Thursday, May 18, 2017

Mistieke Godsdiens - die doodsteek van moderne Christendom


As 'n musiek instrument is daar niks fout met die ramshoring of die orrel of wat ook al nie. Maar die oomblik as ek geestelike waarde en gesag koppel aan die instrument, dan is ek besig met mistieke afgodery. Maw. wanneer ek goddelikheid, geestelike outoriteit of geestelike lewe daaraan koppel en dit gebruik om geestelike lewe te skep of te simboliseer, dan doen ek wat Romeine 1 van spreek. Jy aanbid die skepping meer as die skepper.

Instrumente en selfs die tempel en rituele rondom dit in die OT was nooit bedoel om God en die Heilige Gees te vervang of te beheer nie. God het Israel menig male bestraf en vermaan omdat hulle verknog geraak het aan hul Jewishness en rituele en nie aan Hom nie. Dieselfde Joodse mistieke en Gnostiese dwaling was teenwoordig in Kolossense (lees Kol. 2).

Die ramshoring, orrel, klavier, ens., is lewelose elemente met geen geestelike waarde nie, behalwe om musiek te maak. Vandag gebruik baie mense musiek en instrumente om God se teenwoordigheid aan te help of te skep. So benadering lei tot mistieke godsdienstige praktyke wat afgodery is. Wat waarde het is die hart wat God aanbid in Gees en waarheid (Woord). God word nie op die berg of daai berg gedien omdat daar geestelike waarde in is nie.

Dit was die Samaritaanse vrou se verkeerde begrip van fisiese elemente. Mense wat Shofar's blaas is nie meer geestelik omdat hulle dit blaas nie. Die probleem is hulle blaas dit met 'n spesifieke doel - geestelike oorlog, gesag en lewe. Hulle dink daar gebeur iets in die spirituele wêreld as hulle dit blaas.

Mense wat olie orals smeer, dieselfde - hou demone uit en bring God se "anointing." Eintlik mors hulle net baie tyd aan waardelose rituele. Die aanbidding van God is in Gees en waarheid. Die offers wat God behaag is 'n gebroke hart en 'n verslae gees. Jy het geen Shofar nodig om Geesvervuld te wees nie.

Baie van die moderne aanwensels is bloot uiterlike simbole wat 'n vals sin van nabyheid skep daarom hou mense hul besig daarmee. Die ware Geesvervulde lewe is in die eenvoud van die Woord, gebed en gehoorsaamheid. Dis al wat nodig is. Geen addisionele rituele gaan my meer geestelik maak nie. Dis waardeloos.

Christus is die volheid van God en jy deel in daai volheid in Hom en op geen ander plek of manier nie (Kol. 2:9-10). Jy deel in die volheid van Christus deur die openbaring van die Woord, deur die Heilige Gees, en deur gebed en gehoorsaamheid. So eenvoudig soos dit. Deur die eenvoudige dissiplines van Woord, gebed, gehoorsaamheid, gemeenskap van die heiliges en sakramente, kan elke Christen die Geesvervulde lewe leef.

Monday, May 15, 2017

What is the Gospel?


“For I am not ashamed of the gospel, for it is the power of God for salvation to everyone who believes” (Romans 1:16).

When you hear the word gospel, what comes to mind: music, church, religion? The word gospel actually means good news.

BAD NEWS
Mankind’s biggest problem is this, God is Holy and we are not. God’s standard is moral perfection and we all fall miserably short. Ask yourself the following, have you ever lied, stolen, hated, lusted? “For all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God” (Romans 3:23). Because of sin, we all stand guilty before God and the punishment He has determined for sinners is eternity in hell. “And these will go away into eternal punishment” (Matthew 25:46). We can also not earn God’s approval by our good works. “Not everyone who says to me, ‘Lord, Lord,’ will enter the kingdom of heaven, but the one who does the will of my Father who is in heaven. On that day many will say to me, ‘Lord, Lord, did we not prophesy in your name, and cast out demons in your name, and do many mighty works in your name?’ And then will I declare to them, ‘I never knew you; depart from me, you workers of lawlessness’” (Matthew 7:21-23).
GOOD NEWS
The gospel is good news because God provided the solution to sin by sending His only begotten Son to reconcile sinners to Himself. “and through him to reconcile to himself all things, whether on earth or in heaven, making peace by the blood of his cross” (Colossians 1:20). Jesus Christ, the eternal son of God took on flesh and lived a life of perfect obedience to God the Father – He did not sin in word, thought or action unlike all of humanity who sins every day. “He committed no sin, neither was deceit found in his mouth” (1 Peter 2:22). He then voluntarily went to the cross and took the punishment we rightly deserve. “For our sake he made him to be sin who knew no sin, so that in him we might become the righteousness of God” (2 Corinthians 5:21). He defeated sin and death forever. Three days later he rose from the grave, ascended into heaven, where he reigns forever to save everyone who put their trust in Him alone. “He is able to save to the uttermost those who draw near to God through him, since he always lives to make intercession for them” (Hebrews 7:25).
SALVATION?
The question is what will you do with this good news. Will you reject God’s offer of salvation or will you humble yourself, see yourself as someone that has offended God by your sin and in need of a saviour? Because of sin, the only guarantee you have in this world is death. No matter how healthy or wealthy you are you cannot escape this reality. “Everyone is appointed to die once, and after that comes judgement” (Hebrews 9:27). Are you ready for that day? You can be! Turn from your sin (repent) and put your faith & trust in Jesus Christ alone. No good work can save you; only the finished work Jesus accomplished on the cross can! “For Christ also suffered once for sins, the righteous for the unrighteous, that he might bring us to God” (1 Peter 3:18). Then begin to grow as a believer by reading the Bible, joining a faithful church, and being much in prayer.

We would love to hear from you. If you have any questions please contact or join us at one of our services:

Goodwood Baptist Church
Sunday Service: 10am & 6:30pm.
Address: Corner of Milton and Fisher Street, Goodwood, Cape Town.
Tel: +27 (0)21 591 8041.
Email: goodwoodbaptist@gmail.com.

Friday, May 5, 2017

The Courage to Be Reformed

When we come to grasp Reformed theology, it’s not only our understanding of salvation that changes, but our understanding of everything. It’s for this reason that when people wrestle through the rudimentary doctrines of Reformed theology and come to comprehend them, they often feel like they have been converted a second time. In fact, as many have admitted to me, the reality is that some have been converted for the very first time. It was through their examination of Reformed theology that they came face-to-face with the stark reality of their radical corruption and deadness in sin, God’s unconditional election of His own and condemnation of others, Christ’s actual accomplishment of redemption for His people, the Holy Spirit’s effectual grace, the reason they persevere by God’s preserving grace, and God’s covenantal way of working in all of history for His glory. When people realize that ultimately, they didn’t choose God, but He chose them, they naturally come to a point of humble admission of the amazing grace of God toward them. It’s only then, when we recognize what wretches we really are, that we can truly sing “Amazing Grace.” And that is precisely what Reformed theology does: it transforms us from the inside out and leads us to sing—it leads us to worship our sovereign and triune, gracious, and loving God in all of life, not just on Sundays but every day and in all of life. Reformed theology isn’t just a badge we wear when being Reformed is popular and cool, it’s a theology that we live and breathe, confess, and defend even when it’s under attack.

The Protestant Reformers of the sixteenth century, along with their fifteenth-century forerunners and their seventeenth-century descendants, did not teach and defend their doctrine because it was cool or popular, but because it was biblical, and they put their lives on the line for it. They were not only willing to die for the theology of Scripture, they were willing to live for it, to suffer for it, and to be considered fools for it. Make no mistake: the Reformers were bold and courageous not on account of their self-confidence and self-reliance but on account of the fact that they had been humbled by the gospel. They were courageous because they had been indwelled by the Holy Spirit and equipped to proclaim the light of truth in a dark age of lies. The truth they preached was not new; it was ancient. It was the doctrine of the martyrs, the fathers, the Apostles, and the patriarchs—it was the doctrine of God set forth in sacred Scripture.

The Reformers didn’t make up their theology; rather, their theology made them who they were. The theology of Scripture made them Reformers. For they did not set out to be Reformers, per se—they set out to be faithful to God and faithful to Scripture. Neither the solas of the Reformation nor the doctrines of grace (the five points of Calvinism) were invented by the Reformers, nor were they by any means the sum total of Reformation doctrine. Rather, they became underlying doctrinal premises that served to help the church of subsequent eras confess and defend what she believes. Even today there are many who think they embrace Reformed theology, but their Reformed theology only runs as deep as the solas of the Reformation and the doctrines of grace. What’s more, there are many who say they adhere to Reformed theology but do so without anyone knowing they are Reformed. Such “closet Calvinists” neither confess any of the historic Reformed confessions of the sixteenth or seventeenth centuries nor employ any distinctly Reformed theological language.

However, if we truly adhere to Reformed theology according to the historic Reformed confessions, we cannot help but be identified as Reformed. In truth, it’s impossible to remain a “closet Calvinist,” and it’s impossible to remain Reformed without anyone knowing it—it will inevitably come out. To be historically Reformed, one must adhere to a Reformed confession, and not only adhere to it but confess it, proclaim it, and defend it. Reformed theology is fundamentally a confessional theology.

Reformed theology is also an all-encompassing theology. It changes not only what we know, it changes how we know what we know. It not only changes our understanding of God, it changes our understanding of ourselves. Indeed, it not only changes our view of salvation, it changes how we worship, how we evangelize, how we raise our children, how we treat the church, how we pray, how we study Scripture—it changes how we live, move, and have our being. Reformed theology is not a theology that we can hide, and it is not a theology to which we can merely pay lip service. For that has been the habit of heretics and theological progressives throughout history. They claim to adhere to their Reformed confessions, but they never actually confess them. They claim to be Reformed only when they are on the defensive—when their progressive (albeit popular) theology is called into question, and, if they are pastors, only when their jobs are on the line. While theological liberals might be in churches and denominations that identify as “Reformed,” they are ashamed of such an identity and have come to believe that being known as “Reformed” is a stumbling block to some and an offense to others. Moreover, according to the historic, ordinary marks of the church—the pure preaching of the Word of God, prayer according to the Word of God, the right use of the sacraments of baptism and the Lord’s Supper, and the consistent practice of church discipline—such “Reformed” churches are often not even true churches. Today, there are many laypeople and pastors who are in traditionally Reformed and Protestant churches and denominations who, along with their churches and denominations, left their Reformed moorings and rejected their confessions years ago.

Contrary to this trend, what we most need are men in the pulpit who have the courage to be Reformed—men who aren’t ashamed of the faith once delivered to the saints but who are ready to contend for it, not with lip service but with all their life and all their might. We need men in the pulpit who are bold and unwavering in their proclamation of the truth and who are at the same time gracious and compassionate. We need men who will preach the unvarnished truth of Reformed theology in season and out of season, not with a finger pointing in the face but with an arm around the shoulder. We need men who love the Reformed confessions precisely because they love the Lord our God and His unchanging, inspired, and authoritative Word. It’s only when we have men in the pulpit who have the courage to be Reformed that we will have people in the pew who grasp Reformed theology and its effects in all of life, so that we might love God more with all our heart, soul, mind, and strength and love our neighbor as ourselves. That is the theology that reformed the church in the sixteenth century, and that is the only theology that will bring reformation and revival in the twenty-first century. For in our day of radical progressive theological liberalism, the most radical thing we can be is orthodox according to our Reformed confessions, yet not with arrogance but with courage and compassion for the church and for the lost, all for the glory of God, and His glory alone.

"The Courage to Be Reformed," Copyright 2017 by Burk Parson, has been placed by permission from Ligonier Ministries. It appeared in the May 2017 issue of TableTalk Magazine.