The Jesus ossuary controversy

The Jesus ossuary controversy

By now you’ve probably all heard about the supposed discovery of the bones of Jesus in Jerusalem (from here on I’ll be calling it the “Jesus-in-a-Box Controversy”). I’m not at all surprised someone is trying to make money off the find. But the claim of finding Jesus’ bones is serious because it calls the historical accuracy of the resurrection intostonesmall.jpg question. This itself is nothing new. Even in Paul’s day the bodily resurrection was attacked as a sham. Scripture reminds us that if the resurrection of Christ is bogus, our preaching of the gospel is vain, we lie about God, our faith is futile, our death is hopeless, and we are dead in our sins (1 Cor. 15:12-19). The resurrection is pretty important to the church.

But my personal concern is this: How do I as a Christian gauge this controversy? I want to take this (and other) controversies as opportunities to check my own heart condition. So here are a few thoughts for us to consider:

1. It’s a good reminder of the reality of deception. If Satan’s goal is deception, why wouldn’t he have carved a box with names and bones in an attempt to undermine the gospel? Have we forgotten we have a powerful enemy of the truth willing to take all efforts to subvert the Cross? In this situation, either Satan is a deceptive box crafter and/or he has convinced men of evil lies. Either way, Satan’s work in deception frequently goes unnoticed. Don’t wait for the local newspaper to uncover the Satanic deception — stay on your biblically-illuminated toes.

2. It’s a good reminder to keep our eyes on the gospel. The DaVinici Code was an excellent example how broad punches that land both in the Roman Catholic and Evangelical camps cause equally broad religious alliances. I assume the Jesus-in-a-Box Controversy is headed in the same direction. It will provide a platform for various religions to form alliances in a common goal of protecting the resurrection. The fallout of many years of this activity is that Christians and pastors can no longer discern between a self-righteous gospel and a self-renouncing gospel. Aren’t we on the same team? Honestly, it gets hard to tell the difference when various gospels stand hand-in-hand every year to battle the next cinematic heresy. The tendency will be to let the gospel fade into the background and become more obscure to a culture that largely hopes in self-righteousness. If I understand Paul correctly, it’s not the outright denial of the faith that poses the greatest dangers. The greatest dangers to the church are the subtle shifts in the message of the gospel (see Gal. 1:6-10, 2:11-21). So take this controversy as a great opportunity to rejoice in the self-renouncing Cross (Gal. 6:14). Don’t get thrown off-center.

3. It’s a good reminder to walk by faith and not by sight. Do you trust your eyes more than God’s Word? This question really surfaces in an event like this. If we find our faith shaking in front of the pictures, then it’s possible our faith has always been propped up by what we see with our eyes. We are called to walk by faith in Scripture as opposed to walking by sight (Rom. 10:17; 2 Cor. 5:7; Heb. 11:1). The argument you will read on this controversy is that there is no conclusive evidence these are the authentic bones of Jesus. The problem is there also remains the unlikelihood of proof that these are NOT the bones of Jesus. If we walk by sight we may inevitably come to an inconclusive standstill with the visible evidence. Controversies like this one are useful to gauge our own hearts with this question: Do I take God at His Word or not? “But in fact Christ has been raised from the dead” (1 Cor. 15:20).

4. It’s a good reminder of our propensity to worldly logic. As we’ve seen in our study of Calvin, a true understanding of the gospel exceeds the limits of depraved common sense. The Spirit seals the authenticity of the gospel on our hearts supernaturally (see part 10 of our Humble Calvinism series). Apart from God’s intervention, the gospel will seem foolishness to us; which means once we become Christians we are frequently placed in worldly situations where the true answer will be labeled ‘foolish.’ In this particular controversy, Christians should be free to respond by saying, “God revealed Himself in Scripture. Scripture says Jesus was raised from the dead. Jesus’ bones are in heaven with the rest of His resurrected body. Done.” I’ve read all types of arguments about DNA impossibilities, archaeologists refuting things and language experts making arguments to disprove the authenticity of the boxes. I’m certain lengthy books are already being written. Personally, I wonder how much of this is motivated by Christians seeking to defend their biblical faith without looking foolish to the world? I’m not saying it’s easy to be considered foolish, but it is the cost of devoting our minds and lives to God’s revelation. God has spoken. Take Him at His Word and boast in Him (1 Cor. 1:18-31).

Don’t get me wrong, I don’t disagree with the conclusion of those who deny scientifically or archaeologically that Jesus is in the box. I know He’s not (and honest science and forensic evidence will bear this out). Nor am I arguing for an anti-intellectual fundamentalism that hides from the hard questions. I’ll leave the hard questions for the experts.

My plea is for honesty. Bible-believing Christians and pastors should keep God’s revelation open and central in this controversy, no matter how foolish it appears to the world. We are not called merely to believe in the Cross privately but boast in the Cross publicly! It’s in the light of controversy we gauge our success here.

The bottom line is that I don’t need the testimony of an archaeologist or scientist or scholar to sleep well tonight. I trust in God’s revelation. Christ rose from the dead. God said so. And we must be willing to bear the label of ‘fool’ to stand on the only Rock that can withstand the Titanic breakers of Hollywood.

Feasting on the Word: How to teach hermeneutics

Feasting on the Word
How to teach hermeneutics

Training a church in the way of proper bible interpretation is both very difficult and yet provides the potential of great fruitfulness. As your people are empowered to interpret and study Scripture for themselves, personal faith is strengthened and quite meditation times are made more fruitful.

I had the honor to sit in on the “Feasting on the Word” course taught by Mark Alderton, Associate pastor of Sovereign Grace Fellowship (Minneapolis, MN). If you are interested in bringing a hermeneutics seminar to your congregation I would highly recommend reading and listening to Alderton’s presentation first. I would say he did an excellent job of not only teaching the tools of hermeneutics but also edifying the body with the Gospel. This was first-rate, Cross-centered hermeneutics.

Here are the resources:

– PDF Booklet (2.6 MB)
– Session 1 MP3 (10.7 MB)
– Session 2 MP3 (8.5 MB)
– Session 3 MP3 (8 MB)
– Session 4 MP3 (10.7 MB)
– Session 5 MP3 (10 MB)

Exploring the Bible: A Guide to the Old and New Testaments, 1581348649

Book Announcement
Exploring the Bible: A Guide to the Old and New Testaments
by R. Laird Harris, Samuel J. Schultz
Gary V. Smith and Walter M. Dunnett

I confess I have a weakness for books that provide broad sweeping overviews of the biblical storyline because I never get tired of reading authors who tie the various biblical threads together into one comprehensive picture of God’s redemptive plan. (This explains why one of my favorite books of 2006 was Mark Dever’s, Promises Made.) So I was especially excited to receive my copy of Exploring the Bible: A Guide to the Old and New Testaments (Crossway).

This new book extends far beyond a general overview of the biblical storyline because Exploring the Bible is really three books in one. The first of three books is “Exploring the Basics of the Bible” (pp. 9-114) which includes a helpful introduction to the Bible. Among other things this section includes an overview of inspiration, OT and NT authorship, how the bible was preserved, a primer on higher criticism, difficult bible questions, how to use commentaries, lexicons and the best methods of bible study.

The second book, “Exploring the Old Testament” (pp. 115-336), traces the OT narrative chronologically and later addresses the wisdom literature and prophets. The final book, “Exploring the New Testament” (pp. 337-440), progresses through the NT books generally in the order they appear in Scripture, pointing out broad topical themes.

Throughout this volume, the authors incorporate helpful charts and graphs to help the reader grasp the big picture. Discussion questions are printed at the end of each chapter to facilitate group discussion. Exploring the Bible will prove to be very valuable if you want bible study help, an intro to Scripture and overviews of the OT/NT storyline and themes.

Title: Exploring the Bible: A Guide to the Old and New Testaments
Authors: by R. Laird Harris, Samuel J. Schultz, Gary V. Smith and Walter M. Dunnett
Reading level: 2.4/5.0 > moderately easy
Boards: paperback
Pages: 448
Volumes: 1
Dust jacket: no
Binding: glue
Paper: normal
Topical index: no
Scriptural index: no
Text: perfect type
Publisher: Crossway (see excerpts here)
Year: 2001, 2002; printed together 2007
Price USD: $19.99 / $14.99 at CBD
ISBNs: 1581348649, 9781581348644

Back!

Hello everyone! I returned back from the Northwoods around 3:00 AM this morning. It was a great time of fellowship and hanging out with five close friends in Christ! We tooled around on frozen lakes and rivers on snowmobiles, built a large bonfire, worshiped the God of all creation, watched dozens of deer and just hung out and enjoyed the 20-inches of snow. In the words of my friend Chris, “Minnesota winters are underrated.” (Did you hear that, Bill?)

God was very gracious to us in giving us 16-hours of safe driving, safe play and protection for our wives and children left behind in a 16-inch Minneapolis snowstorm.

See you tomorrow! Tony

P.S. Here is an action shot I snagged of my friend Peter. He’s a natural lumberjack!

Terminating the Gospel on God

Terminating the Gospel on God
by Tony Reinke

Lord willing, if the 16-inches of snow expected in the Twin Cities holds off until tonight, I’ll be headed to the North Woods with some dear Christian brothers. It will be a weekend of fires, food, hiking, snowmobiles and (hopefully) millions of stars and the Northern lights. So a short post before I pack my hatchet, matches and camera.

Even coming into 2007, I eagerly anticipated that God would teach me many new things about communion with Himself. I cannot wait to finally get a copy of Kelly Kapic’s soon-to-be released, Communion with God: The Divine and the Human in the Theology of John Owen (Baker). And later this Winter Justin Taylor and Kapic will release Owen’s Communion with God in the same format as Overcoming Sin and Temptation last year (Crossway). Folks like myself are being stretched to capture the Puritan idea that our union with God drives our communion with Him. Discovering many contours of communion with God is my anticipation for 2007.

In The Pursuit of God, A.W. Tozer explained the danger of terminating on justification and thinking that union with God is the end of all things. Tozer writes, “We have been snared in the coils of a spurious logic which insists that if we have found Him, we need no more seek Him” (16). And earlier, “To have found God and still to pursue Him is the Soul’s paradox of love, scorned indeed by the too easily satisfied religionist, but justified in happy experience by the children of the burning heart” (14).

Recently another very helpful contour in this discovery came a quote from John Piper last Sunday at the Resolved conference in California. Here is the excerpt that grabbed my attention:

“I want God. Forgiveness just gets stuff out of the way between me and God. Forgiveness has value for one reason – it brings me to God reconciled. That’s what I want pastors to get to. I don’t want you to stop at justification. I don’t want you to stop at forgiveness. I don’t want you to stop at eternal life. I want you to push though all of those because the Bible does … ‘We rejoice in God through Jesus Christ, through whom we have received reconciliation’ (Rom. 5:11). But the point is we finally have gotten to the end and ‘we rejoice in God.’ Reconciliation is a means to the end of making God the Gospel! … We get out of the way everything that is an obstacle to enjoying God when we are forgiven. Take justification: ‘Therefore, having been justified by faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ, through whom also we have obtained our introduction by faith into this grace in which we stand; and we rejoice in hope of the glory of God’ (Rom. 5:1-2). That’s the point of justification. Who cares if we’re righteous? Do you want to be God? Is that why you want to be righteous? You want to boast in your righteousness? Why do you want to be righteous? … Because when you get righteousness you get God! You don’t get put in hell — you get God! … All the things we usually terminate on when we preach the Gospel we terminate one step early. We need in America a great awakening of radical God-centeredness … We need millions and millions of believers that are so oriented on ‘God as the Gospel’ they break through forgiveness to God, and through justification to God, and through reconciliation to God, and through eternal life to God.”

– John Piper, “God is the Gospel”, sermon (2007.02.18) 39:53-43:25

The warning that Piper and Tozer sound is a warning not to be a “too easily satisfied religionist.” We need to see that God, not justification, is the heart of the Gospel. I love books, and I love doctrine, and I love Calvinism, and I love the message of a God who covers sinners with His Own righteousness. I love these things! But all doctrines are intended to push us deeper into a relationship with Himself. Tozer was right when he wrote, “God waits to be wanted. Too bad that with many of us He waits so long, so very long, in vain” (17).

But reading books, biographies and diaries of men who followed hard after God is not communion. Spurgeon’s words challenge me here:

“My soul – never be satisfied with a shadowy Christ. … I cannot know Christ through another person’s brains. I cannot love him with another man’s heart, and I cannot see him with another man’s eyes. … I am so afraid of living in a second-hand religion. God forbid that I should get a biographical experience. Lord save us from having borrowed communion. No, I must know him myself. O God, let me not be deceived in this. I must know him without fancy or proxy; I must know him on my own account.”

To personally rejoice in God is the goal of the Gospel. Owen, Tozer, Piper and Spurgeon remind us that our spiritual vision is too small. We seek 15-minutes of prayer time when we should be asking to see more of God’s glory (Ex. 33:18), panting for more of Him (Ps. 42:1-2) and clinging tightly to Him (Ps. 63:8). That is communion.

So let the Gospel and Calvinism and all bible study and theology terminate in personal communion with Him. If we do, we’ll begin to understand what the Gospel is really all about.

The church fathers for Evangelical exegesis

The church fathers for Evangelical exegesis
by Tony Reinke

Recently I received some long-awaited and very beautiful volumes from the Ancient Christian Commentary on Scripture series. I’m interested in the idea – take quotes from the church fathers and assemble them into a 28-volume, verse-by-verse commentary on the whole Bible. As I prepare to dig into these volumes, I eagerly await learning from men relatively unknown to me.

But the arrival of these volumes actually presses me to consider a bigger question that has gone unanswered in my own mind for some time: How (or where) do the church fathers fit into my Reformed faith and expositional research? A simple browse through the index of Calvin’s Institutes shows frequent references to patristic authors. Calvin obviously was indebted to Augustine, and often mentions Athanasius, Cyprian, Irenaeus, Jerome and Tertullian. But this fact alone does not help me with my questions.

So recently I set out to answer two questions: Where do the church fathers fit in my theology? Where do they fit in my exegetical research?

Mariology

This question over the church fathers has led me in a number of interesting directions. The first was to consider the church fathers’ emphasis on Mariology. So recently I picked up a new book titled, Mary For Evangelicals: Toward an understanding of the mother of our Lord, by Tim Perry. Surely this will help me think through the issues (and besides I was intrigued by the idea that Evangelicals had missed a proper understanding of Mary).

In short, the book was a disappointment. The author writes, “While Mary does not figure highly in the New Testament narratives or Epistles, to conclude that Mary is therefore insignificant is wrong” (268). Perry argues throughout the book that Evangelicals must return to a Patristic theological system. The church fathers, “carry a real, if secondary, authority for theological construction,” and are necessary because to “pass over Mariology altogether inevitably leaves other central Christian doctrines underdeveloped” (119, 268). In other words, without an exalted Mariology, we will not fully understand soteriology, ecclesiology, Christology, etc.

Here is the problem: If the theological system of the early church determines Evangelical theology then we’ve lost our Evangelical basis for theology (Scripture). So I don’t buy this argument. Mary does not find a prominent place in Reformed theology because Mary herself (while certainly being elected to be blessed) does not find a prominent place in biblical soteriology, ecclesiology, Christology, etc.

McGrath on the Reformation

Next, I turned to Alister McGrath’s Historical Theology (Blackwell: 1998). And in the chapter on the Reformation I came across the following quote.

“One of the reasons why the reformers valued the writings of the fathers, especially Augustine, was that they regarded them as exponents of a biblical theology. In other words, the reformers believed that the fathers were attempting to develop a theology based upon Scripture alone – which was, of course, precisely what they were also trying to do in the sixteenth century. Of course, the new textual and philological methods available to the reformers meant that they could correct the fathers on points of detail – but the reformers were prepared to accept the ‘patristic testimony’ as generally reliable” (p. 183).

The Reformers set a pattern we can emulate: Stand on the shoulders of the church fathers and correct them when necessary. This helps to confirm my own personal conviction about how to use the church fathers. This clarification about the “patristic testimony” is helpful theologically.

But the second question was not fully answered here. Where do the fathers fit into my expositional library?

John Owen

Finally, I came across John Owen’s thoughts on the use of the church fathers. Owen, one of my Puritan heroes, shows a broad knowledge of the church fathers in his own writings. He argues that the church fathers are not interpretive guides because they disagree so often on interpreting certain texts. “But the pretence of the authoritative determination of the fathers in points of religion hath been so disproved, and the vanity of it so fully discovered, as that it is altogether needless farther to insist upon it” (4:227). In other words, the church fathers cannot be relied upon for a consistent interpretation of Scripture, therefore their conclusions cannot be held authoritative. Discernment must be used when reading the fathers (or any author for that matter).

The church fathers wrote helpful commentaries that were “followed, used, improved, by others innumerable, in succeeding ages” (4:228). And then Owen reminds us that “the best, most useful, and profitable labor in the Lord’s vineyard, which any holy and learned man can engage himself in, is to endeavor the contribution of father light in the opening and exposition of Scripture, or any part thereof” (4:228). So Owen seems to say that the fathers have been greatly improved upon. Beware, lest the fathers become the “authoritative determination” of Scripture. Pray for the Spirit’s further illumination of His Word and seek to build the church further.

Overall, Owen gives me less confidence that a study of the church fathers will really benefit my expositional research of Scripture today.

Where honor is due

What I love about the church fathers was their commitment to doctrinal purity. They climbed into the ring to fight — and even die! — for the divinity of Christ, the Triunity of God and the nature of sin. If we take these doctrines for granted, it’s because we are standing on the shoulders of men long ago. So, I want a healthy respect for the church fathers and how God used them in the formation of doctrines. Systematic theology, historical theology and obviously church history will rightfully contain much of the church fathers. But this does not help me to understand where the church fathers fit into my expositional study of Scripture.

With the Ancient Christian Commentary Series on Scripture, I see new opportunities to become acquainted with the fathers that previous generations did not have. As a bible student there are new questions that we must consider. While I’ve found some answers recently, I still have many questions.

Remaining questions

1. How useful are the church fathers’ comments upon Scripture? Would our time be better spent focusing on contemporary commentaries? This will be answered in the coming weeks as I dig into the Ancient Christian Commentaries on Scripture. I know from reading Augustine’s commentary on the Psalms that he deviates from the text frequently. Again, I’m thankful for Augustine in the history of the church, but where do patristic commentaries fit into an expositional library? If I did not study the church fathers in my exegetical research, what would I miss?

2. Have centuries of bible commentaries made the expositions of the church fathers obsolete? Again, this is not a question of disrespectfulness towards the fathers but a very real question. Where would my time be better spent? Should we/How do we balance the use of contemporary commentaries and patristic commentaries?

3. What major theological problems surface in the church fathers? Obviously, this is not a concern for those who see the fathers as authoritative themselves. But we hold them to the touchstone of Scripture and need to be honest about the errors tainting their exegesis. Which fathers are most/least exegetically reliable?

4. How do I cultivate a respect for the accomplishments of the church fathers?
Maybe I don’t use the church fathers exegetically, but where then do they fit into my ministry. Todd Rester’s words caught my attention: “Clement of Rome according to tradition was drowned at sea with an anchor tied to him, Polycarp was burned to death in the Roman arena, Ignatius was torn apart by wild beasts in the Colisseum at Rome … what sort of Christ would these men die? … The only acceptable answer is a Christ who is God and Man.” These are men of noteworthiness.

5. To what extent did the reformers use the church fathers for historical continuity? The reformers did not want to look like a new schism out of left field, so they tied their theology to longstanding Christian authorities. Contemporary Evangelicalism of course is not fighting for legitimacy. Would the reformers use the fathers differently today?

6. In what ways is our culture like the culture of the church fathers?
This is one of the more interesting questions that arises in this discussion. Nate Shurden writes, “we should take note of the astonishing similarity between our own culture and that of the early church. The similarities are conspicuous, and not merely coincidental. The opening up of the world to communication and travel is unprecedented in our time as it was in the age of the early church. The proliferation of philosophical ideas and religious beliefs and practices (due at least in part to such advances in communication and travel) are as widespread in our day as then, even more so due to technological advances like the Internet. The reality of multiculturalism and the religious pluralism that often accompanies it is as alive today as possibly ever before in human history.” What can we learn from the exegetical ministry of the church fathers for our culture today?

7. Why the growing interest in the church fathers? We can assume that publishers see a growing trend in churches towards ancient traditions, but why? What is driving this new openness? One church historian writes, “whether its emergent Christianity or Celtic spirituality, the pick ‘n’ mix attitude to the past is a classic example of the imperialism of the modern present combined with the aesthetic sensibilities of consumerism. For both groups, history is really only useful as a source of precedents for the present; and the recovery of history is simply the highly selective appropriation of those bits of the past which meet with approval and fit the world we want to make – or justify – for ourselves.” How do we watch our own hearts in this? If the church fathers are not furthering our understanding of Scripture, why are we drawn to them? What are we seeking to justify?

8. What drives us to want to quote patristic authors? It seems that I see pride in my own heart in this. I want some new interpretation of Scripture that comes from Chrysostom just so I can tell some listeners, “The other day I was reading through Chrysostom’s Against the Anomoeans and came across the following…” That, for me, is pride. Maybe I do place a higher authority on the fathers than contemporary commentaries? I may not say the church fathers are “authoritatively determinative,” but my actions may prove otherwise.

9. To what extent is the push to revive the church fathers an ecumenical push?
Clearly Tim Perry in Mary for Evangelicals is using the church fathers for an ecumenical purpose. In the introduction to the Ancient Christian Commentary, Thomas C. Oden writes, “Such an endeavor is especially poignant and timely now because increasing numbers of evangelical Protestants are newly discovering rich dimensions of dialogue and widening areas of consensus with Orthodox and Catholics on divisive issues long thought irreparable. The study of the Fathers on Scripture promises to further significant interactions between Protestants and Catholics on issues that have plagued them for centuries: justification, authority, Christology, sanctification and eschatology” (xxi).

Conclusion

With these questions I feel like I’ve just stepped into a new world of possibilities and dangers. If you can help me think through any of these questions, I welcome your input in the comments.

I want to be open to God’s work that preceded the Puritan/Reformed tradition, motivated out of a love for God’s Word. I want to know God more and experience more of Him through the Word. I want ears to hear ancient voices and discernment to be biblically faithful.

Whether or not I find answers to these questions, they are at least causing me to rest more fully in the illumination of the Holy Spirit. I am increasingly aware that I could fill a library with books and never know God. The Spirit must awaken, confirm, teach and lead me into all truth (John 16:13, 1 John 2:27).