Jesus Prohibits Divorce
It is not often remarked that Jesus prohibits divorce. The evidence is pretty clear: 1 Corinthians 7:10-11; Matthew 5:32//Luke 16:18 (note no exception); Mark 10:2-12//Matthew 19:3-12. I want highlight what Jesus says in Mark 10:2-9.
Mark 10:2-9
The Pharisees test Jesus by asking whether divorce is lawful (v.2). Jesus retorts by asking what Moses commanded (v.3). They respond by alluding to Deuteronomy 24:1-4 where divorce is allowed via a certificate of dismissal (v.4). However, Jesus response to this is very interesting and has far reaching implications. Jesus answers that Moses wrote this command because of "hardness of heart" (v.5). In other words, this law was because of human frailty and is not in the deeper sense the result of God's will. For Jesus, God's will on this matter is that divorce is not permitted. He uses Genesis (1:27; 2:24) to argue that divorce is contrary to God's designs.
Jesus Trumps the Law
What is interesting about Jesus' argument is that he assumes that Scripture (Deuteronomy) is not the last word concerning God's true will and this will is written into creation (Genesis). Perhaps we could say that the Law is evidence that God adjusts his message to the state of humanity because he is merciful and gracious (and a realist?). However, Jesus thinks there is a new game in town (Mt. 9:17) and the situation is changed so that the previous divine accommodation is no longer operative. Christianity brings the Spirit and the Spirit brings the condition that makes divorce a thing of the past.
Theological Upshot
It is true that at the consummation of all things there will be no marriage at all (Mk 12:25) but in the meantime there is no excuse for Christians to divorce. The new heart promised in the the prophets has come. What God has joined together, let no one separate!
Sunday, November 16, 2014
Sunday, August 24, 2014
The Kingdom is forcefully advancing: Matthew 11:12
Preamble
The interpretation of Matthew 11:12 is difficult. NRSV: "From the days of John the Baptist until now the kingdom of heaven has suffered violence [or NSRV's alternative reading: has been coming violently], and the violent take it by force." I will offer an argument for taking "has suffered violence" [biazo] as forcefully advancing, that is, as middle and not passive.
Spiritual Warfare
Jesus and the evil spiritual powers did not enjoy each other's company. Demons seem afraid of Jesus asking him if he will destroy (Mk. 1:24) or torment (Mk. 5:7) them. The fear seems to be based on Jesus' power to make the demons do something against their will. The fear is well-founded because at Jesus' command demons are cast out sometimes it seems with great pain (Mk. 1:26). How does Jesus' word have this power? Clues could reside in the verbs used to describe Jesus' response. In Mark 1, Jesus rebukes (epitiman) the demon and tells it to be silent (phimoo). Scholars have argued that the term for "rebuke" corresponds to the Hebrew (ga'ar) which in the Old Testament is often paired with words such as "destroy", "vanquish", and "trample" (see especially Zech. 3:2). Also, the term for "be silent" means in other contexts "to muzzle" or "to strangle". We just don't know the physics of the metaphysical but somehow Jesus' power extends to the spiritual realm in such a way that "forceful" language is used in scripture.
"Force" language is also used to describe Jesus' overall stance versus the evil spiritual powers. Jesus taught that the strong man must be bound before his property can be plundered (Mk. 3:27/Mt. 12:29/Lk. 11:21-22 [Luke adds the term "overcomes" or "attacks"]). Again, Jesus' actions are described using "force" language.
Jesus interaction with the evil powers is part and parcel to the advancement of the Kingdom of God. Jesus claimed that his exorcisms are by the finger of God (Lk. 11:20) or the Spirit of God (Mt. 12:28) and that they prove the Kingdom has arrived.
Matthew 11:12
Given the above it would make sense for Jesus to say that the Kingdom of God is advancing forcibly. This make sense also in the immediate context. Jesus had told John's disciples, who had come to question whether Jesus is the one to come, to report what they have seen and heard. He then lists actions indicative of his ministry (see Mt. 11:5). Exorcisms are not specifically mentioned in this list but exorcisms are mentioned in summaries of Jesus' ministry (Mt. 8:16).
Scholars have also argued that it could make sense to say "the Kingdom advances forcibly (biazo), and violent people (biastes) have been raiding it." D. A. Carson has argued that a term can be used with two different senses, a phenomenon termed "antanaclasis". The logic of the scene could be then explained by Jesus telling John that the Kingdom is indeed at hand but that it is being met with resistance. However, if the second clause were to be interpreted in a positive sense (people press into the Kingdom), then the whole verse would be positive and Carson's solution would not be needed. The latter option also corresponds better with the Luke parallel (Lk. 16:16). Luke has "the Kingdom of God is being preached" instead of "the Kingdom is forcibly advancing".
Theological Upshot
The Kingdom of God is all about confronting the evil powers and taking back enemy territory. Scripture uses martial language for a reason. We are in a war.
The interpretation of Matthew 11:12 is difficult. NRSV: "From the days of John the Baptist until now the kingdom of heaven has suffered violence [or NSRV's alternative reading: has been coming violently], and the violent take it by force." I will offer an argument for taking "has suffered violence" [biazo] as forcefully advancing, that is, as middle and not passive.
Spiritual Warfare
Jesus and the evil spiritual powers did not enjoy each other's company. Demons seem afraid of Jesus asking him if he will destroy (Mk. 1:24) or torment (Mk. 5:7) them. The fear seems to be based on Jesus' power to make the demons do something against their will. The fear is well-founded because at Jesus' command demons are cast out sometimes it seems with great pain (Mk. 1:26). How does Jesus' word have this power? Clues could reside in the verbs used to describe Jesus' response. In Mark 1, Jesus rebukes (epitiman) the demon and tells it to be silent (phimoo). Scholars have argued that the term for "rebuke" corresponds to the Hebrew (ga'ar) which in the Old Testament is often paired with words such as "destroy", "vanquish", and "trample" (see especially Zech. 3:2). Also, the term for "be silent" means in other contexts "to muzzle" or "to strangle". We just don't know the physics of the metaphysical but somehow Jesus' power extends to the spiritual realm in such a way that "forceful" language is used in scripture.
"Force" language is also used to describe Jesus' overall stance versus the evil spiritual powers. Jesus taught that the strong man must be bound before his property can be plundered (Mk. 3:27/Mt. 12:29/Lk. 11:21-22 [Luke adds the term "overcomes" or "attacks"]). Again, Jesus' actions are described using "force" language.
Jesus interaction with the evil powers is part and parcel to the advancement of the Kingdom of God. Jesus claimed that his exorcisms are by the finger of God (Lk. 11:20) or the Spirit of God (Mt. 12:28) and that they prove the Kingdom has arrived.
Matthew 11:12
Given the above it would make sense for Jesus to say that the Kingdom of God is advancing forcibly. This make sense also in the immediate context. Jesus had told John's disciples, who had come to question whether Jesus is the one to come, to report what they have seen and heard. He then lists actions indicative of his ministry (see Mt. 11:5). Exorcisms are not specifically mentioned in this list but exorcisms are mentioned in summaries of Jesus' ministry (Mt. 8:16).
Scholars have also argued that it could make sense to say "the Kingdom advances forcibly (biazo), and violent people (biastes) have been raiding it." D. A. Carson has argued that a term can be used with two different senses, a phenomenon termed "antanaclasis". The logic of the scene could be then explained by Jesus telling John that the Kingdom is indeed at hand but that it is being met with resistance. However, if the second clause were to be interpreted in a positive sense (people press into the Kingdom), then the whole verse would be positive and Carson's solution would not be needed. The latter option also corresponds better with the Luke parallel (Lk. 16:16). Luke has "the Kingdom of God is being preached" instead of "the Kingdom is forcibly advancing".
Theological Upshot
The Kingdom of God is all about confronting the evil powers and taking back enemy territory. Scripture uses martial language for a reason. We are in a war.
Sunday, July 20, 2014
Miracles and the Meaning of Christianity
Preamble
Why did Jesus perform so many miracles? I claim that an answer to this question goes to the heart of what Christianity is about.
Two inadequate Explanations of Miracles in the New Testament
Why did Jesus perform so many miracles? I claim that an answer to this question goes to the heart of what Christianity is about.
Two inadequate Explanations of Miracles in the New Testament
- Miracles proved Jesus deity. This explanation seems to falter for the following considerations:
- Jesus never appeals to miracles to prove his divine status
- Others worked wonders and their divinity was not asserted (Elijah, Elisha etc.)
- In Mark 7:36, Jesus orders the recipients of his miracle to tell no one. He is reticent in getting acclaim via his miracles.
- Jesus escapes miracle hungry crowds (John 6:15--after feeding miracle).
- Jesus purposely does miracles without crowds (Mark 5:40).
- Miracles evidence Jesus' compassion. See for example Matthew 20:34, John 11:35--raising Lazarus, et al. This explanation actually dovetails into the next and best explanation.
- Miracles express the presence, character, and hope of the Kingdom of God, in other words, they are symbols and foretastes of the kingdom of God itself.
- The miracles themselves are more often to put right what is not as it is intended to be (healing blindness, deafness, muteness, and lameness). Jesus' miracles were not just firework displays, they met human needs. They were signs that God's rule was beginning to put things right.
- The type of miracles Jesus performed were indicative of the reign of God as put forth in Isaiah 35:4-10, which Matthew seems to allude to in 15:29-31 where the litany of Isaiah is repeated twice.
- Exorcisms (a type of miracle) are signs of the defeat of Satan's kingdom which makes room for the Kingdom of God. This is how Jesus viewed it in light of Mark 3:27//Matthew 12:29 (the strong man bound in order to plunder).
- Jesus himself directly links his miracles to the Kingdom of God: Luke 4:18-19; Matthew 11:2-6//Luke 7:18-23; Luke 9:1-2; Matthew 12:28 "if by the Spirit of God"//Luke 11:20 "if by the finger of God".
- Even some of the "nature" miracles fall in line here. Jesus stills the storm using the same verb that he used to exorcise demons. The storm was probably a Satanic event meant to take out the ambassadors of God's Kingdom. The feeding miracles meet people's needs. The cursing of the fig tree was probably an enacted parable of judgment.
Jesus gives authority to his disciples to perform miracles (Matthew 10:1//Luke 9:1-2), and they perform exactly the type of miracles Jesus performed. Acts is replete with miracles done by the disciples (see summary at 2:35 and 5:12-16). Peter and Paul and Stephen and Philip all perform miracles which echo Jesus' miracles. The reason they too perform miracle is that they were Jesus' ambassadors of the Kingdom of God. The Kingdom of God arrives with healing and making things whole.
Miracles Today
If miracles are part and parcel of the Kingdom of God, then we would expect the church throughout history to perform them. Cessationist arguments to the contrary are based on a mistaken view of what miracles were meant to accomplish. If the Kingdom of God is nothing more than information to be believed ("Jesus died for our sins"), then it might make sense to say that miracles ceased because on that view the miracles were only there to call attention to the Gospel message so understood. However, the Gospel evidence of miracles totally undermine this picture. The miracles are part of the Kingdom of God, not just some carney sideshow. Perhaps miracles happen where there is most need for God's power: human powerlessness. If we in the West do not see miracles perhaps that says more about us and our non-reliance on God's power than it does about the possible cessation of miracles.
Theological Upshot
The miracles matter and they matter for reasons. Paul says in 1 Corinthians 4:20 that the Kingdom of God (Paul rarely uses these terms) is not a matter of talk but of power. Miracles are God's power setting things right. It's time for us evangelicals to unmask our talk-only theology and put the power back into the Gospel where real transformation and new creation happen and not mere imputation, that is, mere talk.
Sunday, June 22, 2014
An Argument against Christian Conspiracy Theories
Preamble
I intend to argue that Christian Conspiracy Theories fail to run the gauntlet of scripture. Specifically, I will use Ephesians 6:10-20 (especially 6:12) to severely cast doubt on the belief that there is a human cabal that manipulates world events to advance a (satanic) agenda.
Two Alternatives
There are two basic alternatives, the first I endorse and the second I will argue against:
Most conspiracy theories (not just Christian ones) posit a human Cabal that manipulates events. The relationship between Satan and this Cabal takes two basic forms, with the second form also coming in two forms:
Problems with the Cabal from Satan's perspective
Problems with the Cabal from the the Christian conspiracy theorist's perspective
I intend to argue that Christian Conspiracy Theories fail to run the gauntlet of scripture. Specifically, I will use Ephesians 6:10-20 (especially 6:12) to severely cast doubt on the belief that there is a human cabal that manipulates world events to advance a (satanic) agenda.
Two Alternatives
There are two basic alternatives, the first I endorse and the second I will argue against:
- Satan and his spiritual minions (demons etc.) conspire directly to influence world events by using the disobedience (greed, pride etc.) of individuals. The intelligence for this manipulation remains with Satan. Human actors need not be privy to Satan's strategies and schemes.
- Satan and his minions use a secret human Cabal to influence world events.
Most conspiracy theories (not just Christian ones) posit a human Cabal that manipulates events. The relationship between Satan and this Cabal takes two basic forms, with the second form also coming in two forms:
- The Cabal is conscious of Satanic influence, that is, the Cabal are Satan worshipers who get their strategies directly from Satan.
- The Cabal is merely influenced by Satan without necessarily being conscious of his schemes.
- 2a) Satan assembled the Cabal (without their conscious knowledge).
- 2b) Satan just uses an existing Cabal to accomplish his plans.
Problems with the Cabal from Satan's perspective
Relying on the Cabal is dangerous for Satan. Investing his strategy with humans runs risks:
- Humans may repent and turn to God and bring down the Cabal (destruction from within)
- The Cabal may experience a leak and be discovered (destruction from without)
- It very hard to set up a Cabal. Actual Satan worshipers in the case of (1) are very rare, so not only does Satan need powerful humans but he needs them to be Satanists. In the case of (2a), it might be rather difficult to orchestrate the formation of a Cabal with the requisite power to manipulate world events. In the case of (2b), there are no guarantees that Satan will find a suitable ready-made Cabal to do his dirty work.
- Peter (Mk 8:31-33)
- Judas (Lk 22:3, Jn 13:27)
- Ananias and Sapphira (Acts 5:3)
- See also Eph. 2:2, 4:27, 6:11-12; 2 Tim. 2:25; 1 Cor. 7:5; 2 Cor. 2:11, 11:15
Problems with the Cabal from the the Christian conspiracy theorist's perspective
- Many Christian conspiracies posit a Cabal to explain how something like the one world government or new world order is to come about. But scripture attests that Satan already has world power:
- God of this age 2 Cor. 4:4
- Prince of the Power of the Air Eph. 2:2
- Prince of this world Jn. 12:31, 14:30, 16:11
- Implied in Mt. 4:8,9
- There are too many candidates for the Cabal: Masons, Zionist Jews, Illuminati, Bilderbergers, CFRers, Skull and Bones, Templar Knights, Opus Dei, Priory of Sion, Rosicrucians, Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn, Ordo Templis Orientis etc. If a Cabal is discovered how do we know it is the top dog and not a low-rung group. Perhaps our discovered Cabal is only a plant that is meant to throw one off the scent. This proves that the existence of the Cabal is really worthless from a Christian perspective because we would never know if we had the real thing.
- It's hard to prove the existence of the Cabal for by definition it is super secret. If there is evidence for the existence of a Cabal then theorists must be fair and admit evidence when it goes against the existence of a Cabal. Conspiracy theorists are notorious for not adhering to this principle. On this score, my alternative is much simpler. Most of the phenomena that the Cabal is meant to explain is more simply explained just using greed and pride etc. Why are Hollywood movies they way they are? Because being the way they are makes someone money.
- The Christian belief in the Cabal just mimics non-Christian conspiracy thinking which is dangerous considering the anti-Semitism of many non-Christian conspiracies. Of course, this doesn't prove that there are not Cabals but it does remind Christians that Conspiracy Theories do not have a Christian origin. Non-Christian conspiracies have to postulate the Cabal since they don't have recourse to Satan, though even here some alien/reptilian theories come very close if not identical to the demonic.
- Conspiracies, especially of the (2b) type, tend to slide into the belief that Satan just uses individuals because it is a small step from merely influencing a ready-made Cabal to influencing mere individuals. Taking the intelligence out of the Cabal is a huge step away from your standard Conspiracy.
- Conspiracies are distracting. They concentrate on the kingdom of Satan at the expense of the Kingdom of God.
- Many Conspiracies rely on a faulty interpretation of Revelation but that is another blog!
One of the biggest strikes against the Cabal is the teaching that our struggle is not against flesh and blood but against Satan and his minions. So even if there is a Cabal, who cares? From a Christian perspective that is not the heart of our struggle. This also goes to show that conspiracy theorists tend to be rather judgmental and unloving and suspicious of behavior that may otherwise be righteous.
What Conspiracy Theorists get right
The one thing Christian conspiracy theorists get right is being suspicious of power that other Christians may not recognize as satanic.
Theological Upshot
Conspiracy Theories add next to nothing to the Kingdom of God. They are worthless.
Saturday, June 7, 2014
Open Theism and Peter's Denials
Preamble
In my last blog I used the idea of "prophetic strength" to argue that Open Theism provides the best explanation of Biblical prophecy. I argued that most prophecy has rather low strength. However, there are prophecies that seem to have rather high strength. I will discuss one of these, the denials of Peter, and argue that its strength is perhaps not as high as may first appear.
The Predictions:
All four Gospels have Jesus predicting that Peter will deny him in the future. Matthew and Mark have this prediction said on the way to Gethsemane and Luke and John have is said at the Last Supper.
Preliminary Consideration:
Mark's prediction is different from the others in that he has Peter's three denials occurring before the rooster crows twice. There is another difficulty that has to do with the actual three denials. Here are the questioners in each of the Gospels [and where they said their question or accusation]:
Other considerations:
My Solution:
My proposal is that Jesus was only trying to teach Peter that his bravado was unwarranted and that Peter was not ready for the reality of the disappointment that the Kingdom of God was about suffering and not political onslaught. However, Jesus' prediction was most likely not meant to be foretelling but was a strategic challenge to help Peter when the moment of the disappointment arrived. The importance of the prediction is not to show off Jesus' predictive powers but for the nurturing of Peter. The open theist Greg Boyd has made the point that Jesus in the Gospel of John (chapter 21) alludes to Peter's denials in order to teach him the real values of the Kingdom and that he predicted that Peter would follow him on the road of suffering and death. This episode helps tie together Jesus' motive for saying what he did to Peter and what actually happened.
There is no reason why Jesus cannot use language in such a way as to challenge and there is no reason why Jesus cannot use language that is hyperbolic or figurative or whatever. It is my conjecture that Jesus' prediction used an idiom and the purpose of the idiom was to communicate Jesus' assurance that Peter would deny him. Jesus was only saying that he was sure Peter would deny him. Jesus was sure that Peter's bravado was misplaced (because Peter believed in a political messiah?) and he was sure that there would be opportunity for Peter to deny him. At the same time, Jesus was sure Peter would try try to follow (albeit at a distance) because he knew Peter had deep feelings for Jesus. So, Jesus uttered his statement to Peter to warn him that his confidence was misplaced.
Sure, Peter could have not denied Jesus and he could have then come to Jesus and complained that Jesus was wrong. But couldn't Jesus have then replied by saying that the only reason he worded things they way he did was for Peter's benefit and that it was meant to make Peter think about the foundations of his commitment. Jesus could have said: "Look Peter, I wasn't putting my divinity on the line and predicting that you would 100% for sure deny me, but that is not what I was attempting to do, I only wanted you to learn about yourself. Can't I use language that is strategic and not literally true? After all, you have heard me say a lot of parables you knew I used language in ways everyone else does."
Open Theism
If I am correct about the meaning of Jesus' prediction, then this gives considerable more leeway in how this prediction is assessed in relation to Open Theism. All that "needed" to happen for Jesus' prediction to be literally true, if that is the way we want to go, is to say that Peter denied Jesus before dawn, but it would not have necessarily taken supernatural knowledge to come to this conclusion. Jesus knew a lot about Peter and he knew a lot about the situation.
I will grant that the Gospel writers were impressed by the fact that Peter literally fulfilled Jesus' figurative "prediction" since they all recounted three denials. I think they did this because they did want Jesus' figurative prediction to be literally true in order to highlight Jesus' superior knowledge. However, since we cannot harmonize all the Gospel denials, it is safe to say that Peter denied Jesus on multiple occasions (compare the so-called "six denial solution"). This is bolstered by the fact that the Gospels at times claim that the questioners/accusers were plural, in which case, it would be hard for an eye-witnesses to count the actual denials (see Matthew's and Mark's third and John's second). But if this is true, then those who hold the view that the future of the universe is completely settled cannot point to the precision of Peter's denials as evidence against Open theism. There were more than three and Jesus was not very specific how these denials occurred. In other word, Jesus prediction had rather low strength.
The Open theist can always claim that God could have just forced Peter to deny Jesus three times, and forced the rooster to crow after the third (this may have been true even on my story) and forced the questioners/accusers to question or accuse. But why? Nothing hung on Jesus' prediction being literally true. It is not where Jesus put his emphasis. Jesus put his emphasis on Peter's attitude.
Finally, Jesus, in John's last chapter (21) alludes to Peter's three denials. The only thing this need show is that someone (Peter, the other disciple who was present [only mentioned in John, by the way!], or someone else, could have noticed that Peter denied Jesus on multiple time and amazingly literally fulfilled Jesus figurative saying). Jesus picked up on that and asked Peter three times in keeping with the three in his figurative prediction. Nothing here requires that the future be completely settled.
Theological Upshot:
I conclude that Peter's denials do not cast doubt on Open Theism. The accounts themselves just do not lend themselves to the type of future prediction that the settled view predicts. Open Theism is still the best explanation of the strength of Biblical prophecy, including Peter's denials.
In my last blog I used the idea of "prophetic strength" to argue that Open Theism provides the best explanation of Biblical prophecy. I argued that most prophecy has rather low strength. However, there are prophecies that seem to have rather high strength. I will discuss one of these, the denials of Peter, and argue that its strength is perhaps not as high as may first appear.
The Predictions:
All four Gospels have Jesus predicting that Peter will deny him in the future. Matthew and Mark have this prediction said on the way to Gethsemane and Luke and John have is said at the Last Supper.
- Matthew 26:34: Truly I say to you that during this night before a cock crows, three times you will deny me.
- Mark 14:30: Truly I say to you today this night before a rooster crows twice you will deny me three times.
- Luke 22:34: I tell you, Peter, will not crow today a rooster until three times you deny to know me.
- John 13:38: Truly, truly, I say to you never will a cock crow until you deny me three times.
Preliminary Consideration:
Mark's prediction is different from the others in that he has Peter's three denials occurring before the rooster crows twice. There is another difficulty that has to do with the actual three denials. Here are the questioners in each of the Gospels [and where they said their question or accusation]:
- Matthew: 1) One [used in tandem with "another" in the second denial] servant woman [court]; 2) Another woman [entrance way]; 3) Those present [entrance way]
- Mark: 1) One of the servant women of High Priest [courtyard]; 2) Same servant woman [presumably in the courtyard still even though Peter moved to the forecourt]; 3) bystanders [forecourt]
- Luke: 1) A certain servant woman [courtyard]; 2) Another man [courtyard]; 3) A certain man (another) [still in courtyard]
- John: 1) gatekeeper servant woman [courtyard]; 2) servants and guards [courtyard still]; 3) One (masculine) of the servants of the High Priest, a relative of the man whose ear Peter cut off [courtyard still]
Other considerations:
- John has an episode at the end of his Gospel (chapter 21) where Jesus questions Peter three time which seems to echo Peter's three denials. This seems to shows that Jesus thought of Peter's denials in terms of three.
- Jesus could have said something like "Before a cock crows twice, thrice you will deny me." [Mark's version] This 2/3 pattern is similar to the 3/4 pattern in Proverbs 30:15,18,21,29 and Amos, and to the 2/3 pattern in Job 33:29. In other words, there is Biblical warrant for saying that Jesus was using an idiom and so the numbers "two" and "three" may only be incidental to the actual prediction.
My Solution:
My proposal is that Jesus was only trying to teach Peter that his bravado was unwarranted and that Peter was not ready for the reality of the disappointment that the Kingdom of God was about suffering and not political onslaught. However, Jesus' prediction was most likely not meant to be foretelling but was a strategic challenge to help Peter when the moment of the disappointment arrived. The importance of the prediction is not to show off Jesus' predictive powers but for the nurturing of Peter. The open theist Greg Boyd has made the point that Jesus in the Gospel of John (chapter 21) alludes to Peter's denials in order to teach him the real values of the Kingdom and that he predicted that Peter would follow him on the road of suffering and death. This episode helps tie together Jesus' motive for saying what he did to Peter and what actually happened.
There is no reason why Jesus cannot use language in such a way as to challenge and there is no reason why Jesus cannot use language that is hyperbolic or figurative or whatever. It is my conjecture that Jesus' prediction used an idiom and the purpose of the idiom was to communicate Jesus' assurance that Peter would deny him. Jesus was only saying that he was sure Peter would deny him. Jesus was sure that Peter's bravado was misplaced (because Peter believed in a political messiah?) and he was sure that there would be opportunity for Peter to deny him. At the same time, Jesus was sure Peter would try try to follow (albeit at a distance) because he knew Peter had deep feelings for Jesus. So, Jesus uttered his statement to Peter to warn him that his confidence was misplaced.
Sure, Peter could have not denied Jesus and he could have then come to Jesus and complained that Jesus was wrong. But couldn't Jesus have then replied by saying that the only reason he worded things they way he did was for Peter's benefit and that it was meant to make Peter think about the foundations of his commitment. Jesus could have said: "Look Peter, I wasn't putting my divinity on the line and predicting that you would 100% for sure deny me, but that is not what I was attempting to do, I only wanted you to learn about yourself. Can't I use language that is strategic and not literally true? After all, you have heard me say a lot of parables you knew I used language in ways everyone else does."
Open Theism
If I am correct about the meaning of Jesus' prediction, then this gives considerable more leeway in how this prediction is assessed in relation to Open Theism. All that "needed" to happen for Jesus' prediction to be literally true, if that is the way we want to go, is to say that Peter denied Jesus before dawn, but it would not have necessarily taken supernatural knowledge to come to this conclusion. Jesus knew a lot about Peter and he knew a lot about the situation.
I will grant that the Gospel writers were impressed by the fact that Peter literally fulfilled Jesus' figurative "prediction" since they all recounted three denials. I think they did this because they did want Jesus' figurative prediction to be literally true in order to highlight Jesus' superior knowledge. However, since we cannot harmonize all the Gospel denials, it is safe to say that Peter denied Jesus on multiple occasions (compare the so-called "six denial solution"). This is bolstered by the fact that the Gospels at times claim that the questioners/accusers were plural, in which case, it would be hard for an eye-witnesses to count the actual denials (see Matthew's and Mark's third and John's second). But if this is true, then those who hold the view that the future of the universe is completely settled cannot point to the precision of Peter's denials as evidence against Open theism. There were more than three and Jesus was not very specific how these denials occurred. In other word, Jesus prediction had rather low strength.
The Open theist can always claim that God could have just forced Peter to deny Jesus three times, and forced the rooster to crow after the third (this may have been true even on my story) and forced the questioners/accusers to question or accuse. But why? Nothing hung on Jesus' prediction being literally true. It is not where Jesus put his emphasis. Jesus put his emphasis on Peter's attitude.
Finally, Jesus, in John's last chapter (21) alludes to Peter's three denials. The only thing this need show is that someone (Peter, the other disciple who was present [only mentioned in John, by the way!], or someone else, could have noticed that Peter denied Jesus on multiple time and amazingly literally fulfilled Jesus figurative saying). Jesus picked up on that and asked Peter three times in keeping with the three in his figurative prediction. Nothing here requires that the future be completely settled.
Theological Upshot:
I conclude that Peter's denials do not cast doubt on Open Theism. The accounts themselves just do not lend themselves to the type of future prediction that the settled view predicts. Open Theism is still the best explanation of the strength of Biblical prophecy, including Peter's denials.
Monday, June 2, 2014
Open Theism and Biblical Prophecy
Preamble
Bible prophecy is often used to refute Open theism, but I want to argue that Bible prophecy actually supports Open theism versus the settled view. My basic argument is that Open theism provides the best explanation of the strength of Bible prophecy. If my argument is sound, then there are some important ramifications which I will discuss below.
Form of the Argument
Premise 1: The strength of Bible prophecy is value X.
Premise 2: Open theism provides a better explanation of value X than the Future-is-settled view.
Therefore Open theism is preferable to the settled view.
Premise 1
To understand premise 1, I want to explain what I mean by the strength of prophecy. I contend that the strength of Bible prophecy as a whole depends on the strength of individual prophecies and the quantity of such prophecies. Let us say for the sake of argument that Jesus was born in a manger on the evening of March 31, 4 B.C. in Bethlehem to parents of Davidic lineage. If this was so, then the following predictions, let's say made in 500 B.C., would be on a scale of weaker strength prophecies to stronger strength prophecies:
I contend that the individual Old Testament prophecies concerning Jesus' first advent fall in the 2-3 range in the (imperfect) scale of my example, but they do not reach to strength 4. This leads me to rate the overall strength of Bible prophecy, taking into account quantity as well as quality, in the 2-3 or 3-ish range. This is fairly low.
Premise 2
Open theism provides a better model for why Bible prophecy would have strength 2 or 3 and not 9 or 10. If the future is open then there is a lot of historical wiggle room that God gives freedom. Given this freedom, and given God's unthwartable sovereign plans, then we wouldn't expect Bible prophecy to be much higher than 2 or 3. Open theism is often compared to a chess game in which a grandmaster will always beat a novice even though the grandmaster does not know in advance what moves the novice will make. The grandmaster's plan of victory is assured. God's plans are assured even though the individual moves might not be known in advance. The grandmaster will win, even though we don't know that it is by capturing the rook and forcing checkmate on move 14, say. In other words, the reason the strength of Bible prophecy is low is that Open theism is true.
A person who believes that the future is completely settled might have a response to all this, even if they were to admit that the strength of Bible prophecy is in the 2-3 range. They might want to say that God purposely keeps the strength of the prophecies low. But why? It can't be to glorify himself because God would get more glory if the predictions had a higher strength. It's harder to predict 10 than 1 in the example I gave, so the reason why God keeps prophetic strength low is not related to his glory. Some might claim that keeping prophetic strength low safeguards faith. But this gambit seems to plays into the hands of Open theists because it highlights God's desire to safeguard human free will. If God went about amazing people with predictions of the 10 variety then it wouldn't take any faith to believe in him. So, the non-open theist lands in a dilemma. Therefore, Open theism provides a better explanation as to why prophetic strength is low.
Ramifications
Since I claim Old Testament prophecy of Jesus' first advent has a rather low strength, and that Jesus is important and ought to garner as high a strength as any other Biblical topic, then we ought not expect prophecies yet to be fulfilled to have any higher strength. If this is so, then much of the pin-the-tail on the anti-Christ speculation is rendered fruitless. Bible prophecy just doesn't work that way. The same would apply to prophecies at all times, including those in Daniel, for example. If so, does this have bearings on how we date that book?
Theological Upshot
I have tried to show that Bible prophecy actually is a boon and not a bane to Open Theism. I grant the subjective nature of my arguments but I think the basic logic holds.
Bible prophecy is often used to refute Open theism, but I want to argue that Bible prophecy actually supports Open theism versus the settled view. My basic argument is that Open theism provides the best explanation of the strength of Bible prophecy. If my argument is sound, then there are some important ramifications which I will discuss below.
Form of the Argument
Premise 1: The strength of Bible prophecy is value X.
Premise 2: Open theism provides a better explanation of value X than the Future-is-settled view.
Therefore Open theism is preferable to the settled view.
Premise 1
To understand premise 1, I want to explain what I mean by the strength of prophecy. I contend that the strength of Bible prophecy as a whole depends on the strength of individual prophecies and the quantity of such prophecies. Let us say for the sake of argument that Jesus was born in a manger on the evening of March 31, 4 B.C. in Bethlehem to parents of Davidic lineage. If this was so, then the following predictions, let's say made in 500 B.C., would be on a scale of weaker strength prophecies to stronger strength prophecies:
- A King will be born
- A King will be born in Israel
- A King will be born in Bethlehem
- A King will be born in Bethlehem in 37-4 B.C.
- A King will be born in Bethlehem in 4 B.C.
- A King will be born in Bethlehem in 4 B.C. on March 31st
- A King will be born in Bethlehem in 4 B.C. on the evening of March 31st
- A King named Jesus will be born in Bethlehem in 4 B.C. on the evening of March 31st
- A King named Jesus will be born in a manger in Bethlehem in 4 B.C. on the evening of March 31st
- A King named Jesus will be born in a manger in Bethlehem in 4 B.C. on the evening of March 31st to parents named Joseph and Mary.
I contend that the individual Old Testament prophecies concerning Jesus' first advent fall in the 2-3 range in the (imperfect) scale of my example, but they do not reach to strength 4. This leads me to rate the overall strength of Bible prophecy, taking into account quantity as well as quality, in the 2-3 or 3-ish range. This is fairly low.
Premise 2
Open theism provides a better model for why Bible prophecy would have strength 2 or 3 and not 9 or 10. If the future is open then there is a lot of historical wiggle room that God gives freedom. Given this freedom, and given God's unthwartable sovereign plans, then we wouldn't expect Bible prophecy to be much higher than 2 or 3. Open theism is often compared to a chess game in which a grandmaster will always beat a novice even though the grandmaster does not know in advance what moves the novice will make. The grandmaster's plan of victory is assured. God's plans are assured even though the individual moves might not be known in advance. The grandmaster will win, even though we don't know that it is by capturing the rook and forcing checkmate on move 14, say. In other words, the reason the strength of Bible prophecy is low is that Open theism is true.
A person who believes that the future is completely settled might have a response to all this, even if they were to admit that the strength of Bible prophecy is in the 2-3 range. They might want to say that God purposely keeps the strength of the prophecies low. But why? It can't be to glorify himself because God would get more glory if the predictions had a higher strength. It's harder to predict 10 than 1 in the example I gave, so the reason why God keeps prophetic strength low is not related to his glory. Some might claim that keeping prophetic strength low safeguards faith. But this gambit seems to plays into the hands of Open theists because it highlights God's desire to safeguard human free will. If God went about amazing people with predictions of the 10 variety then it wouldn't take any faith to believe in him. So, the non-open theist lands in a dilemma. Therefore, Open theism provides a better explanation as to why prophetic strength is low.
Ramifications
Since I claim Old Testament prophecy of Jesus' first advent has a rather low strength, and that Jesus is important and ought to garner as high a strength as any other Biblical topic, then we ought not expect prophecies yet to be fulfilled to have any higher strength. If this is so, then much of the pin-the-tail on the anti-Christ speculation is rendered fruitless. Bible prophecy just doesn't work that way. The same would apply to prophecies at all times, including those in Daniel, for example. If so, does this have bearings on how we date that book?
Theological Upshot
I have tried to show that Bible prophecy actually is a boon and not a bane to Open Theism. I grant the subjective nature of my arguments but I think the basic logic holds.
Saturday, May 10, 2014
Jesus' Argument for the Resurrection
Preamble:
Jesus' argument for the Resurrection (Mark 12:18-27) is brilliant, if not unusual. I want to present this argument and assess its cogency.
Mark 12:18-27:
18 Some Sadducees, who say there is no resurrection, came to him and asked him a question, saying,
19 "Teacher, Moses wrote for us that if a man's brother dies, leaving a wife but no child, the man shall marry the widow and raise up children for his brother.
20 There were seven brothers; the first married and, when he died, left no children;
21 and the second married the widow and died, leaving no children; and the third likewise;
22 none of the seven left children. Last of all the woman herself died.
23 In the resurrection whose wife will she be? For the seven had married her."
24 Jesus said to them, "Is not this the reason you are wrong, that you know neither the scriptures nor the power of God?
25 For when they rise from the dead, they neither marry nor are given in marriage, but are like angels in heaven.
26 And as for the dead being raised, have you not read in the book of Moses, in the story about the bush, how God said to him, 'I am the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob'?
27 He is the God not of the dead, but of the living; you are quite wrong."
Structure of Mark 12:18-27:
Based on J. P. Meier's work, the structure of this passage can be outlined as follows:
I. 12:18-23
a. 12:18-19 Sadducees do not believe in the fact of resurrection (18) and use Moses to show that the resurrection is ridiculous (Deuteronomy 25:5, cf. Genesis 38:8).
b. 12:20-23 Sadducees set up a fictitious scenario based on the Moses passage to show that the resurrection leads to a ridiculous consequence.
II. 12:24-27
a. 12:24-25 Jesus states that the Sadducees are wrong about the fact of resurrection and wrong about the manner of resurrection (24), and then argues in reverse the two points, first that the Sadducees are wrong about the manner of resurrection (25).
b. 12:26-27 Jesus argues the fact of resurrection using Moses (Exodus 3:6).
Jesus' argument resurrection in Mark 12:26-27
Jesus' logic in verses 26-27 seems to go as follows:
Premise #1: God defines himself in relation to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob
Premise #2: God would not define himself in relation to dead things.
Conclusion #1: Therefore, Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob cannot be dead.
Conclusion #2: Therefore, The three men must be alive or will be alive in the future; in other words, the resurrection must be fact. QED.
Cogency of Jesus' argument
Jesus' argument is unprecedented. It relies on God's abhorrence of death. There is nothing more counter to the God of Life than death. Jesus capitalizes on this to reason that God would not define himself in terms of inanimate dust, rotting flesh or the like. God's identification with Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob at least shows that God thought highly of these individuals and so it would be out of character for God to let those whom God cares about to rot in the grave for all time. If God has the power to raise these individuals from the dead, then he would do so at least in this case. So, we are right back to the power of God, which informed Jesus response to the manner of Resurrection. Jesus argued that God has the power to raise individuals to a angelic-like state and therefore circumvents the Sadducees faulty scenario. Therefore God has the power to raise individuals to life. It's a question about God's power.
Theological Upshot
Does God have the power to raise individuals from the dead? That is a question we have to ask. Christianity answers with an unequivocal "Yes"!
Jesus' argument for the Resurrection (Mark 12:18-27) is brilliant, if not unusual. I want to present this argument and assess its cogency.
Mark 12:18-27:
18 Some Sadducees, who say there is no resurrection, came to him and asked him a question, saying,
19 "Teacher, Moses wrote for us that if a man's brother dies, leaving a wife but no child, the man shall marry the widow and raise up children for his brother.
20 There were seven brothers; the first married and, when he died, left no children;
21 and the second married the widow and died, leaving no children; and the third likewise;
22 none of the seven left children. Last of all the woman herself died.
23 In the resurrection whose wife will she be? For the seven had married her."
24 Jesus said to them, "Is not this the reason you are wrong, that you know neither the scriptures nor the power of God?
25 For when they rise from the dead, they neither marry nor are given in marriage, but are like angels in heaven.
26 And as for the dead being raised, have you not read in the book of Moses, in the story about the bush, how God said to him, 'I am the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob'?
27 He is the God not of the dead, but of the living; you are quite wrong."
Structure of Mark 12:18-27:
Based on J. P. Meier's work, the structure of this passage can be outlined as follows:
I. 12:18-23
a. 12:18-19 Sadducees do not believe in the fact of resurrection (18) and use Moses to show that the resurrection is ridiculous (Deuteronomy 25:5, cf. Genesis 38:8).
b. 12:20-23 Sadducees set up a fictitious scenario based on the Moses passage to show that the resurrection leads to a ridiculous consequence.
II. 12:24-27
a. 12:24-25 Jesus states that the Sadducees are wrong about the fact of resurrection and wrong about the manner of resurrection (24), and then argues in reverse the two points, first that the Sadducees are wrong about the manner of resurrection (25).
b. 12:26-27 Jesus argues the fact of resurrection using Moses (Exodus 3:6).
Jesus' argument resurrection in Mark 12:26-27
Jesus' logic in verses 26-27 seems to go as follows:
Premise #1: God defines himself in relation to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob
Premise #2: God would not define himself in relation to dead things.
Conclusion #1: Therefore, Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob cannot be dead.
Conclusion #2: Therefore, The three men must be alive or will be alive in the future; in other words, the resurrection must be fact. QED.
Cogency of Jesus' argument
Jesus' argument is unprecedented. It relies on God's abhorrence of death. There is nothing more counter to the God of Life than death. Jesus capitalizes on this to reason that God would not define himself in terms of inanimate dust, rotting flesh or the like. God's identification with Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob at least shows that God thought highly of these individuals and so it would be out of character for God to let those whom God cares about to rot in the grave for all time. If God has the power to raise these individuals from the dead, then he would do so at least in this case. So, we are right back to the power of God, which informed Jesus response to the manner of Resurrection. Jesus argued that God has the power to raise individuals to a angelic-like state and therefore circumvents the Sadducees faulty scenario. Therefore God has the power to raise individuals to life. It's a question about God's power.
Theological Upshot
Does God have the power to raise individuals from the dead? That is a question we have to ask. Christianity answers with an unequivocal "Yes"!
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