Sunday, August 17, 2025

The Lead-Up to Romans

1. I've been mulling over for some time how to present biblical material in a way that might engage a broad reader. With Wesleyan Publishing House, I've written books covering the whole New Testament. For example, Paul: Soldier of Peace covers Romans. By happenstance, the title doesn't tell you anything about the book.

I'm proud of those books, although few have bought them. They make good book studies for a small group or Sunday School class. They cover the biblical material broadly rather than in verse by verse detail.

2. I've also produced some "Explanatory Notes." These go verse by verse. Here is one I published with Cascade publishing on the book of Hebrews. But my sense is that most people aren't into a verse by verse analysis. Commentaries of this sort are primarily reference tools that pastors use in sermon preparation or students use when doing exegesis.

Is there a way to meet in the middle? That is the question I've been asking. What would that even look like?

3. For the last few months, I've been working through Mark, aiming at a kind of middle ground. I went chapter by chapter, summarizing them and bringing out any salient issues of interpretation or application. I like the result a lot, although I'm not convinced anyone would buy it. 

But it combines the strengths of the two approaches I've just mentioned. It is more granular than my broader books. It is less detailed than my Explanatory Notes. Still, it is probably too deep for your average Sunday School. I went to a Sunday School class at a church not too long ago. They were reading The Screwtape Letters by C. S. Lewis. It's not a shallow book by any means, but it is in narrative form. That makes deep material more accessible to a general audience. The conversation, though, was very surface level that Sunday.

So, here is an experiment, an attempt to bring the text alive on a deep level using story. There will inevitably be some novelizing, but hopefully only enough to bring out the meaning of the material on a deep level. You can tell me if it works.
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1. Paul was discouraged when he arrived at Corinth late in the year AD56. He was preparing to go to Jerusalem with an offering to the church there. It was a kind of peace offering, as there had often been some tension between him and the Jerusalem church. 

The last time he had spoken with James, James had urged Paul to remember the poor of the city (Gal. 2:10). This offering was to be the fulfillment of his pledge to do so. Paul may have seen it as the fulfillment of prophecy. Isaiah 60:5 talks about the wealth of the nations flowing to Jerusalem at a time of restoration for the city. Paul may have seen his offering as a piece of the end times puzzle.

He apparently had a group of representatives with him from various Gentile (non-Jewish) churches he had planted or had a hand in planting. These included Sopater from Berea in Greece, Aristarchus and Secundus from Thessalonica, Gaius from Derbe in Asia Minor, as well as Tychicus and Trophimus from Ephesus (Acts 20:4). Timothy and Titus were Paul's long time co-workers. Timothy was from Lystra in Asia Minor, and Titus was possibly from that general region as well.

Part of the arrangement was apparently for them to carry the gifts from their churches. He didn't want there to be any charge of impropriety, so the designees from each church stewarded the money entrusted to them (e.g., 2 Cor. 8:19-20). Paul even left open the question of whether he would travel with these representatives (e.g., 1 Cor. 16:3-4).

It's at least possible that some of this money ended up being used to pay for the sacrifices Paul made in Jerusalem with several who had taken a vow (Acts 21:24). James suggests Paul do this to show the Jewish believers in Jerusalem that he keeps the Jewish Law. For Paul, it seemed like an easy enough thing to do.

So, Paul is in Corinth, about to head to Jerusalem with this offering when he writes Romans. As he says in Romans 15:25-27: "But now I am going to Jerusalem to minister to the saints. For Macedonia and Achaia were pleased to make some contribution for the poor among the saints of Jerusalem."

2. At the same time, it's hard not to think Paul was discouraged at this time. The words in Romans 15:23 have a certain heaviness: "Since I now no longer have a place in these regions..." 

Think about Paul's situation. Although Acts omits mention of it, many think it likely that he was imprisoned at Ephesus (cf. 2 Cor. 1:8). I suspect he was more or less banished from the city, which would be part of why he does not go into the city when he comes through again (cf. Acts 20:16-17). After three years at Ephesus, his time there is done. There is "no place" for him there.

And while we can presume his hosts at Corinth were cordial, we have good reason to think that his presence at Corinth was not entirely comfortable either. Yes, he enjoys the hospitality of Gaius (Rom. 16:23). Yes, he has many allies in the church there, people like Sosthenes (1 Cor. 1:1; Acts 18:17) and Chloe's household (1 Cor. 1:11). Perhaps Stephanus and his household are allies as well (1 Cor. 16:15-17).

But Paul has enemies at Corinth too. After nine incredibly harmonius chapters, in 2 Corinthians 10 Paul suddenly goes off the rails. It is like Paul thought everything was peachy with him and the Corinthians only to receive new information. The church is not as submitted to his authority as he thought. Some key individuals have apparently not repented of their sins.

The tone of 2 Corinthians 10-13 is unlike anywhere else in Paul's writing. "I fear lest somehow when I come to you, I might not find you as I wish... lest when I come to you again, God might humble me before you and I might mourn over many who had sinned before and have not repented of their uncleanness and sexual immorality and the sensuality that they practiced" (2 Cor. 12:21).

So it would seem that Corinth, like Ephesus, has "no place" for him either. We do not know what happened in response to Paul's letter to the Galatians. We would hope that they ended up listening to him and not the Judaizers who were trying to persuade them to convert fully to Judaism. While he may have ministered for several years in his home region of Cilicia, he apparently has not gone back much since.  In short, he may be ready to move on.

We do not know if there is any lingering tension over him at Antioch. He had a blow up there less six or seven years previous, after which he soon left the city (Gal. 2:14). While Acts portrays Paul in good relationships with all these places, we should note that to portray such harmony is part of Luke's rhetorical aim. Paul's own writings suggest much more tension.

This is the context of Romans. As Paul senses that the door is closing on his ministry in the east, he looks west.

Saturday, August 16, 2025

The Wesleyan Church 2035 (in honor of Keith Drury)

Two men sit down at a coffee shop. One looks to be in his late 60s. The other is relatively young, maybe in college. The young man has a tablet to take notes on.

Aaron: Thanks for agreeing to meet with me on such short notice. My paper's due tomorrow.

Keith: (with a grin) If I'd have known that, I wouldn't have agreed to the interview. You'll never be successful in ministry if you don't learn to plan ahead and get things done in a timely way.

Narrator: A slight look of horror came over the student's face.

Keith: So, you're writing a paper about the recent history of the Wesleyan movement?

Aaron: Yes, in particular I'm supposed to write about the split that happened recently.

Keith: Well, that's the first thing to get straight. It wasn't a split.

Aaron: What? Isn't there The Wesleyan Methodist Church, The Wesleyan Connection, and one other I can never remember the name of.

Keith: The Wesleyan Holiness Church?

Aaron: Yes, that's it. 

Keith: Yes, and there are also a number of congregations that don't belong to any of these any more.

Aaron: Right. So a split.

Keith: Nope. 

Narrator: The puzzlement on Aaron's face was plain as day. He was a twenty-one year old young man studying to be a full-time minister. It was a rare approach to ministry those days, since most pastors were now co-vocational.

Keith: Let me explain. It wasn't a split. It was a fizzle.

Aaron: A fizzle? What's that?

Keith: OK. Let's go back about ten years, and I'll tell you my interpretation of what happened.

Aaron: That would be great. You're already different than a couple others I've interviewed. But I'm supposed to let you tell the story your way without interfering. So fire away.

Keith: Ten years ago in 2025, America was very divided. You'll remember that Trump was president at that time. Some of the divisions in America were present in the church as well. But those weren't the primary reasons behind the fizzle. They more came into play after the fizzle.

Aaron: You're kind of hurting my brain. Could you back up and start again.

Keith: Sure. Let me start again. 

Ten years ago, there were already cracks in The Wesleyan Church that had been steadily widening. For example, the church had been struggling over the issue of drinking for decades. One wing of the church -- especially large church pastors and younger pastors -- saw a prohibition on drinking as a hindrance to evangelism and church growth. And they just didn't see an absolute prohibition on drinking as biblical. They thought the church's position should be moderation, not total abstinence.

Aaron: That's the position of The Wesleyan Methodist Church, right? 

Keith: Yes, and The Wesleyan Connection. The only one of the three that prohibits drinking now is the Wesleyan Holiness Church. In fact, that's one the main reasons it exists. 

Aaron: Really? I didn't know that. What about homosexuality? Was that part of the cause of the split?

Keith: It wasn't a split. And no. 

It's true that, for a long time, there were voices that warned about The Wesleyan Church splitting over homosexuality. It just was never a real threat. It was more of a fear about something that could happen in the future.

The Global Methodist Church had pulled out of the United Methodist Church over the ordination of gay ministers. And there were many in The Wesleyan Church who warned that The Wesleyan Church might undergo the same split if we didn't "tighten the ship," so to speak. They believed that we were getting more and more liberal. 

Aaron: So, was there ever a group of Wesleyans fighting to affirm homosexuality?

Keith: No, but the fear of it was a crucial element in the dissolution of The Wesleyan Church.

Aaron: Dissolution?

Keith: The fizzle I've been talking about. Have you learned about the "trust clause" yet? 

Aaron: No, what's a trust clause?

Keith: Well, you'll need to learn about it because The Wesleyan Methodist Church put it back in. But it doesn't exist any more in the other two branches of the Wesleyan fizzle. 

For a very long time, the property of local churches was technically owned by the districts they were in. There was a line in the property deed that said it was held "in trust" for the denomination. A local church thus couldn't vote to leave the denomination and take the property with them. And the denomination held authority over the local church.

Aaron: Really? Even if the church paid for the building and all?

Keith: Yes. Part of the idea was that local churches usually had a lot of help getting established. The denomination might invest a lot into a local church and then, if the local church got some new pastor next year who wanted the church to leave with the property, the denomination could lose the church and it wouldn't be fair. There were a lot of churches that left the church with their property in the 1960s.

There was also the desire to make sure local churches didn't start teaching heresy. Owning the property gave the district ultimate control over the church. 

On the other hand, for those afraid the church would drift into accepting homosexuality, there was the fear that the denomination would go liberal and then local churches would be forced to accept homosexuality or lose their property. That's somewhat what happened in the Global Methodist Church.

Aaron: OK. So did the trust clause go away before or after the "fizzle," as you call it.

Keith: Before. It was one of the key steps in the denomination dissolving.

Aaron: I'm still not quite sure what you mean by fizzling or dissolving.

Keith: Maybe it would help if I talked about where most of The Wesleyan Church ended up. That's in The Wesleyan Connection.

Aaron: And they call themselves a "connection" rather than a "church," right?

Keith: Yes. A lot of the larger Wesleyan churches had never really believe in denominations, in my opinion. They were almost a denomination to themselves. 

Aaron: So what exactly is a "denomination"? 

Keith: A denomination is a collection of churches that have an official structure of authority, organization, rules, etc. The local church is part of and under the authority of a larger organization.

Aaron: Like the Wesleyan Methodist Church. 

Keith: Yes, or the Wesleyan Holiness Church.

Both churches have a Discipline. Both churches have general superintendents. Even though the Wesleyan Holiness Church doesn't have a trust clause, it is organized into districts and has district superintendents. In their case, they don't have much teeth if a church wants to leave, which has already happened in a few places.

Aaron: So what does The Wesleyan Connection have? 

Keith: It has a President and Connectional By-Laws. But membership in the Connection is purely voluntary. It lets you participate in certain common goals like the Wesleyan Planters Association. There are benefits to partiipating, but it isn't a denomination per se any more.

Aaron: So how did that happen?

Keith: Well, like I said, there were many who thought that we should be more like they saw the New Testament church. And they liked to say that John Wesley started a movement and that the early Wesleyan churches were part of a movement. They became organized churches later. 

These voices thought we too would be more biblical if we were a Spirit-led movement rather than an organization that was also a business. A hidden assumption here was that our goal should be to make the church today be just like the church was in the first century.

Aaron: And isn't that what we're supposed to do?

Keith: The church of the first century fit the shape of the world in the first century. There are groups today who might say we shouldn't have guitars in worship because they didn't have guitars in Bible times. But surely we should focus on the goals of the church, not the various forms the church has used to reach those goals over the centuries.

Aaron: So you're saying they mistook the forms for the substance.

Keith: Yes. It was much the same as those who say we should meet in house churches because the early Christians met in houses. They just applied it to denominations. They said, "They didn't have district superintendents in the Bible so we shouldn't either" or "They didn't call them local boards of administration in the Bible so we shouldn't either." In the end, they didn't see that every generation has to play out the gospel in the most helpful forms for its own day.

Aaron: So how did that play out?

Keith: Like I said, the larger churches had already largely run to a large extent like they were their own denominations. They sometimes felt like district leadership was less capable of leading than they were. They sometimes felt like smaller congregations were either failing at the mission or were small-minded in their thinking.

So in the late 2010s and early 2020s, there was a shift toward putting the larger churches in charge of the districts. Districts were combined, which lessened the voices of more traditional Wesleyans -- especially the ones that eventually ended up in the Wesleyan Holiness Church. 

The Boomer layer of the denomination was finally in charge. They emphasized evangelism and lay leadership. There was a big emphasis on equipping non-ministers to do the work of the ministry. There was less and less a sense that a minister was someone called and set aside specially for full time ministry.

Meanwhile, larger churches and many in the denomination had long been absorbing ideas from other mega-churches and broader evangelicalism. The church was absorbing a lot of Baptist and broader evangelical thinking and assumptions in the process. The broader church culture of America was pulling us into its gravitational pull.

Aaron: Like how? 

Keith: For example, many in the church had a low view of the sacraments.

Aaron: You mean baptism and communion?

Keith: Yes. The larger churches and a lot of pastors believed that any Christian should be able to baptize a new believer or lead at communion.

Aaron: That's not what the Wesleyan Methodists do, right?

Keith: Right. The Wesleyan Methodists only let a licensed or ordained minister serve communion or baptize, except in emergency situations.

Aaron: And Wesleyan Methodists allow infant baptism?

Keith: Yes, it's somewhat rare, but it is not allowed in either The Wesleyan Connection or the Wesleyan Holiness Church.

Aaron: And what about women in ministry?

Keith: Women cannot be lead pastors in The Wesleyan Connection, but they can be staff pastors. That's one of the reasons the Wesleyan Methodist Church isn't part of the Connection any more. In the Wesleyan Holiness Church, women can't be pastors at all. But in the Wesleyan Methodist Church, they can be any kind of pastor up to General Superintendent.

Aaron: So what led to the fizzle?

Keith: Well, there was this slow movement behind the scenes. The headquarters was sold without anyone hardly even noticing it. The trust clause was done away with. The financial institution of the church went independent.

Aaron: So it was slowly moving away from a denomination toward a connection for a while?

Keith: Yes. At the 2030 General Conference they made it official. In 2032, they would meet to draft the By-Laws of the new "Wesleyan Connection." 

This move solved several problems. It let local churches and former districts that wanted to prohibit drinking prohibit drinking. Meanwhile, churches who believed in moderation could adopt that position. 

Every church would agree to the by-laws of the Connection and would enjoy the benefits of pooled resources. But they could follow their conscience on "non-essential" items. The leaders of the move championed it as "becoming like the New Testament church."

Aaron: So did they meet and set it up in 2032?

Keith: Yes, but it didn't play out quite like the leaders of the move thought it would. It's funny how so many think that a church might just follow the Bible alone. But there are always different interpretations of Scripture -- even in a small denomination like The Wesleyan Church.

A Task Force came with its recommendations. The move on drinking was obvious. There would be no prohibition on drinking in the By-Laws. It didn't make a lot of churches in Tennessee and Kentucky happy, but I think initially they were planning to go along with it.

Aaron: But they didn't in the end? 

Keith: No, in the end there were several features that led them to walk away. They thought the position on entire sanctification was too watered down. There were some strong voices that didn't believe in women in ministry at all. And they obviously didn't like the allowance of drinking. 

They had felt shoved in the corner for too long and missed the days when they played a more central role in the church. The year after the Connection formed, they came together and re-formed as a denomination again, the Wesleyan Holiness Church. It mostly consists of smaller churches. A lot of them were churches that had once been Pilgrim Holiness churches before the 1968 merger.  

Aaron: So why did the Wesleyan Methodists leave the Connection?

Keith: That's where some of the social and political dimensions of the last decades came into play. Both in the Connection and the Wesleyan Holiness folks, there were some strong feelings against things they called "woke" or "social justice warriors." Following the flow of 2020s politics, they saw things like women in ministry, racial reconciliation, taking care of the poor, helping immigrants get documented -- they saw these values as "leftist liberal."

Aaron: Really? I've been taught that those values were part of the founding of The Wesleyan Church and John Wesley. And don't those values come from the Bible?

Keith: Well, The Wesleyan Methodist Church sure thinks so. But the leaders of the other churches didn't so much. Or they thought those issues were too secondary to let interfere with the greater good that was happening. Some had actually come to see such values as evil and preached against them. The culture and political landscape at the time was strongly pushing them in that direction. We don't always know why we see what we see in the Bible.

Aaron: So the Wesleyan Methodists left the Connection too?

Keith: Well, they never really joined. It was mostly the Millennial layer of the church. They just couldn't agree with some of the values and direction of the Connection. Like the Wesleyan Holiness Church, they re-formed as a denomination again the next year in 2033.

Aaron: And that was just two years ago! Wow.

Keith: We'll see how the three bodies go. The Connection is going strong. Lots of baptisms. Very white upper middle class.

The Wesleyan Methodists are growing too. It's finding a lot of forty somethings coming back to the church after leaving in the 2020s. It also seems to speak to your generation well.

Aaron: And the Wesleyan Holiness Church? 

Keith: My impression is that it is holding its own so far. A lot of older congregations in small churches. 

Aaron: Wow. This has been very helpful. The paper has practically written itself.

Keith: Next time, do it in plenty of time. Don't be a last minute minister. Plan your responsibilities out. You never know when an emergency is going to pop up.

Aaron: Understood. Thanks so much for letting me interview you.

Keith: Thanks for the coffee!

Sunday, August 10, 2025

Through the Bible -- Mark 10

With this post, we finish my series of general thoughts on the Gospel of Mark. Here is the complete series:

Mark 1:1-13
Mark 1:14-15 
Mark 1:16-45
Mark 2
Mark 3
Mark 4:1-34
Mark 4:35-5:43
Mark 6
Mark 7
Mark 8
Mark 9
This post
Mark 11:1-11 (Palm Sunday)
Mark 11:12-25 (Temple Monday)
Mark 11:26-12:44 (Debate Tuesday)
Mark 13 (Temple Prediction)
Mark 14:1-52 (Last Supper)
Mark 14:53-15:47 (Good Friday)
Mark 16 (The Resurrection) 
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1. Jesus heads south. In Mark, this is the first time. It is the same in Matthew and Luke. Given the symbolic nature of John, it is at least possible that the three Passovers there are symbolic of the three days that Jesus was in the grave. If all we had were Matthew, Mark, and Luke, we would no doubt think Jesus' full ministry was only for part of a year.

The chapter begins with questions about divorce from "some Pharisees." Is it permitted, they ask him. This was a well-known rabbinic debate among various schools of Pharisees. The school of Hillel allowed divorce for a wide range of reasons, including trivial ones such as a wife burning a meal. [1] The school of Shammai took a stricter view, permitting divorce only in cases of serious indecency or unfaithfulness.

In Mark, Jesus sounds stricter even than the school of Shammai, since he gives no exception. However, Matthew adds "except for sexual immorality," thus aligning Jesus' position with that of Shammai. My seminary professor Bob Lyon felt like Jesus would not have startled anyone if he had historically given the exception and thus was inclined to believe that the historical Jesus made no exceptions.

2. It is quite hermeneutically instructive that Jesus overrides Moses. Rather than considering the teaching of Deuteronomy 24 to be timeless, exceptionless law, he indicates that there are teachings in Scripture that are less than ideal. In effect, Jesus says that God accommodated the hardness of Israel's heart when he allowed for divorce. This is quite striking.

Jesus then goes back to Genesis 2. A husband and wife become one flesh and thus are joined together by God. ("One flesh" here does not precisely correlate sex and marriage. Paul indicates that a person becomes one flesh with a prostitute in 1 Cor. 6, but he does not see that as a marriage).

Groups have often made the teaching here into a legalism of its own, which is ironic given Jesus' strong avoidance of legalisms. Bruce Malina has argued that, in the normal sense of adultery at the time, a man could not actually commit adultery against his wife because adultery was culturally understood to be the shaming of a man by sleeping with his wife. It didn't work the other way around because her honor was entirely embedded in his. [2] 

Jesus is thus being radically countercultural when he suggests a man could actually commit adultery against his wife. This would have been shocking. It also hints at the underlying reasoning. Far from setting down a legalistic view of marriage, Jesus is laying down protection for wives who were easily discarded in that world. He is forbidding it.

The additional note in 10:12 about a woman not divorcing her husband is likely a Markan addition to balance out the instruction for a broader Roman world. In Israel, a wife was not typically able to divorce her husband, making the command unlikely to come directly from Jesus historically. Rather, it is likely Mark applying Jesus' teaching to a braoder audience.

3. The middle part of Mark 10 implicitly contrasts the attitude of children with that of the rich. At first, the disciples rebuke people bringing children to him. It is another example of them not getting it, of the disciples' lack of understanding. We cannot enter the kingdom of God unless we receive it like a child.

The next story then contrasts. It is almost impossible for the rich to enter the kingdom of God. Far from the attitude of a child, it is hard for them to surrender everything to God and be completely dependent on him. 

A rich man asks Jesus what he must do to inherit eternal life. Jesus reminds him of the Ten Commandments. He has kept all of those from his youth. But Jesus says that he lacks one thing. Jesus instructs him to sell everything he has and give to the poor. He goes away sorrowful because he has many possessions.

If we look back at the commands that Jesus mentions first, they are not to murder, commit adultery, steal, bare false witness. Honoring parents and not defrauding others are also mentioned. Defraud here seems to relate to coveting the things of others and cheating them in order to get them. We note that the Sabbath command is. not mentioned, which in Gentile Christian circles may not have been a central concern (cf. Rom. 14:5). We remember that Mark's audience may be primarily Gentile.

What else is missing from this list? The central command -- to love God with one's whole heart, not to have any other gods before Yahweh. It is often pointed out that Jesus does not make this command to everyone. I have heard it used often of a "one time" command of Jesus that was needed especially by a specific individual at a particular time.

I think this is ultimately the right application of the passage, but we probably let ourselves off the hook a little too easily. The Christian culture of today too easily throws away Jesus' frequent negativity toward the rich and his warnings about wealth. We have sanctified capitalism and made it part of godliness. The Parable of the Talents -- which appears right before the Parable of the Sheep and the Goats in Matthew 25 -- is made into a parable of monetary investment while the context suggests it is investment in others, especially those who are in need.

Similarly, there was apparently an apocalyptic urgency to Jesus' earthly ministry. While we are looking back at two thousand years, Jesus' ministry modeled the immanency of the kingdom's arrival. Having possessions in such a context is irrelevant. What is important is Jesus' mission. All else falls away.

If God has blessed you with wealth, Jesus indicates that you have no part in the kingdom if it is more important to you than he is. If you would not joyfully surrender every last bit for the sake of God, then it is as if you have not kept any of the commandments. It is our faith that indicates our belonging, not our rule-keeping.

"How hard it is for a rich person to enter the kingdom of God," Jesus says (10:23). It is harder than to get a camel through the eye of a needle. There was no "Camel Gate" or any other folk tale explanation attempt. In the saying, a camel is a camel, and a needle is a needle. It is hyperbole for sure, but the statement means what it seems to mean -- it would have been almost impossible for a wealthy person in Jesus' context to be part of the kingdom of God. 

In the coming age, those who are first now will be last, and those who are last now will be first then. The receiving of houses and lands and brothers and sisters and mothers now is not referring to a prosperity gospel but to becoming part of the family of God. Other people's mothers become your mothers. Their houses become your houses. Their land becomes your land. It is a communal dimension to the Christian family that Jesus has in mind here.

Again, he calls the disciples children, and Peter reminds Jesus that they have left everything to follow him. This hearkens back to what Jesus said about the children coming to him.

4. When the young man comes to Jesus, he calls him a "good teacher." Jesus deflects the word good as a descriptor. "Why do you call me good?" he says. "Only one is good -- God."

It is a fascinating reaction in several respects. On the one hand, there are those who take this as a straightforward indication by Jesus that he did not consider himself to be God. Then there are others who would say that Jesus' point specifically is to hint that he is God. This is probably the way most Christian interpreters throughout the centuries have taken the exchange. 

In either case, there is a clear allusion to the Shema in Deuteronomy 6:4 -- "Hear, O Israel, Yahweh our God, Yahweh is one." The original sense of the Shema was probably, "Yahweh is our God, Yahweh alone."

Then there is the question of whether a human can be good. As Christians, we certainly believe Jesus was (and is) good. This pushes us again toward an ironic reading of Jesus' statement, one that hints at something more than it says. 

It is also possible, however, that Jesus is trying to lower the rich man's opinion of himself. Perhaps the young man thinks he is good beyond what he actually is. Thus Jesus reminds him that God is the One who is truly good. We humans are creatures of sin, and our goodness is only by God's gracious empowerment.

4. The next part of the chapter presents the third time that Jesus predicts his death. Even in Mark, the three times may allude symbolically to the three days that Jesus was in the ground. This time it is James and John who show that the disciples do not understand. They do not get the fact that it is Jesus' suffering that will most clearly indicate that he is the Messiah.

They are still thinking of the Messiah in victorious political terms. They want seats of privilege at Jesus' right and left hand. The contrast with the fact that Jesus has just told them he was going to Jerusalem to die is stark. They don't get it.

Jesus asks if they can drink from the cup he is about to drink. Obliviously, they say yes. Jesus says that they will indeed. Although the tradition is that John did not die a martyr's death, this exchange suggests that John the son of Zebedee did indeed die a martyr. James would die fairly early on in the early forties at the hands of Herod Agrippa I. Mark seems to imply that John would also die by the early 70s.

The other ten are annoyed that James and John would try to get in line ahead of them. Jesus thus uses the moment as a teaching opportunity. In the Gentile world, leaders love power. They love to show off their authority. Frankly, this is human nature in general.

But it is not the way of the kingdom. Those who would be in leadership must be servants, not just in name but in reality. The first among them must behave like a servant.

Then we get the only explicit statement in Mark on the meaning of Jesus' death. Jesus -- the Son of Man -- did not come to be served (10:45). He came to serve. And he came to lay down his life as a ransom for many. Jesus' death would provide a means of freedom from bondage for those who trust in him.

5. The chapter ends with the healing of blind Bartimaeus leaving Jericho. This is the final event before the triumphal entry and the beginning of Passion week. It happens here in Mark as Jesus is leaving Jericho to head west toward Bethany and Jerusalem. In Matthew, there are two unnamed blind men. In Luke, it is a blind man as Jesus enters the city. These differences are a reminder that we are not getting a video tape of Jesus' ministry.

The fact that he is named suggests that he remained known within the early Christian community. We even know his father's name. It is also part of a cumulative case that Mark is the earliest of the gospels we have. 

The blind man calls Jesus "Son of David," which of course suggests he is the Davidic king. He is the first and only one to call Jesus this in Mark. He is blind, but he clearly sees.

Some of Jesus' followers rebuke him for thinking he is significant enough to be seen by Jesus. Jesus does not explicitly rebuke them, but the text implies a rebuke. As with the children, their priorities aren't in order, and they don't understand Jesus.

Jesus asks what the man wants him to do for him. It may be obvious, but it's important for the man to articulate. He wants his sight. In a sense, Jesus isn't the one who gives it. Rather, it is the man's faith (10:52).

[1] Mishnah Gittin 9:10

[2] Bruce J. Malina, The New Testament World: Insights from Cultural Anthropology, 3rd ed. (Louisville: Westminster John Knox, 2001), pp. 146–147.

Sunday, August 03, 2025

Sermon Starters: Happy Trials to You

Preached at Mt. Edna Community Life Church, 8-3-25

Scripture: James 1:2-8, 12-15

Introduction

  • I haven't gone through many trials, perhaps you have (note relatively minor worries in the vast scheme of things).
  • My daughter lost 2 dogs, a cat, and a parakeet in the same year. Still, not the same as being martyred or losing a child.
  • This is the anniversary of my mother's death, but she died at 98, father at 87. They both died well, and lived blessed lives.
  • Still, the questions arise. Why does God allow so much suffering? Why so much evil? Why do the bad guys win so often? 
  • Tim Keller -- We have small pieces of an answer but not really a comprehensively satisfying one. Free will explanation. Satan and demons explanation. We just have to trust that God is in control and that, if we could see everything, we would see that he is in fact good.
  • James was stoned in AD62. Jerusalem was in between Roman governors and the high priest jumped at the opportunity.
I. Trials perfect us (1:2).

  • This is one of the main answers to why God allows suffering. It can make us stronger. It can help us grow. "No pain, no gain."
  • Running. If you're not training, you won't be able to make it on race day. Many times, our reaction to a sudden trial reveals whether we've been training -- by orienting our lives around surrender to God.
  • A person who has had an addiction needs to surrender that area of potential temptation every day. So we should be practicing surrender long before the time of trial comes.
  • We may, without thinking of it, think of God more as a candy machine than the one we are actually living for.
II. God wants to give us wisdom 1:5.
  • He doesn't begrudge us asking. While God (and the Holy Spirit) stand ready to give us wisdom for anything, the context suggests God will particularly give us wisdom when we are in a time of trial.
  • "Ask... seek... knock" (Matt. 7). This is "if we ask according to his will" (1 John) and are remaining in him (John 15). That is, our wills are aligned with his. And he gives us his Holy Spirit to guide us (Luke 18).
  • If we really want an answer, he will give it. It may not of course be the one we prefer.
  • The "double-minded person" is someone who has divided loyalties. They have not been truly surrendered to God but are half loyal, half self-loyal.
  • Many of us make the "Corban" move -- we say we have given everything to God but then we decide what to do with "God's" stuff (Mark 7).
III. Sometimes we bring trial on ourselves (1:14-15).
  • One reason for trials are bad choices we make.
  • 1:14-15 give the anatomy of a sin -- a temptation, a choice, a sin, eventually death.
  • As said, one reason we have suffering is because God gives us a choice. Then we experience the consequences.
  • God is not being mean when we run into a brick wall. The wall isn't being mean. We made a choice to run into it.
  • Give illustration of consequences of sin (e.g., a broken marriage because of sinful choices).
Conclusion
  • Let's start getting ready to suffer now.
  • Job -- never finds out about Satan's wager. He finally has to trust in a bigger picture he doesn't see.
  • God allowed Job to suffer. He didn't direct it in this case.
  • The bottom line -- 1 Cor. 10:31 and Col. 3:17 -- living a life fully oriented and surrendered to God

Sunday, July 20, 2025

Through the Bible -- Mark 9

Previous posts at bottom
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1. Mark 9:1 actually is the final verse in the previous section. Peter has confessed Jesus as the Messiah. Then Jesus has told them that he is going to die. Then he talks about the exchange between this moment and the coming kingdom. To gain the whole world now means to lose it then. Similarly, to be ashamed of Jesus now is for him to be ashamed of you when he comes with his angels (8:38).

That paragraph concludes then with the shocking statement that some of them would not taste death before the arrival of the kingdom of God with power (9:1). On its face, this statement is confusing. It is similar to the statement in Mark 13:30 that the generation of the disciples would not pass until all the events of Mark 13 had taken place.

Several options have been suggested beyond a sense that Mark did not understand. The versification may suggest that Stephen Langton, who made the chapter divisions in the early 1200s, may have seen the Transfiguration as the fulfillment of the statement. It immediately follows in chapter 9. 

Probably the easiest suggestion is that this is a reference either to the resurrection or the Day of Pentecost. The kingdom of God did come in power at the resurrection, and we see it in full swing on the Day of Pentecost.

2. Mark 9:2-8 is a curious event -- The Transfiguration. Jesus, Peter, James, and John are with Jesus on a high mountain. Suddenly, Jesus becomes intensely white. Moses and Elijah appear with him. Peter doesn't seem to know what to say. He suggests maybe putting up three tents.

But he hears a voice from the sky saying that Jesus is God's beloved Son. It is a similar statement to the one that Jesus hears at his baptism in 1:11. But in Mark's presentation, only Jesus hears the pronouncement then.

It is a revelation of Jesus' glory. The presence of Moses and Elijah suggests that Jesus is the fulfillment of the Law and the Prophets. The pronouncement of Jesus as the Son of God is a declaration that he is in fact the Messiah.

In keeping with the theme of the messianic secret, Jesus commands them not to tell anyone what they have just witnessed until after the resurrection (9:9). They of course don't understand what he means in keeping with the them of the dullness of the disciples.

The event gives them reason to ask about the coming of Elijah, understood to be a prophecy about the coming of the Messiah, based in Malachi 4:5-6. Jesus hints that Elijah has already come. As in Matthew, he seems to refer to John the Baptist  (cf. Matt. 11:14). 

3. This stretch of Mark, from Peter's confession to the beginning of Passion Week, seems to focus on the cost of discipleship. Jesus will tell his disciples three times that he is going to the cross to die. Three times, they will say or do something that shows they do not understand.

In this chapter, Jesus tells them a second time that he is headed to the cross (9:30-32). They do not understand him, again in keeping with Mark's "disciples don't get it" theme. So what do they do? They debate over who will be the greatest in the coming kingdom (9:33-37). They are thinking earthly kingdom. They are thinking ruling.

Jesus' response is that the one who wants to be first (which was what they wanted) must become last (9:35). That is to say, the person with the highest honor in the kingdom is the one who is a servant of others. He takes a child on his lap and instructs them to receive them in his name (9:36-37). Unlike our world where children are cherished, children were low in status in that world. When Jesus says to receive children in his name, he is saying to watch out for the lowest in status.

At the end of the chapter, Jesus warns against those who might cause any "little one" who believes in him to sin. While it is certainly possible to apply this teaching to literal children, it seems likely that Jesus is thinking of any lowly follower of him. We must not be the cause of other's stumbling. Jesus says it would be better to be thrown into the sea with a millstone around our neck than to face the judgment of causing others to stumble in their faith.  

Jesus then speaks of things that might cause us to sin. Speaking hyperbolically, he says it would be better to chop our own hand off than to let it be a source of temptation for us. The same is true of our feet or our hands. If they are a source of temptation, a cause of our sin, then it would be better to cut them off or pluck them out.

The point seems clear enough. Do not put yourself in contexts where you are tempted to sin. Cut those parts of your life off, so that you will remain faithful to Christ. The end result of the other path is to be thrown into Gehenna (9:47). This is the only passage where hell is mentioned in Mark's Gospel.

Jesus alludes to Isaiah 66:24 where the image of a worm not dying and fire not ending seems to refer to the rotting corpses of the dead outside of Jerusalem. In Mark 9, it certainly refers to the eternal consequences of causing others to stumble. Whether it refers to a literal fire is unclear from Mark itself although this seems to be how Matthew interprets it.

The statement about salt seems a little odd in the train of thought. It may very well have been a free-floating saying of Jesus that Mark decided to put here. In Matthew, it is incorporated into the Sermon on the Mount. 

It does fit, however. Salt cannot chemically lose its identity, but it can be corrupted. In other words, it can become something other than salt. As the warning about temptations to sin, Jesus warns us not to lose our saltiness and to remain salt. When we are salt in the world, we season everyone's life, and we live at peace with each other (9:50).

4. An interesting event earlier in the chapter is when the disciples are unable to cast out a spirit. The description sounds somewhat like epilepsy, which perhaps at the time would have been seen as having a spirit. The spirit does not speak and -- in the end -- Jesus heals the boy no matter how they might have conceptualized the situation. Jesus meets us where we are.

Jesus is upset with his disciples, another instance of the theme of the disciples lack of faith. Jesus will later indicate that this was a very difficult case, one that required prayer. (Later manuscripts added "and fasting" in 9:29) Interestingly, the father of the boy also struggled with faith. But he gave us the prayer for all of those disciples who struggle with faith -- like the first twelve.

"I believe. Help my unbelief" (9:24).

5. The final piece of the chapter is when John the son of Zebedee discovers someone else casting out a demon in Jesus' name. The incident reminds us of John 10:16 where Jesus says he has other sheep not of this fold. There, he is probably referring to later Gentile believers.

Here, Jesus indicates that those who are not against him are for him. These are actually individuals who are doing good in his name. Whoever gives a cup of water to Jesus' missionaries will find favor with the Lord. They may not be formally following Jesus, but they are following Jesus. And God will treat them as such. 

Mark 1:1-13
Mark 1:14-15 
Mark 1:16-45
Mark 2
Mark 3
Mark 4:1-34
Mark 4:35-5:43
Mark 6
Mark 7
Mark 8

Mark 11:1-11 (Palm Sunday)
Mark 11:12-25 (Temple Monday)
Mark 11:26-12:44 (Debate Tuesday)
Mark 13 (Temple Prediction)
Mark 14:1-52 (Last Supper)
Mark 14:53-15:47 (Good Friday)

Mark 16 (The Resurrection)    

Wednesday, July 16, 2025

Chapter 11 -- Ours for the Taking

I have been filling in the final gaps in a sweep of US history I mainly worked on in the week leading up to July 4. Here are some of the excerpts I've posted:

This morning I finished chapter 11 on America's expansion in the late 1800s/early 1900s. The more I've worked on this material, the more I'm convinced that there is a mastermind of history in the current administration. I have my own sense of who it might be. Unfortunately, I sense they admire the dark side of US history rather than the truly Christian side. I'm praying that such individuals will lose favor with the president.
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We’re coming for whatever you got.

Progress at Home, Power Abroad
By the dawn of the 20th century, America had cleaned up its living room but started eyeing the neighbors’ houses.

The Progressive Era had arrived. Reformers at home were calling out corruption, monopolies, poisoned food, child labor, and slums. These were journalists, pastors, politicians, teachers. They wanted to fix things. Teddy Roosevelt led the charge with his “Square Deal,” busting trusts and regulating railroads. The government, they argued, could be a force for good. And sometimes, it was.

But while America was busy scrubbing up the inside, it was also kicking down doors outside.

Expansionism wasn’t new. Manifest Destiny had already pushed America westward in the early 1800s. It had swallowed land from Mexico and forced Native peoples off their ancestral homes. But by the late 1800s, America had run out of frontier – at least on the mainland. So, the eyes of Washington and Wall Street turned outward.

In 1898, the U.S. declared war on Spain, supposedly to help Cuba gain independence. The real reason? To prove we had the muscle of an empire. Within months, the U.S. had scooped up Puerto Rico, Guam, and the Philippines. That same year, we annexed Hawaii, claiming it was about security and civilization. The sugar plantations told a different story. We backed a coup, overthrew a queen, and called it progress.

A few years later, we took part of Colombia to carve out Panama, building a canal to connect the oceans. We wrapped it all in the language of liberation and progress. But our real motives were clear: land, labor, leverage.

This wasn’t just history. It’s a mindset that never fully left. Apparently, it’s always been there lurking in the minds of some.

In his second term, President Trump has resurrected this conquest mindset. In one of his rallies, he joked about buying Greenland, calling it “prime real estate.” It wasn’t really a joke.

He floated the idea of making Canada the 51st state. The result? A Canadian conservative who had been leading in the polls lost support overnight. Canadians weren’t interested in becoming America’s 51st state.

Trump said we should “take back Panama” – “because we built the canal, didn’t we?” And he renamed the Gulf of Mexico the “Gulf of America.” As he put it, “Why should Mexico get to name it? We’ve earned it.”

Some laughed. Some cheered. But to the rest of the world, it wasn’t funny.

It’s like the same story all over again in a new century. Finders keepers, losers weepers.

The Spanish American Grab
If Manifest Destiny was about claiming the continent, 1898 was about claiming the globe.

The Spanish-American War lasted less than four months, but it changed America’s role in the world forever. The official reason for the war was to help free Cuba from Spanish rule. That’s what the newspapers screamed. It’s what President McKinley told Congress. We wrapped the war in slogans about liberty and democracy.

But wars usually have more than one reason. And the real reasons are often less noble. "The good of the people" was mostly propaganda.

This was about proving America could play empire, just like the old European powers. It was about territory. It was about ports and shipping lanes. It was about sugar and rubber and new markets. We were flexing our new-found muscles. And the world noticed.

When the war ended, the U.S. walked away with prizes: Puerto Rico, Guam, and the Philippines. These weren’t accidental acquisitions. They were trophies.

In the Philippines, things turned ugly fast. Filipino revolutionaries had fought alongside the Americans against Spain, thinking they were about to win independence. Instead, they woke up to find out they had traded one colonial power for another.

The U.S. flag went up. The new empire wasn’t Spanish. It was American.

What followed was the Philippine-American War, a brutal conflict that is rarely taught in U.S. history classes. Between 200,000 and 300,000 Filipinos died from combat, famine, and disease. As is often the case, they were mostly civilians. American troops burned villages and tortured prisoners. Some of the same politicians who had spoken about freeing Cuba now spoke about “uplifting” the Philippines, as if democracy could be delivered at the end of a bayonet.

Civilians were rounded up into concentration camps. One general issued orders to kill every male over the age of ten – reminiscent of what Pharaoh did to the Israelites in Exodus. Another general described the war effort as trying to "pacify" a people he called savages. Some liberation. 

U.S. officials described the occupation as a civilizing mission. President McKinley claimed God told him to “uplift and civilize and Christianize” the Filipinos. By the way, they were already overwhelmingly Christian – just Catholic. It was colonial arrogance wrapped in missionary language.

Meanwhile, Guam and Puerto Rico became U.S. territories. They are still in limbo today. They’re stuck in that half-American status where you get the rules but not all the rights. Wouldn't it be nice to give them the statehood they deserve?

This is the pattern. “Liberation” as a mask for control, freedom as a brand name for U.S. interest. And when the people we “helped” didn't fall in line, we acted surprised. It was as if freedom was only freedom if it followed our instructions.

It wasn’t just about land. It was about narrative. If we were the good guys, then nothing we did could be imperial. It had to be noble. It had to be generous. It had to be for their own good.

But history is less flattering. We didn’t just plant flags. We planted lies. And we called them liberty.

This was Manifest Destiny internationalized. It was a shift from continental conquest to global ambition. We didn’t just want to be a country anymore. We wanted to be an empire like the big boys. And just like that, the land of liberty got into the empire business.

It goes without saying that none of this is Christ-honoring in any way. It is violence for self-gain. It doesn’t do to others what we would have them do to us. It isn’t love of neighbor or enemy. It is love of self.

Certainly, there have been “Christian” nations who have done such things, nations with state religions that call themselves Christians. Since Constantine in the 300s, there have been many instances where a visible church became fused with the powers of government.

They might have used Christian language. But they weren’t following Jesus. They were following power. These weren’t the actions of the true, invisible church. William McKinley might have used some Christian words. But this had nothing to do with Jesus.

Empire and the Dollar
America’s new empire wasn’t just built with bullets. It was built with business plans.

Behind every military intervention was a profit motive. Sugar, rubber, tobacco, bananas, oil, shipping lanes. These weren’t side benefits of expansion. For many, they were the point. People get conquered. American gets land. Business gets rich. It’s the same playbook Europe used when it came to the New World.

The Philippines became a steppingstone to China, opening up new markets for American goods. Hawaii wasn’t about security. It was about sugar plantations and pineapple companies. Puerto Rico became a hub for American sugar production, with local economies restructured to feed the U.S. market – not their own people of course.

In Panama, we didn’t just want a canal for global commerce. We wanted to control the toll booth. Owning the path between the Atlantic and the Pacific meant we could control trade itself.

It’s no coincidence that President Trump has talked about taking the canal back. From a business perspective, Carter was stupid to give it to the people of Panama. Far too authentically Christian. Didn’t he get the memo that governments are only supposed to use Christian language? They’re not supposed to actually be Christian.

This wasn’t a new idea. “Dollar diplomacy” became the official policy under President William Howard Taft in 1909. Use money, not just military, to expand influence. Set up banks, control debt, install friendly governments that owe you favors. If that didn’t work, send in the Marines.

American companies weren’t just doing business abroad. They were becoming the tentacles of empire. United Fruit Company in Central America. Standard Oil in the Caribbean. American Sugar Refining in Hawaii and Puerto Rico. These corporations shaped foreign policy just as much as presidents did.

We told ourselves we were spreading democracy. But what we really spread was economic dependency. We were making sure that other countries produced what we wanted, bought what we sold, and stayed in line with our rules.

It was conquest by contract.

And just like the military empire, the business empire has never really gone away. We don’t always send troops anymore. We send lobbyists. We send trade negotiators. We send corporations so big that governments bend to their will.

When you control the market, you don’t have to fire a shot. You can just sit back and watch the cash flow in.

Fortress America
While America was expanding its footprint abroad, it was tightening the gates at home. We will explore these dynamics in more detail in the next chapter.

By the early 1900s, the same country that claimed to be spreading freedom overseas was busy closing its borders and purifying its population at home. This wasn’t a contradiction. It was the same story, just in reverse. Conquer abroad, control at home.

The Progressive Era had a dark side. Alongside the food safety laws and labor reforms came eugenics, anti-immigrant hysteria, and “Americanization” campaigns. Eugenics was one of the ugliest undercurrents of the early 20th century. It is the pseudoscience of human breeding. Progressives didn’t just want cleaner streets and safer factories. Many wanted a cleaner gene pool. 

State fairs held “fitter family” contests. Universities taught courses on racial hierarchy. Forced sterilization programs targeted thousands of people – the poor, the disabled, immigrants, Black women, Native women, anyone labeled “unfit.” In some states, sterilization was performed without consent, sometimes without the patient even knowing it had happened. We like to tell ourselves this was a European problem. But the truth is that America wrote the first draft of the playbook Hitler would later use.

And the abuses didn’t stop with sterilization. From 1932 to 1972, the Tuskegee Syphilis Experiment let hundreds of Black men suffer untreated syphilis so government doctors could “study the effects.” The men weren’t told what was happening. They were promised free healthcare. Instead, they became test subjects in a cruel exercise of medical racism. It was the kind of experiment we usually accuse dictatorships of running. But this wasn’t Nazi Germany. This was Alabama.

Immigrants were told to drop their languages, their cultures, even their names. Scientists gave speeches about “racial hygiene.” Politicians warned of "undesirable stock." The goal was simple. Build an empire outside, keep it pure inside.

This wasn’t just about race. It was about fear of dilution. Fear that too many new people would change what America meant. Fear that “real Americans” would lose control.

It’s the same fear Trump has tapped into again in his second term. At the same time that he has talked about expansion abroad – taking back Panama, renaming the Gulf of Mexico, absorbing Canada – he has been building walls at home. People are being sorted into categories: who belongs and who doesn’t. Who’s allowed to stay, and who’s disposable.

This isn’t about safety. It’s about identity. It’s about drawing a line around who counts as an American and who doesn’t. And it’s about keeping that line wherever it serves the empire’s needs, whether it means expanding it for land and labor. Or closing it to keep power in the right hands.

Who do we want to be?
America has always had a choice.

We can be the takers. We can be the sugar barons, the canal-grabbers, the men who talk about civilization while cashing checks and counting profits. That’s one version of America. It’s the William McKinley and William Howard Taft version, where expansion is destiny and moral language is just the marketing department of greed.

Or we can be something else.

We did eventually do the right thing for the Philippines. When the Japanese took over the Philippines in World War II, they brutalized both the Filipino people and the captured American soldiers. General MacArthur made a promise: “I shall return.” And he did.

It took decades of control, war, and occupation. But after World War II, we finally did what we had claimed we were doing all along. On July 4, 1946, we recognized Philippine independence. It was late. But it mattered. Doing the right thing, even after failure, is still better than never doing it at all.

We did eventually do the right thing in Panama too. After almost a century of holding the canal as our own personal shortcut, President Carter brokered the deal to hand it back. He was mocked for it. Called weak. But it was the right thing to do.

History has given us this choice over and over again.

Do we want to be the country that talks about liberty while practicing domination? Or do we want to actually live out the words of the Declaration of Independence?

“Let America be America again.” That was Langston Hughes’ plea. And it wasn’t about nostalgia. It was about living up to the promise we keep making but don’t always keep.

It’s not just history. We still make this choice over and over.

Do we want to be a “finders keepers, losers weepers” empire, grabbing land and locking out immigrants? Or do we want to be a nation that does to others what we would have them do to us?

We’re still deciding whether that’s the road we want to stay on. It’s not too late to do the right thing.

Monday, July 14, 2025

Chapter 17 -- Church vs. State

I had been scrambling to publish a sweep of US history by July 4 but didn't make it. I might still publish it as it was almost finished. Here is another segment in addition to other excerpts I've posted:

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Jesus didn’t run a political party. Your pastor shouldn’t either.

Freedom to Impose
When we talk about religious liberty in America, the story often starts with the Pilgrims and Puritans. We know them as those very serious, buckled-shoe figures of Thanksgiving lore. We imagine them as holy seekers of freedom, fleeing oppression in England to build a new society where everyone could worship God freely.

But the real story is a little more ironic – and a very important mirror for today.

The Puritans didn’t come to the New World because they loved religious freedom. It’s actually quite funny to think that. They came because they couldn’t take over England.

They had tried. Throughout the 1600s, Puritan reformers fought to “purify” the Church of England. They desperately tried to rid it of anything that smelled Catholic – vestments, ceremonies, bishops, holidays. Some Puritans worked within the system. Others left it entirely. They briefly took over Parliament and even put a king to death! 

But when the monarchy was restored, the dream of remaking England as a Puritan nation collapsed. So, they packed up their theology and set sail across the Atlantic.

In Massachusetts, they finally had their shot. And what did they do with their newfound freedom? They imposed it on everyone.

Puritan Massachusetts was not a land of religious tolerance. It was a theocracy – at least in theory. A theocracy is the idea that God is ruling directly rather than any human or group of humans. The fatal flaw with this concept, of course, is that someone has to interpret what God says. The Bible must be interpreted, as the tens of thousands of little church groups around the country prove. For some reason, they can’t seem to agree on what the Bible means.

Any notion of a theocracy is thus a farce. Ask yourself who is interpreting the Bible. That’s who’s really ruling.

In Puritan New England, church attendance was mandatory. Dissent was criminalized. The idea wasn’t to build a place where everyone could follow God as they understood Him. It was to build a place where everyone followed the Puritan understanding of God.

“A city on a hill,” yes. But only if you agreed with the sermon. Disagree, and you were out. Or worse.

Roger Williams believed in freedom of conscience. He argued that the government should not dictate religious practice, and he insisted that Native Americans had legitimate land rights. This was a deeply unpopular stance in Puritan Massachusetts even though it seems rather Christ-like. From a theological standpoint, we may disagree with some of his views. But politically, his vision was clear: the state should not control a person’s faith. 

And, actually, no one can. Even God lets us decide. Romans 1 makes this clear when it says that God “gives people up” to their sinful desires (Rom. 1:28). Otherwise, God would be the author of sin. If God is dictating everything that happens, then he would be a rapist, a child-molester, and a serial killer. No, God allows sin. He doesn't dictate it.

The Puritans banished Williams from the Massachusetts Bay Colony. He fled into the woods and eventually founded Rhode Island. It was the first colony built on the principle of religious freedom. There, not only could various Christian denominations worship freely, but Jews and even atheists were welcome too. It was radical for its time. 

And it totally went against the Puritan way.

Anne Hutchinson dared to interpret the Bible for herself. A woman! Imagine that! She led Bible studies. She criticized the clergy for preaching works over grace. She was exiled, too. And even after her death, Massachusetts leaders expressed relief that God had “judged” her. 

Mary Dyer was a Quaker. She didn't leave. They put her to death.

The story of America’s founding isn’t just one of escape from religious oppression. It’s also a story of how quickly the oppressed can become the oppressor.

And the Puritans weren’t alone. Other colonies carried their own religious baggage. Maryland was founded as a haven for Catholics. But Protestants quickly took over and passed laws punishing those who observed Catholic Mass.

Pennsylvania, founded by Quaker William Penn, offered a broader tolerance to Christians and even some non-Christians, but still drew clear boundaries. New Amsterdam (later New York) was initially founded under the Dutch Reformed Church. It did offer some economic opportunity to Jews and Baptists – but not much patience.

Virginia and Georgia were Anglican strongholds, closely tied to the Church of England. Accordingly, there, dissenters like the Puritans could be fined or jailed. Each colony, in its own way, wrestled with the tension between religious conviction and civil freedom. Some loosened their grip over time. Others didn’t.

By the time the Constitution was written, Americans had over a century of religious conflict behind them – persecutions, executions, riots, bans, and backlash. Europe had seen even worse. The Thirty Years' War (1618–1648) had devastated Central Europe, as Catholic and Protestant forces fought for dominance in a brutal religious tug-of-war. After all that bloodshed, one lesson stood out: when religion and government mix, people suffer. And more often than not, faith itself is corrupted in the process.

That’s why religious liberty in America wasn’t just about avoiding persecution. It was about avoiding power. It was about making sure no one version of faith could use the government to enforce its will – and in the end oppress others. The lesson wasn’t just to escape tyranny. It was to make sure we didn’t become it.

A Wall Between
The First Amendment was a boundary. It was clear, deliberate, and hard-earned. After centuries of religious warfare and persecution, both in Europe and the colonies, the Founders drew a line. Government would not establish a religion. And religion would not control the government.

As mentioned in the previous chapter, the Continental Congress would not have approved the Constitution without the immediate promise of a Bill of Rights. The First Amendment reads: “No law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof.”

In those few words, the Founders rejected the idea of a national church. They would bar religious tests for office. They made space for Methodists and Muslims, Quakers and Catholics, deists and dissenters alike. All would enjoy equal dignity under the law.

Some argue today, “Sure, that’s what they wrote, but they really meant ‘Christian.’” The truth is more complicated. The Founders were thinking a variety of things. And yes, some may have had Christianity in mind. But what they agreed on and wrote down is what became law. And what they passed is what governs us now. Unless we change it.

Thomas Jefferson made the principle vivid in 1802, when he wrote to the Danbury Baptist Association. Baptists in Connecticut were worried. They were a minority in a state with an entrenched Congregationalist establishment. Jefferson assured them the federal government had no intention of privileging any denomination. Instead, he said, the First Amendment had built “a wall of separation between Church & State.”

This wall wasn’t designed to keep religion out of public life. It was meant to keep religion from forcing itself on anyone. It wasn’t hostility toward religion. It was protection from religion.

James Madison, another architect of the Constitution, made this clear. He believed religious pluralism was essential to liberty. Pluralism means different religions can coexist peacefully in the same society. It doesn’t require believing all religions are equally true. It just means the government stays neutral. If religions are the raisins, the government is the oatmeal. It holds them all without favoring one.

Madison opposed government funding for religious institutions, even in the form of “non-denominational” chaplaincies, because he feared the long-term effects of entanglement. When government takes sides in religion – even subtly – it usually corrupts both.

None of this meant faith had no place in the public domain. It meant that the government would stay neutral, not that it would be against religion. Churches have always shaped moral conscience. Religious leaders helped lead the abolition movement, the Civil Rights Movement, and more. But there’s a difference between moral influence and political control.

The church is not meant to wield the sword. The government is not meant to pick a creed. When the two blur their roles, history shows us what happens next: oppression, corruption, and a loss of integrity on both sides.

The wall between church and state isn’t a rejection of religion. It’s how religion stays free. It’s how democracy stays safe. And when either side climbs over that wall, it’s not faith that wins. It’s power.

A Century of Peace
For nearly two centuries after the Constitution was ratified, the United States tried to keep a careful balance. Religion was respected, even revered, but not officially enforced. Faith was a major force in American life. But it wasn’t mandated by the state. That was the whole point.

From the beginning, American public life was saturated with religious language. Presidents invoked the Almighty in inaugural addresses. Congress opened sessions with prayer. The calendar honored Sunday as a day of rest.

No one was being forced to be religious, but these practices reflected a population that was overwhelmingly Christian – especially Protestant. In many towns, Christianity was simply the air people breathed. That reality shaped public life, but it didn’t define the government’s authority. No national denomination was ever enshrined. 

Religious liberty was a real (if imperfect) commitment. Baptists and Methodists could thrive alongside Presbyterians and Catholics. Jewish communities took root and grew. And in most eras, the courts held the line. Religion could shape personal life and public conscience, but it couldn’t be imposed by law.

There were tensions, of course. Anti-Catholic riots broke out in the 1800s. The Ku Klux Klan in the 1920s opposed not just Black Americans but also Catholics and Jews. Religious minorities often had to fight for recognition and equal treatment. When John F. Kennedy ran for president in 1960, many voters feared his Catholicism would make him a puppet of the Pope. JFK famously countered with a speech affirming the separation of church and state: “I do not speak for my church on public matters – and the church does not speak for me.”

There were some religious additions to national symbols. But they were more cultural than theological. “In God We Trust” was added to paper currency in 1956. Why? Because of a revival? No, because of the Cold War. “Under God” was inserted into the Pledge of Allegiance in 1954. Why? As a way to distinguish the U.S. from the atheistic Soviet Union. These additions reflected the era’s religious tone, but they didn’t create a national church or compel belief.

During this long stretch, religious life in America didn’t just survive without government enforcement. It flourished. Churches multiplied. New denominations emerged. Missionary societies expanded globally. Faith-based institutions launched hospitals, colleges, and charities. Revival movements drew massive crowds from the Second Great Awakening of the 1800s to the Billy Graham crusades of the 1950s.

Why did religion thrive? In part, because people were free to choose it. When faith is not coerced, it can persuade. When it is not armed with state power, it can speak with moral authority.

The genius of the early American experiment wasn’t that it removed religion from public life. It’s that it gave religion room to breathe. Faith could inform the conscience without controlling the sword. And for almost 200 years, that balance has held.

Were there inconsistencies? No doubt. Only as America has become more diverse have we begun to recognize how many of our laws and customs assumed a Judeo-Christian norm. But they do not negate the principle of separation. 

We are simply realizing places where we have not practiced what the Constitution preached. We’ve been on a journey for over two centuries. We may not have reached the destination yet.

The Religious Right Rises
For most of American history, evangelicals stood at a cautious distance from political power. They believed in influencing culture through revival and moral example, not partisan machinery. But something shifted in the late 20th century. A movement arose that wasn’t content to shape hearts. It wanted to shape laws. And it began to trade spiritual integrity for political influence.

In the 1980s, this movement took form under banners like the Moral Majority (Jerry Falwell) and the Christian Coalition (Pat Robertson). Evangelicals who had once been cultural outsiders became political kingmakers. They were wooed by politicians, given direct lines to power, and promised policies in exchange for pulpits.

The language was moral. The goals were legislative. School prayer. Abortion. These weren’t just concerns of conscience. They became litmus tests. Rallying cries in an escalating culture war. Christian voters were mobilized not to bear witness, but to win. Not to live out the gospel, but to legislate it.

Here, we see a distinct theological shift, one that Reinhold Niebuhr described as “Christ above culture.” It’s the idea that Christian truth should not merely speak to the world. It should take it over. The nation must be brought into line with God's laws whether the people consent or not. Faith isn’t just personal. It should be public policy.

That vision may feel noble. But it raises a crucial constitutional problem. When laws are crafted to reflect a specifically religious understanding of morality – especially one not shared by all citizens – those laws risk violating the First Amendment...

Unfortunately, the rise of the Religious Right wasn’t just about affirming morality. It was about acquiring power and using God as a campaign slogan. When any faith becomes a tool for political control, it’s not just democracy that suffers. It’s the credibility of the faith itself.

It's absolutely right for faith to influence conscience and values. But when the line between pastor and politician disappears then we’ve lost both gospel and government. When churches become voting blocs and candidates become messiahs, both institutions suffer. Neither was meant to serve the other. And both are cheapened when they try to...

Jesus is Not Your Party
If Jesus showed up today, he wouldn’t be speaking at anyone’s political convention. He wouldn’t be at a campaign rally. He wouldn’t be wearing a red hat or a blue one. And it's doubtful he would be forwarding political memes endorsing candidates on social media.

Jesus didn’t run for office. He didn’t fundraise. He didn’t command an army. He didn’t write legislation. When people tried to make him king, he slipped away.

That should tell us something.

When pressed about politics, Jesus said, “Give to Caesar what is Caesar’s, and to God what is God’s.” Jesus draws a line between an earthly kingdom and the kingdom of God. It echoes what theologian Reinhold Niebuhr later called the "Christ against culture" model. It is a posture of resistance, not endorsement. Christ doesn’t baptize Caesar. He doesn’t sanctify the sword. Jesus reminds us that there are higher loyalties, a kingdom that is not of this world (cf. John 18:36).

In that light, Jesus would almost certainly not belong to a political party. And if he did vote, he might do it with a broken heart, well aware that no party platform fully embodies the justice, mercy, humility, or truth of the kingdom of God.

That’s not to say Christians shouldn’t care about politics. Of course we should. Laws matter. Policies affect people’s lives. But when faith becomes fused with party identity, we’ve crossed a line. When we start treating political leaders as spiritual ones, we’ve become confused. We’ve traded kingdom thinking for tribalism.

Clearly, that line has been crossed by a large number of American Christians.

Too many Christians today conflate loyalty to Christ with loyalty to a party. Or worse, a single politician. They wrap the cross in a flag and then act surprised when people confuse the two. But when we do that, we don’t elevate politics. We shrink faith. Jesus becomes a mascot. The gospel becomes a stump speech. And the world hears something far less than good news.

There’s a reason the early church didn’t try to take over Rome. They weren’t apolitical. They were just clear about where real power lived and where it didn’t. Their job wasn’t to conquer, but to witness. They cared for others and lived so that the world saw something different.

The church does its best work not when it commands the government, but when it reminds the government who it’s supposed to serve. Not when it demands special privilege, but when it loves its neighbor – especially the ones the world would rather forget. The credibility of the church has never come from controlling the culture. It has come from resembling Christ.

Jesus is not your party. He’s not a Democrat. He’s not a Republican. He’s not waiting to be nominated, and he doesn’t need your vote. He wants your life. And the world needs a church that can finally say, without fear or hesitation, “We have no king but Christ.”

Sunday, July 13, 2025

Through the Bible -- Mark 8

Previous posts at the bottom
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1. The middle of this chapter will mark the midway point in the Gospel. Starting at verse 27, the tone of the Gospel will change, and Jesus will set his face toward the cross.

Mark 8 begins with the feeding of the 4000. The story is strikingly similar to the feeding of the 5000, which we encountered in Mark 6. The main difference is the quanity of food that Jesus has to distribute (7 loaves here) and the quantity picked up (also 7 baskets here). In chapter 6, there were five loaves and two fish, with 12 baskets of fragments left afterward. Jesus blesses the bread, and it feeds the whole crowd.

Some have seen these as two versions of the same story. The idea is that oral traditions about a single event found its way into two versions -- one with 5000 and one with 4000. Such a scenario would of course speak strongly to the historicity of the core event. Others would of course preclude this possibility from a sense that the truthfulness of Mark requires historicity on the level of detail. Yet it is not clear that ancient history writing was as concerned about such things as we are. Papias in the early 100s suggests that Mark's main concern was more to record all the stories that he had heard. [1]

A multiplication of food and feeding of multitudes is recorded in all four Gospels. In John 6, it is one of seven signs that likely came from some source tradition known by its compilers. It was thus a core memory of Jesus tradition.

Some see these two stories relating to two different audiences. The feeding of the 5000 might take place within Jewish territory. The feeding of the 4000 is in the Decapolis and thus in a more Gentile area. They thus suggest that two different audiences are in view.

2. Verses 11-12 give a key statement of Jesus on signs. The Pharisees demand a sign from Jesus. He tells them that no signs will be given. The saying is preserved in Matthew and Luke as well but with the exception of the sign of Jonah. That sign is then differently interpreted as being three days in the fish (Matt. 12:40; 16:4) or the fact that Nineveh repented (Luke 11:29-30). [2]

The contrast with John's Gospel is striking, where the whole of the first half of the Gospel seems structured in part around 7 key signs. This difference fits well the contrast between Mark's secrecy theme in contrast to John's "megaphone" about Jesus' identity. 

Neverthless, there is no contradiction here. A sign in Mark is a sign on demand, it is a call for Jesus to do something spectacular for those who do not believe. In actually, Jesus provides countless signs for those who have eyes to see and ears to hear. So the difference is that John calls those miraculous deeds "signs" even though they are not done on demand. Mark, on the other hand, does not call them signs.

It is thus a difference of vocabulary not of substance. It is a reminder that God inspired each biblical author within their own language and style. If they were only mindlessly typing God's dictation, this would be more of a contradiction. But once we take into account individual vocabulary, there is no contradiction here.

3. Following Jesus' statement on signs, Jesus warns his disciples about the "yeast" of the Pharisees and Herod. He is talking about the corrupting influence they have on society. He is warning them to avoid them. This is not controversial to us, but the religious leaders -- especially the Pharisees -- were highly revered at the time.

But while Jesus is talking on a deep level, the disciples are still on the surface. They are worried about having enough bread to eat in the boat. Jesus reminds them that he has just fed 4000 and that earlier he had fed 5000. He's got bread covered!

The story thus reveals the difficulty the disciples had in understanding Jesus, a key theme of Mark's Gospel. Back in Mark 4, we first saw this theme in full bloom as the disciples failed to understand the Parable of the Soils, a parable whose point was that only those with faith would understand his parables. As hear it would seem that they did not have "eyes to see" or "ears to hear."

This theme of the dullness of the disciples probably arose especially in their failure to see that Jesus as Messiah was going to die on the cross, as we will see at the end of the chapter. They expected only the victorious Christ, not the suffering one. Jesus even asks here if their hearts are "hardened."

4. In Bethsaida, Jesus heals a blind man. This is the only healing that seems to take place in stages. Jesus spits on his eyes and his vision partially returns. Then he puts his hands on his eyes again, and his sight is completely restored. In John 9, Jesus also spits as part of the healing.

Matthew 11:20 suggests that Jesus did many miracles in Bethsaida, the village where Philip was from -- and possibly also Peter and Andrew originally (John 1:44). However, this is the only miracle that the Gospels mention specifically taking place in Bethsaida, although it is possible that the feeding of the 5000 took place nearby. Bethsaida was a little northeast of Capernaum. Jesus will heal another blind man near Jericho.

5. Mark 8:27-33 is arguably the turning point, the pivot of Mark's story. Up to this point, the mood as been optimistic and positive. Jesus heals. He casts out demons. It's "go, go, go." He faces opposition, but it is hardly forceful. Jesus is an unstoppable force and any resistance is ineffective.

From this point on in the Gospel, Jesus is facing the cross. Three times he will predict his imminent death, and three times the disciples won't get it. They are expecting a militant Messiah. Jesus is a suffering servant in this stage.

The conversation begins with the question, "Who are people saying I am?" It is a reminder that, while the demons know that Jesus is the Holy One, Jesus' identity as Messiah has not yet been established yet in Mark among his disciples. Here we are at the very end of Jesus' earthly mission. They are about to head to Jerusalem, and only now is the subject coming clear.

Some say Jesus is John the Baptist come back from the dead -- which Herod had feared. Some say he is Elijah, the forerunner of the Messiah. Still others think he is a prophet, perhaps the prophet of Deuteronomy 18:15-18.

Then Jesus asks who they think he is. Peter is the one to say it. "You are the Christ." Christ is Greek for anointed one. In Aramaic, it would have been meshiach, meaning "anointed one." Jesus accepts this belief. But in keeping with the secrecy theme, he warns them not to tell anyone.

6. At verse 31, Jesus makes his first prediction of his death. Referring to himself as the "Son of Man" or the "Son of Humanity," he connects the phrase to the suffering he is about to endure. Remember that this phrase chiefly appears in three contexts: 1) places where it is a idiomatic self-reference that means something like "the man," 2) a phrase connected with his identity as the suffering Messiah, and 3) places where it alludes to Daniel 7 and Jesus' victorious coming on the clouds of heaven.

Jesus will suffer. He will be rejected by the elders. He will be killed. Then after three days, he will rise again.

Peter does not understand. The disciples "don't get it." He takes Jesus aside and begins to rebuke him. "You're not going to die. You're a winner, Jesus. You're the Messiah. You're going to pound the Romans." 

But Jesus says, "Get behind me Satan." While satan can mean "adversary," Jesus may suggest that Satan is using Peter's ignorance to test him, to try to derail him from the cup that is set before him. Jesus tells Peter that he simply does not understand the things of God. He is thinking on a merely human level.

7. Now Jesus instructs Peter, the rest of the disciples, and the crowds. He indicates that following him is a way of the cross. Following Jesus is not a call to conquer. It is not a call to win. It is a call to suffer, perhaps even to die. If we are to follow Jesus, we must be willing to go to the cross. [3]

"Whoever wants to save their life will lose it, but whoever loses their life for my sake and the gospel, will save it" (8:35). This is the paradox of following Jesus.

Part of the paradox is the difference between now and that which is to come. If we invest our life's meaning too much in this current world, we are not likely to abound in the world that is coming. If we betray Christ now to survive, we will not live in the kingdom to come. If we are ashamed of Christ now, he will be "ashamed" of us at the time of his second coming to set up the kingdom in its fullness.

[1] Eusebius, Ecclesiastical History 3.39. It might say something about the author of Mark, however, if he incorporated into his Gospel two version of the same story. Might it imply a greater distance from Jesus than we might expect of John Mark? For example, would Peter have recorded both a feeding of 5000 and a feeding of 4000 if he knew these were two versions of the same story?

[2] In my estimation, this is probably an example of a saying that was both in Mark and Q. The Q version of the saying must have included the statement on Jonah, which Matthew and Luke then variously interpreted. Some of the Baptist material likely also fits in this category of overlap. I find it less likely that Luke has modified Matthew's version.

[3] This seems likely to be a paraphrase -- "take up your cross." Such a statement would have made no sense at all to Jesus' disciples or the crowd at this point. On the other hand, it is an incredibly powerful statement to those of us who live after the crucifixion.

Mark 1:1-13
Mark 1:14-15 
Mark 1:16-45
Mark 2
Mark 3
Mark 4:1-34
Mark 4:35-5:43
Mark 6
Mark 7

Mark 11:1-11 (Palm Sunday)
Mark 11:12-25 (Temple Monday)
Mark 11:26-12:44 (Debate Tuesday)
Mark 13 (Temple Prediction)
Mark 14:1-52 (Last Supper)
Mark 14:53-15:47 (Good Friday)
Mark 16 (The Resurrection)   

Thursday, July 10, 2025

Ben Kantor's Reconstructed "Early High Koine" Greek Pronunciation

Because of a project, I've had to wade a little into Ben Kantor's recent, unbelievable, staggeringly detailed work on the pronunciation of Greek in Judeo-Palestine at the time of Christ (long version, short version). He's mostly reconstructed it on the basis of misspellings (which reveals what sounded the same). He's used computers to process all the data.

Man, I feel old. So far, I haven't found anywhere where the darn thing is summarized in a user friendly way (including in his own book!!!). There are YouTube videos but they just seem to rant on and on about the project. They never seem to get to the summary I'm looking for.

So, here is a shot at summarizing. I call on the scholarly forces of the universe to correct me.