This blog serves as an outreach for Pastor Randy Powell of the First Baptist Church of Franklin, PA. Feel free to ask questions or send me an e-mail at pastorpowell@hotmail.com
HaYesod is the primary disciple-training material for the Hebrew Roots Movement aligned organization: The First Fruits of Zion
This analysis is from the 2023 edition. My initial seminar warning of the dangers of FFOZ utilized the 2017 edition. As will be shown here, the amount of unorthodox and heretical material has significantly increased from that edition to this.
The following analysis is not based upon this one lesson alone. These same false teachings have appeared in dozens of other Torah Club and FFOZ published materials.
What this lesson reveals is that Torah Club leaders are being taught to embrace these teachings, not gloss over them. The “correct” answers provided are truly damning.
FFOZ has a fascination with, and an allegiance to, the 2nd Temple Judaism of the 1st century. As such, they work to integrate beliefs from that era of Judaism into the theology they’re attempting to bring into churches.
Theodicy is the study of the “problem of evil.” It is a rich field that includes the wisdom of books like Job. However, to say that when godly people suffer it must be because of the sins of other people is a human-centered view that was rejected by Job’s insistence that his suffering was not the result of his sin (or any sin), and by the testimony of Jesus Christ.
John 9:1-3 (NIV) As he went along, he saw a man blind from birth. 2 His disciples asked him, “Rabbi, who sinned, this man or his parents, that he was born blind?” 3 “Neither this man nor his parents sinned,” said Jesus, “but this happened so that the works of God might be displayed in him.
Because suffering and sin are not directly corelated, the entire premise of the so-called “Law of Atonement” is false. Even if the righteous suffered for the sins of others, there is zero biblical evidence that such suffering is connected to, let alone effective at, sin atonement. On what basis is this claim made?? The suffering and death of human beings never atones for sin. It cannot, at all. We are not a spotless sacrifice.
1 Peter 2:20 (New American Standard Bible) For what credit is there if, when you sin and are harshly treated, you endure it with patience? But if when you do what is right and suffer for it you patiently endure it, this finds favor with God.*
[* “finds favor” is not a universal translation, it was chosen to connect to the story of Moses that is coming. Beware of theology built on cherry-picked translations.]
The use of 1 Peter 2:20 is an out-of-context abuse of Peter’s original intent. There is zero reason to assert that Peter believed that the suffering of Jesus’ followers could atone for their own sins, let alone those of anyone else. This whole concept is antithetical to the Gospel message: Only the Son of God is worthy.
“An innocent person who suffers and dies accrues extra merit and favor with God. This merit can be credited to someone else’s account.” This is blasphemous and deeply heretical. No human being has ever had enough merit to earn God’s favor, let alone extra. There is ZERO hint in God’s Word that a human being could apply merit, even if he/she had extra, to anyone else. Note that FFOZ simply makes this massive claim with zero attempt to support it from a single scriptural source, or even from their usual trope “the sages.”
FFOZ’s hermeneutical methodology is deeply flawed. Word usage determines word meaning, claiming that two words in different languages simply mean the same thing is overly simplistic and misleading.
ḥên occurs 66 times in the OT, where in the NASB it is translated into English as: adornment (1), charm (1), charming (1), favor (51), grace (8), graceful (2), gracious (3), pleases (1).
χάρις (charis) occurs 157 times in the NT, where in the NASB it is translated into English as: blessing (1), concession (1), credit (3), favor (11), gift (1), grace (122), gracious (2), gracious work (3), gratitude (1), thank (3), thankfulness (2), thanks (6).
Too simply say that both of these words mean favor (and only favor), and both are equal to each other, is simplistic at best, misleading at worst. FFOZ uses this technique to mislead…To what end?
To a disastrous redefinition of grace: “The merit and favor a person acquires in the eyes of another.”
The long-standing Christian interpretation of grace as “unmerited favor” is purposefully thrown out, earning God’ favor (that is, earning grace) is in.
Where could FFOZ possibly turn to find an example of a human being earning God’s grace? To Moses.
Note: This house of cards depends upon equating favor in the OT with grace in the NT. The example of Moses earning favor, even if it were valid, leads to a false conclusion because Moses and the Apostle Paul do not mean the same thing when using hen and charis.
Is God saying in Exodus 33 that Moses’ obedience has earned God’s favor? Yes.
Is that favor equal to atonement? No
Is it equal to redemption? No
Is it equal to righteousness? No
Is it equal to salvation? No
None of these ideas that are part of our understanding of Jesus Christ’s sacrifice as the Lamb of God are in any way connected to Moses. In fact, these concepts as they are understood in the NT are not in the OT (See my Torah in its Ancient Israelite Context series on the YouTube channel)
“The LORD agreed to extend His favor for Moses to the entire nation:”
Did God bless others because of the favor in which he held Abraham, Joseph, Moses, Ruth, David, etc? Yes.
Is that blessing in any way connected to the righteousness that is ours because of the atoning power of the Blood of Christ? 1,000 times No.
“The story also demonstrates that grace is not ‘an unmerited gift.’ Moses did merit God’s favor when he interceded with God on behalf of a guilty nation.” – This so-called interpretation of scripture is an abomination.
On the basis of a false equivalence of favor in the OT with grace in the NT, by which FFOZ declares that grace is not “unmerited favor” but instead acquired/earned favor, it has set up a false equivalence between Moses and Jesus, all to pave the way for the coming insistence that Paul’s objection to the “works of the law” is not about legalism at all. This is the goal to which this lesson is striving, to remove the stigma associated with keeping Torah as works-righteousness.
“Remember what happens when a godly and righteous person suffers and dies undeservedly…Through His righteous life and His undeserved suffering, Yeshua merited even more favor in God’s eyes, so much favor that He has an abundance to share.”
{Why is “only begotten son” in quotation marks? Why not simply say, “As the Son of God,”? Given their track record of denying the Trinity, such things make my Spidey-sense tingle}
Jesus is the only person to ever earn the righteousness that atones for sin, full stop. No solely human being could earn atonement, it is impossible. When you put atonement, favor, and grace in a mixer as FFOZ has done here, the result is grotesque.
In this section, FFOZ argues that Paul’s only issue is with full-on adoption of Jewish identity through the conversion process.
“It’s not a question of working to earn eternal life by keeping the Law. It’s a question of whether someone needs to become Jewish to be eligible for eternal life.”
They make this specious case by saying that when Paul writes about the, “works of the law” it always means only Jewish identity (i.e. circumcision, full conversion) never Torah keeping (Sabbath, kosher, festivals).
In order for this line of reasoning to hold water, every usage of “works” and “works of the law” by Paul would need to be about full-conversion only, never about legalistic attempts to keep Torah to earn righteousness.
That, of course, is not a tenable position, but when FFOZ interprets Galatians, for example, it does so assuming Paul only cares about full-conversion, they claim he was 100% in favor of Torah keeping for Jew and Gentile as long as it didn’t lead to conversion for Gentiles.
Faith does not equal belief?
True, faith does not ONLY equal belief, it is more than just belief as James rightly clarifies, but given FFOZ’s stated hostility toward the Early Church credal statements…
Where is this going? To a butchered paraphrase of Ephesians 2:8-9…
“By God’s favor, you have been saved for eternal life though your allegiance to Yeshua as the Messiah, but that favor is not something you earned. It is the gift of God, not as a result of the works of conversion. So no one, neither Jews nor Gentiles, have anything to boast about.”
“Paul sometimes used the term ‘works’ as shorthand to argue against Gentiles becoming Jewish.” – p. 2.8
Once again, we see the effort to drive a wedge between full conversion (including circumcision) and Torah keeping with respect to “works.” In FFOZ’s warped view, human being can earn God’s favor (which they say equals grace), and relying on works is ok provided that they are the Torah-proscribed ones. Do you see why they want to downplay Paul’s concerns about legalism?
And what are the “good works” of Ephesians 2:10? What has God prepared in advance for the followers of Jesus?
“These ‘good works’ are the good deeds and acts of obedience described by the Torah’s commandments.” – p. 2.10
Once you divorce “works of the Law” from Torah keeping, the next goal is to transform it into a substitute for the Fruit of the Spirit. Once legalism has been downplayed, Torah keeping can become the new test of true discipleship.
“When a righteous person dies unjustly, they accrue favor with God.”
“This favor can be bestowed on someone else.”
So absurd that followers of Jesus ought to run screaming from this madness.
“Paul refers to the process of becoming Jewish as the ‘works of the law.’”
‘‘’We are not saved by works’ means that we are not saved by becoming Jewish.”
To reject Paul outright is too obvious, redefining him into a pro-Torah keeping champion is a much more dangerous approach.
“Is grace unmerited favor? If not, how does one acquire it?”
“No; grace is earned. One acquires it by doing good and living a difficult life or having it bestowed on them by someone else who earned it.”
Is the utter rejection of the Gospel by FFOZ not fully evident yet? What further evidence is needed?
Conclusion: FFOZ ought to be labeled a dangerous cult for their views of the Trinity alone…
The HaYesod discipleship manual proves once again that they teach equally dangerous and heretical falsehoods about grace, atonement, faith, works, and the Law of Moses.
Ephesians 2:8-9 is an amazing ode to God's plan to save those who trust in Christ by grace. However, God's plan for his people doesn't stop with saving their souls, God has a plan for each one of us here in this life. What is it?
To do good works. In a mind-blowing revelation, Paul reveals that God has prepared opportunities ahead-of-time which those whom he has renewed through the Holy Spirit are equipped to accomplish. When a potential good deed is in our path, it isn't a random moment, rather it is our Heavenly Father's desire to partner with us in fulfilling his will.
The essence of the Gospel is our salvation by grace through faith in Jesus Christ. This is a simple message, but also the most powerful one that ever has been. It challenges human pride and it rests upon the love of God. Attempts have been made to supplement God's grace with human effort, these have all ended in the failure that such folly deserves. In the end we are left with this joyous message: By grace alone, through faith alone, in Christ alone, to the glory of God alone.
Sometimes it is difficult for us to connect with the purpose behind why a particular portion of scripture was included in the sacred text. Lists of names are probably high on that list, and so too is the story of the Tower of Babel given how often it is misunderstood.
These two episodes in chapters 10-11 of Genesis are there to set the stage for God's work in calling Abram in chapter 12. The 70 nations show the diversity that God had to choose from, emphasizing as always that salvation is God's grace not human effort, and the Tower of Babel illustrates this principle in action. The builders of the tower, a ziggurat, had hoped to invite God (or a god) to come down from heaven to dwell with them, a stairway from heaven (not a prideful stairway to heaven). This is a noble thought, but a misguided one. Humanity cannot solve its own sin problem. We need a savior, and it needs to be on God's terms and according to God's timetable.
One of the things which makes ecumenical conversations and cooperative efforts more difficult is the abundance of misinformation that Catholics have about Protestants and Protestants have about Catholics. Some of these misunderstandings are inevitable, the product of 500 years of division, partisans on both sides that feed on attacking straw men, and a general lack of first-hand knowledge. The clearing up of these misconceptions is thus an ongoing project among Christians, one that won't end anytime soon. With that being said, I'd like to respond to an article written by Father Dwight Longenecker in the National Catholic Register on April 9th. As such, I've copied his entire article below, and will intersperse my own thoughts in brackets with a red font.
Are Catholics Born-Again Christians?
“Amen, amen, I say to you, no one can see the kingdom of God without being born from above.” (John 3:3)
My godly Evangelical mother used to “witness” when we were out shopping. She’d ask the storekeeper, “Have you been born again?” If the conversation got going she’d relate the story of the conversation between Nicodemus and Jesus in the third chapter of John’s gospel. I don’t know if she ever succeeded in making a convert, but she succeeded in embarrassing me somewhat. I’m now embarrassed that I was embarrassed and, in hindsight, admire her courage, faith and zeal.
The question remains, however, “Just what is a ‘born-again Christian'”? Most Evangelicals would say that being ‘born again’ or ‘getting saved’ consists of a personal conversion experience. In some way the individual has a prodigal son moment and ‘comes to himself.’ He repents of his sin and turns to Jesus Christ for salvation. He does this by saying ‘the sinner’s prayer’ which is very simply, “Lord Jesus, I’m sorry for my sins and I want to accept your gift of forgiveness and salvation. Come into my life and make me your disciple forever.” [The overemphasis on 'the sinner's prayer' is a legitimate issue within Evangelical circles, but any such prayer is simply an attempt to put into practice Paul's words in Romans 10:9-10, "If you declare with your mouth, “Jesus is Lord,” and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved. For it is with your heart that you believe and are justified, and it is with your mouth that you profess your faith and are saved." The exact words themselves are of course not the point, it is the combination of belief and profession of faith that is at the heart of any version of a prayer of repentance which acknowledges the Lordship of Jesus, and one's own need for forgiveness though him.]
That’s all well and good I suppose, and if this is all that is required to be “born again” then every Catholic is a “born-again Christian” because at every Mass we confess our sins and accept Jesus. At every baptism we confess our sins and accept Jesus. At every celebration of the sacrament of confession we confess our sins and accept the forgiveness of Jesus.
The problem between Evangelicals and Catholics does not come with this core definition and basic experience. The difficulty comes in what comes next. Essentially the Evangelical (and I know I’m making generalizations and that there is a spectrum of theological opinions within Evangelicalism) doesn’t think there is anything next — at least not anything that is necessary. Once the person says the sinner’s prayer he’s got his ticket to heaven, and nothing else is required. This is a consequence of the Evangelical Protestant’s loathing of anything that smacks of “salvation by works.” He wants salvation to have no strings attached. Nothing else is necessary — not even the sacrament of baptism. [Here is where we need to clear some things up: Yes, there are some Evangelicals who have a 'catch and release' mentality that focuses far too much on the initial stage of conversion and far too little on the production of Fruit of the Spirit which is the necessary hallmark of authentic faith which has taken root. By and large, however, most Evangelicals, and most Protestants, are well aware that "faith without works is dead", and that if spiritual maturity and discipleship are not forthcoming after any 'conversion experience' {whatever form it takes} then the whole basis of a supposed conversion is called into question, necessitating a return to 'square one' as it were, starting once again from a confession of Christ and a commitment to repentance. It was Dietrich Bonhoeffer who labeled the tendency toward a discipleship-free faith that cost its adherents nothing as "cheap grace", an invalid version of Christianity devoid of its heart. The crux of the difference of understanding between Catholics and Protestants here seems to be on the definition of the word 'necessary'. Protestants would point to the thief on the cross as an example of one for whom nothing more than a confession of faith was possible, certainly he had no opportunity for baptism or any other demonstration of his faith, but at the same time, most Protestants (and Evangelicals) would understand that in the long-run it is expected that every true believer would repeatedly and continually demonstrate acts of obedience and service as faithful disciples of Jesus indwelt by the Holy Spirit. I will readily admit that trying to avoid "sounding Catholic", i.e. anything that feels or sounds like 'salvation by works' is certainly a problem for Protestants, although the opposite version is a hang-up for many Catholics as well, as both groups try to avoid sounding/acting like their historic rivals in ways that warp us both.]
The Catholic, on the other hand, quotes the New Testament and says, “Repent and be baptized.” The simple action of faith has to be combined with the sacrament of baptism. Evangelicals should understand that we do not regard baptism (or any of the sacraments) as something we do as some kind of good work. Instead, baptism is God’s action toward us. It is a completely unmerited outflowing of God’s grace toward us. This is why we emphasize baptism as the “born again” experience rather than the “sinner’s prayer,” which definitely is something a person does. [The emphasis by Father Longenecker is welcome here, for most Protestants do think that Catholics consider the sacraments to be a form of good works, not an act of God's grace, but by the same token, he's putting the shoe on the other foot where it doesn't fit either, for Protestants do not consider repentance {in the form of a 'sinner's prayer' or anything else} to be a work done by the Lost sinner, but rather an act of God's grace who calls the lost to repentance and makes repentance possible. This is of course delving into the time-honored debate between Calvinists and Arminians, between God's sovereignty and man's freewill; not an easy puzzle to solve, and in my opinion not one that God intended us to solve.]
This is the irony from our point of view: Evangelicals say we believe in a salvation by works because we insist on sacraments. Yet our true belief is that the sacraments are the actions of Christ through his Church pouring out his grace on us unmerited sinners. He sends out the invitations. He sets the table for the feast. He cooks the meal and serves at table. All we do is turn up. The irony is deepened because Evangelicals claim not to have a religion based on works, but they ask their converts to say the sinner’s prayer, which is a kind of work of salvation. [Here is where he swerved away from a helpful explanation and into a swipe at the opposition, unfortunately. Let's be honest, however we understand the confluence of God's grace and man's responsibility, we all agree that without God's grace we'd be screwed, and we all agree that those who repent are not robots, they are certainly 'doing something', something prompted by God's grace, enabled by his Spirit, but it remains something that we must still do as evidence of our salvation {Not to BE saved, but to show that we have already BEEN saved, the emphasis must remain on the finished work of Jesus and the ongoing Grace of God}. Both Protestants and Catholics are explaining what man has to do to be saved BY God somewhat differently, but an honest evaluation would conclude that we both believe that if God doesn't do what only God can do, anything we try to do will be pointless.]
Furthermore, for the Catholic, the action of faith is a continuing action. All our ‘good works’ are ‘works of faith.’ They are filled with faith and are faith in action. Instead of a once-and-done decision of ‘getting saved,’ Catholics know that faith is a commitment and continuance in a newly graced way of life. Being born again is all well and good, but if that’s all there is, we’re concerned at the alarming rate of infant mortality. [As I said before, only the worst examples of Evangelicals preach that salvation is a 'once-and-done' experience without the expectation of resulting righteous deeds, so don't make that a straw man to oppose any more than the Catholics who misunderstand the sacraments as good works instead of God's grace.]
Lest any Evangelicals think I’m throwing stones, I’m alarmed at the high rate of spiritual infant mortality amongst the Catholics as well as among the Evangelicals. A Baptist pastor friend of mine once asked me how many of the children I baptized grew up to be active and committed church members. I guessed maybe one in ten. He smiled and said he had about the same drop-off rate among adult converts whom he baptized. [Anecdotal evidence is only worth so much, but I find a 1/10 ongoing commitment rate for any Baptist church to be scandalous, we are talking about adults (or at least teens) making a choice in a setting that involves ongoing support. If what we're doing as a Church, Catholic or Protestant, only 'works out' 1 time in 10, we'd better be taking a hard look at our own actions, for God's grace is certainly not 10% effective.]
I mentioned that Evangelicals don’t want there to be any sniff of salvation by works. However, it would be wrong to suppose that they don’t care about spiritual maturity, keeping the converts committed and living the life of faith. They do, and they work hard to make sure the faith sticks. What Evangelicals need to realize is that Catholics are also “born-again Christians.” We’ve repented and accepted Jesus. It’s just that we’ve done so in a different context and with some different basic assumptions — ones that, if you stopped to understand them, actually complement and complete what you already believe. [There is a growing consensus among Evangelicals, and Protestants in general, that a committed/active Catholic is not a part of the mission field anymore than a committed/active part of a different Protestant denomination. There will always be those on both sides who view anyone who isn't exactly like them in belief/practice as a "heretic" to be condemned, but that attitude is decreasing, as it should. I have to say, it is refreshing to hear a Catholic use the phrase, "born again", even though I had concluded from the Scriptures, and from my own experience with Catholics, that same thing nearly twenty years ago, it is still rare to hear a Catholic use "our" lingo, which of course is the whole point, we misunderstand each other, too often, but hopefully less in the future.]
Thus ends me thoughts on the article, I found it to be refreshing, but still suffering somewhat from the same tendency toward misunderstanding and misconception that Father Longenecker is trying to correct coming from Evangelicals, thus the task remains before us of correcting our own misconceptions of each other as we seek to build the unity of the Church of Christ.
When trying to explain why our own righteousness, that is the morally upright things that we do, can never be sufficient to please the holy God who created us, I hit upon an analogy that might help some understand what Jesus is trying to say in Matthew 5:20 "For I tell you that unless your righteousness surpasses that of the Pharisees and the teachers of the law, you will certainly not enter the kingdom of heaven." Given that those two groups were believed to be the most righteous people in Israel, the words of Jesus seem like an impossibility. Later on Jesus would explain the failures of the religious leaders of his people, focusing on their pride, failure to care about those in need, and the shallowness of their devotion, but the point about righteousness remains. The statement by Jesus is intended to invoke a sense of despair, about our ability to please God on our own, hence setting aside our pride and allowing us to lean upon the grace of God.
So, how high can we climb on our own, and why isn't that good enough for God? Let's suppose that you make it to the pinnacle of human moral achievement, climbing higher than anyone else.
That seems like a tremendous accomplishment, especially with so many other people falling far short of your lofty achievement and others not even trying. But what is the goal, have you reached it, simply because you can't possibly get any higher?
But God is holy, perfect, without flaw; we are not. Our highest possible ascent toward God, on our own, leaves us far, far short. Could Sir Edmund Hillary have climbed from the summit of Everest into space? Of course not, the gap is too wide, and there's nothing left to climb. Our righteousness, whatever it might be, is equally hopelessly insufficient when compared to the holiness of God.
So, what is left for us to do, give up? In a way yes, to come to God, we need to give up trying to fix ourselves and instead trust that the righteousness of Christ, who died and rose again on our behalf, will be applied to our account by God because of our faith in him. So go ahead and climb the Mt. Everest of morality, doing the right thing is always the right thing, but not because it will make God accept you, do it because you wish to honor the sacrifice of Jesus and be as much like him in this life as possible.
After his conclusion that faith that is not accompanied by works is dead, James offers two Old Testament examples to further prove the point. The first example is the revered Patriarch, Abraham, a man renowned for his faith and righteousness. The second example is quite the opposite, the Gentile prostitute Rahab, a woman with no interaction with God prior to the moment when she risked her life to save the spies sent by Joshua. In both cases, actions confirm what faith has already begun, in Abraham's case, decades after it had begun, in Rahab's case, at its inception. These two examples thus offer proof that actions (works, deeds, whatever they're called) are necessary to vindicate faith, for both those coming from a high position with a track record of faith, and those coming from a low position with no pretense of having a righteousness of their own. The discussion of the necessity of actions along with faith by James offers a counter-balance to those who might misinterpret the writings of Paul and thus get stuck on the fact that our salvation is indeed by grace alone without moving beyond our initial repentance to focus upon the absolute necessity of having works of righteousness as part of our discipleship. The path to being reconciled with God is grace (faith in what Christ has already done for us), the only way to walk with God once we have been reconciled is for our faith to propel us to take action.
In an effort to explain why his previous instruction about favoritism and discrimination is of the utmost importance, even beyond the prior notice that doing so is breaking the royal law of loving our neighbor and thus rebelling against God, James follows those thoughts up with a stark example of inactive faith that does not lead to action. The conclusion about such "faith", of a kind that could watch a fellow Christian in a near-death scenario of need and do nothing in response, is that it is dead. James doesn't call such "faith" weak or diseased, he flat out labels it dead. Without actions being produced by faith, actions of righteousness, the only conclusion we can reach is that the person in question has no real faith at all.
Intellectual assent to the idea of God is not enough. Saying that you believe in Jesus is not enough. If these words are not matched by actions derived from faith, then the words in questions are just words, and not life changing professions of repentance. We cannot be saved by works, James agrees with Paul on that (sorry Martin Luther, you were mistaken on this one), but we must have works once we are saved, works that show that we are in possession of a living and active faith.
The book of James has at times been viewed, most famously by Martin Luther, as being in opposition to the message of salvation by grace alone preached by the Apostle Paul. While this misunderstanding of James has been explained and the reconciliation of James and Paul made clear by theologians long in generations past, an interesting bit of serendipity has occurred to me of late. I have been preaching verse by verse through James on Sunday morning, and at the same time, working through Romans, verse by verse, in my Wednesday morning Bible Study. Working on the two of them together, I have been impressed by how many times I have been able to explain something in Romans using a reference to what I had previously preached in James.
Paul's message of salvation by faith, through grace alone, is in no way opposed to James' emphasis on a living and active faith that demonstrates its viability through works of righteousness. Paul is explaining how a person canbecome a Christian when he insists upon sola fide and sola gratia, James is showing instead how a person who already is a Christian needs to be living in order to prove it (A theme that the Apostle John takes up in I John as well). We cannot be saved by our works, but she had better have them once we are saved. This same point was made again and again by Jesus in the Gospels when he demanded "fruit" from God's people lest they be uprooted and tossed aside as worthless.
To put works before faith is to put the cart before the horse, but to preach a faith that never asks for works as a demonstration of that it is alive and well is empty and foolish. If you want to quote Ephesians 2:8-9 to talk about salvation by grace through faith, that's the right place to start, but don't forget to keep reading through verse 10, "For we are God's workmanship, created in Christ Jesus to do good works, which God prepared in advance for us to do." God saved us by grace, we couldn't do it ourselves, but don't let the necessary emphasis on grace fool you into thinking you don't have work to do for the Kingdom of God.
In this passage Paul offers advice to the Church at Philippi in the event that it proves necessary in the future. He warns them about "dogs" and "mutilators of the flesh" who will try to impose upon them the requirements of the Law (in this case circumcision) in addition to faith in Christ. Paul views such version of the Gospel, faith plus something else whatever it may be, with horror because he knows from personal experience that self-righteousness is a dead end. Earlier in life, when Paul was known as Saul, he had every reason to expect that his strict observance of the Law would bring him to God, he was shocked into reality, however, when he met Jesus on the road to Damascus and learned that he had in fact been fighting AGAINST God. How can that be? To do the right thing is not enough, God demands a right heart as well, and Saul's was full of self-righteous pride that left no room for compassion for the Lost. Now, as an Apostle of Jesus Christ, Paul knows that every church must be on its guard against the temptation to add any kind of works before faith (such as: Baptism, Communion, membership, etc.). We do not work to earn God's favor, we work to celebrate God's grace. The difference may seem slight, but it means everything. Salvation is not earned, therefore, I must not stand in the way of anyone who might accept it, more than that, it becomes our duty to share the message of God's love with anyone and everyone we can.
To watch the video, click on the link below: Sermon Video
Paul's asks the people of the church of Philippi to "continue to work out your salvation with fear and treambling". This isn't an indictment of the Bible's clear teaching of salvation by faith through grace apart from works, rather it is a call to action to those who have ALREADY been saved by grace. Once we accept what only God could do for us (forgive our sins), our obligation to join in and work for the cause requires us to bear fruit. As it usually does, the NT speaks here to "your" in the plural; it is our salvation as a local church that needs to be worked on, not my own; we're in this together. The task is incredible, to spread the Gospel to the ends of the Earth, hence our fear and trembling at such a responsibility. In the end, Paul assures us that God's power will work through us to make our success possible.
Due to a technical glitch, the portion of the video between the introduction and the 2nd half of verse twelve is unavailable; my hope is that this message of the importance of our purpose and mission will speak to God's people even so...
To watch the video, click on the link below: Sermon Video
There are time when the Bible is, admittedly, hard to understand. There are passages of Scripture that baffle Bible scholars and provoke endless debate. However, when God wishes to make something plain to us, he doesn't waste time with making the message any more than it has to be. When Paul and Silas were asked by the jailer in Philippi (just after an earthquake had caused the building to collapse, but all of the prisoners had remained in their cells because of Paul's preaching), "Sirs, what must I do to be saved?" the answer was remarkably simple. Paul simply replied, "Believe in the Lord Jesus Christ, and you will be saved."
It is amazing to me how we can overcomplicated such a simple message. How the Church can take God's one sentence offer of salvation for those who believe in his Son and turn it into a massive tome. The message itself is complete without any embelishments. There isn't anything else we can do to be saved, there isn't anything else we have to do to be saved. There isn't anyone or anything else that we can put our faith in that will get us the result of salvation promised by Jesus.
And yet, over the centuries, we've allowed other things to creep in, we've made the test of faith harder for those on the outside to pass. We've forgotten that we too were saved by the blood of the Lamb and that without Jesus we'd be as lost and fallen as anyone. I had a basketball coach that liked to recite an acronymn that he was sure teenage boys would remember: Keep It Simple Stupid. He didn't want us to overcomplicate the sport, but the sentiment applies here as well. The message was simple and straightforward when Jesus spoke it, it was simple and straightforward when Luke wrote Acts, and it should be simple and straightforward when we tell it to the world today.
What about good deeds, don't I have to prove that I'm worthy? That comes later. Once we become Christians we prove that our faith is genuine by obeying God's laws and following the teachings of Jesus, but those deeds alone will never save us. They're part of a process of becoming like Christ that will occupy the rest of our lives as we seek to removed impurities through the grace of God. Rest assured, if someone tells you that you need to be good before you can be a Christian they don't know what they're talking about.
The message is simple, "Believe in the Lord Jesus, and you will be saved."
I've been preaching my way through the letter of St. James at Palo and it has reminded me that the Church has come a long way in the last 2,000 plus years. In some ways, we've remained amazingly consistant with what the Apostles and Early Church Fathers intended. In other ways, we've let inertia and reaction to other Christian groups (Catholics not wanting to emphasize that they aren't Protestans and vice versa; along with countless other such action/reactions) take us in directions that we aren't even fully aware of.
The letter of James has a section in Chapter 2 that focuses on the absolute necessity of keeping Faith & Works (the KJV word for it; deeds, actions, etc.) TOGETHER. James makes it very clear that he believes that "faith without works is dead"....And yet, in response to the corruption of the Church of the Middle Ages, Martin Luther felt it was necessary to emphasize "sola fide" (faith alone); in response, the Catholic Church was pushed (or pushed itself) even further in the direction of working for salvation. In both cases, the danger of divorcing Faith from Works was very real (and in some circles remains so today)...Neither vision of Christianity is correct. We cannot be Christ-like simply by what we believe (Faith alone) and we cannot be justified before God without faith in Christ (Works alone)...Much of the debate and animosity within the Church (universal; that includes Protestant, Orthodox, Catholic) arises from our failure to understand that we've spent the last 500 years emphasizing the two NECESSARY aspects of Christian faith. We've acted as if the two can be torn apart and get us to Heaven on their own. In doing so we've lost sight of the warning of James, No man can be justified by works alone, and faith without deeds is dead.