January 26, 2009

Exciting News

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For those of you who don't know, I am called to be in the ministry. Specifically, I feel that I am called to eventually be a head pastor, and that I have strong gifts towards teaching and pastoring. (If I get my way, I'll retire as a seminary professor, but we'll see how Yahweh guides things). I now have MDiv from Northeastern Seminary and am planning on getting ordained through the Assemblies of God.

Because I have the MDiv, I can skip the accreditation phase of ordination and move right to licensing, after I take (and pass) the history and polity course for AG. After that course, I will go before a committee of the local presbytery, who would approve me for a license. Once I have a license I can act as a minister until it expires. After two years, I can then pursue ordination, and if ordained I can minister indefinately with AG.

Now for the exciting news: I am now starting the history and polity course! It is a home course that I do out of a packet which I recieved this past Friday.

As for the blog, this means that I'll either be blogging more or less. I will have less time, and I already haven't had enough time to really blog. However, I'll also be thinking more, and I may simply prattle on here about the course so I can get my thoughts out. The course is likely to run until sometime in May, when I then make a request to be licensed.

Anyhoo, this should be an exciting time for me, and I would like to ask you all for your prayers and support. Thank you very much.

January 11, 2009

Interesting past couple months

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Man am I tired. I have been very busy the past month or so, and it doesn't look like it'll be easing up anytime soon. I'm getting a lot more hours at work, which is a great thing, but I also have to work earlier than I used to. This also means that I can't stay up as late as I used to either, which is when I've gotten most of my blogging done.

So, I have been quiet a while. Esther and I have also been painting our apartment. So far it looks good, but we still have a lot to go.

All in all, I'm sorry I haven't been very active. Quite frankly, its taking all my blogging time just to read what everyone else is writing. I have a couple of posts have written, and a few others planned. I just hope I get to them soon before I loose my focus on them.

January 2, 2009

Romans 9

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Billy Birch is starting a series on Romans 9 that I am rather looking forward to. He is going to go through Romans 9 verse by verse, exegeting it along the way, demonstrating why the Calvinist interpretation doesn't hold up. So far, he has done two posts: Love for the Lost and The Ultimate Sacrifice.
Now I don't know what Billy is going to be saying as he goes along, but I thought I would take the opportunity to point out another series on the same subject. I believe I have mentioned it before. That is the one by Kieth Schooley (who is a strong advocate for the New Perspective on Paul). Indeed, it is so fine that I have been unable to justify doing one of my own since it would be the same as his, just less articulate.
In his introduction he demonstrates that the first few verses often ignored by Calvinists state Paul's thesis for the whole chapter: that being a descendant of Abraham does not guarantee salvation, and that God has brought salvation to the Gentiles. He then shows how Paul uses Isaac and Jacob to demonstrate this point. Paul then uses the example of Pharoah as an example of God's mercy to Gentiles. Indeed, Kieth makes the point that interpreting Pharaoh as Calvinists do undermines Paul's thesis in the section. Paul then uses Jeremiah's Potter and Clay metaphor to emphasize God's consistency in demanding repentance  and his patience with Israel as an object of His wrath.
Keith's conclusion lists out both exegetical perspectives. I have included these lists below.
Calvinism:
  • Paul begins by agonizing over the failure of Israel to come to salvation through faith in Christ (9:1-5).
  • Paul’s solution is that not all of Israel is Israel; i.e., not all of Israel is elect (v. 6).
  • Paul demonstrates God’s prerogative to elect whomever he wills by having elected Isaac over Ishmael and Jacob over Esau (vv. 7-13).
  • God has mercy only on those whom he chooses to have mercy, and hardens the rest, as exemplified by Pharaoh (vv. 14-18).
  • At this point, Paul hypothesizes a questioner who articulates the Arminian contention: if God has chosen to harden someone like Pharaoh, how can God then judge him for what he was predestined to do (v. 19)? Paul rebukes the questioner for impiety, and uses the potter-clay illustration to reiterate that God has the right to elect some and reprobate some as he deems fit (vv. 20-21).
  • Paul then adds, as a supporting argument, the fact that when God chooses to reprobate someone like Pharaoh, he has to bear patiently their sin and arrogance, but does so, in order to demonstrate his glory to his elect, which turn out to be among the Gentiles as well as among the Jews (vv. 22-24).
  • He thus brings the discussion back to the issue of Jewish unbelief in Christ, from which his discussion of election has been an excursus.
My understanding:
  • It begins, as before, with Paul agonizing over the failure of Israel to come to faith in Christ (vv. 1-5).
  • He has to confront the Jewish objection that, if his gospel were correct, it would mean that God’s promises to the Jews had failed. His response is that God’s promises have not failed, but others are inheriting the promises, because not all of Israel is Israel: i.e., not all of Israel has followed Abraham in faith (v. 6).
  • Ethnic descent from Abraham is not enough to be considered “Abraham’s children,” as the examples of Ishmael and Esau demonstrate; Israel has already been granted unmerited blessings as compared with other descendants of Abraham (vv. 7-13).
  • Therefore God is not unjust if he now excludes those descendants of Jacob who do not come to faith, because anyone he blesses, even Moses, is a recipient of his mercy (vv. 14-16). God may choose to spare for a time even someone like Pharaoh, whom God has chosen to harden—knowing that he will harden himself in response to God’s challenge—in order for God to glorify himself through that person, who can be viewed as both an example of God’s mercy and hardening (vv. 17-18).
  • The implication is therefore that the Jews have been given mercy in the past but are not guaranteed mercy in the future if they do not come to faith in Christ. The hypothetical questioner asks why God still blames the Jews, if He has hardened them (v. 19), refusing to recognize that the Jews are hardened just as Pharaoh was hardened, by their own stubborn refusal to repent. Paul therefore rebukes them, and uses the potter-clay illustration to point out that God has always dealt with Israel on the basis of its repentance, and it is only those who refuse to repent who argue back to God that he made them as they are (vv. 20-21).
  • Paul then points out that God has to bear patiently the “objects of his wrath”—the unbelieving—in order to make his glory known to the “objects of his mercy”—those who come to faith, which he specifically identifies as having come not only from the Jews but also from the Gentiles (vv. 22-24). The supporting quotations from Hosea and Isaiah make clear the point: that many of those whom the Jews had considered excluded from the covenant (the Gentiles) would in the end be included, while many whom the Jews had considered included in the covenant (themselves) would be excluded (vv. 25-29).
  • The basis upon which Gentiles have been included and Jews excluded is made explicit in vv. 30-33: it is that the Gentiles are obtaining righteousness through faith, while the Jews have pursued it by works.