Then, he describes the “lower class mentality”:

. . . the lower class individual lives from moment to moment. If he has any awareness of the future, it is of something fixed, fated, beyond his control: things happen to him, he does not make them happen. Impulse governs his behaviour, either because he cannot discipline himself to sacrifice the present for a future satisfaction or because he has no sense of the future. He is therefore radically improvident: whatever he cannot use immediately he considers valueless. His bodily needs (especially for sex) and his taste for “action” take precedence over everything else—virtually over any work routine. He works only as he must to stay alive, and drifts from one unskilled job to another, taking no interest in his work. . . (H)e “doesn’t want much success, knows he couldn’t get it even if he wanted to, and doesn’t want what might help get him success.” Although his income is usually much lower than that of the working-class individual, the market value of his car, television, and household appliances and playthings is likely to be considerably more. He is careless with his things, however, and even when nearly new, they are likely to be permanently out of order for lack of minor repairs. . . .
The lower-class individual has a feeble, attenuated sense of self; he suffers from feelings of self-contempt and inadequacy, and if often apathetic or dejected. . . . In his relations with others he is suspicious and hostile, aggressive yet dependent. He is unable to maintain a stable relationship with a mate; commonly he does not marry. . . .
(Banfield, p. 61,62)

There are many observations that can be made from this characterisation. However, here are some immediate reflections.

1. Notice how in both cases the “upper” and “lower” classes are reaping what they are sewing. Their lifestyles are bringing into existence the very things about life in which they believe. This is a vivid example of God’s covenantal governance at work.

2. The description of the “world-view” of the lower class reads like a present day description of many communities in New Zealand now. Thirty-five years after Banfield was writing, we see the lower class mentality growing in number and place.

3. No amount of money or social welfare or grants or education is going to change the lower class mentality—unless it is met head on and confronted—and even then the prospects of success are not high. Our firm belief is that it is only the Gospel of God’s saving mercy extended in the Lord Jesus Christ that can change the hearts of people who have been brought so low. Throwing money at the lower classes only confirms them in their destructive world-view.

4. Jerusalem is by its animus and nature reflects a true upper class mentality—more closely approximating mankind in his nobility, as God created him to be. Jerusalem has an ethic of self-denial, of service, of considering others more important than oneself. Jerusalem has a time horizon that stretches out through many generations to come. Jerusalem has a commanded obligation to live one’s life for the good of children, grandchildren, and great grandchildren. Therefore, the present is relatively unimportant in comparison with the future. Therefore Jerusalem denies itself and invests and works for the long term good of the future and the generations to come.

Consequently, Jerusalem inherits the blessings of God and the favour of the Lord. But, as always, the doors of the Great City are open, always open, to any that may come.