Open Question Thursday > Contextualizing and Natural Revelation

Open Question Thursday

Contextualizing and Natural Revelation

Hello everyone and happy New Year! This week we are starting what I hope to be a weekly feature called Open Question Thursday (though comments will be open beyond Thursday). I want to hear from you!

My first question is this: It seems with all the talk about contextualizing the message of the bible to our culture, there is a lopsided emphasis on methodology and presentation rather than revelation (an emphasis leading to religious relativism). I’m wondering where the importance of general revelation fits here. Is general revelation God’s way of contextualizing in every generation? Thus the preacher points to a tree (which all are familiar) and says, ‘God made that to bring honor to Himself.’ I don’t know. What do you think? How do contextualizing and general revelation correlate?

A battle-axe for the New Year’s Resolutions

It’s an American tradition to make promises for the New Year and Christians sanctify the tradition by using this opportunity to commit themselves to bible reading, prayer and killing sin. This year I, like many of my friends, have resolved to kill (or ‘mortify’) personal sin. Spurgeon gives us a fitting reminder to focus on the mortifying power of the Cross.

“Some, I fear, use the precious blood of Christ only as a quietus to their consciences. They say to themselves, ‘He made atonement for sin, therefore let me take my rest.’ This is doing a grievous wrong to the great sacrifice. … A man who wants the bloodaxe.jpg of Jesus for nothing but the mean and selfish reason, that after having been forgiven through it he may say, ‘Soul, take thine ease, eat, drink, and be merry: hear sermons, enjoy the hope of eternal felicity, and do nothing’ — such a man blasphemes the precious blood, and makes it an unholy thing. We are to use the glorious mystery of atoning blood as our chief means of overcoming sin and Satan: its power is for holiness. See how the text puts it: “They overcame him by the blood of the Lamb” (Rev. 12:11): these saints used the doctrine of atonement not as a pillow to rest their weariness, but as a weapon to subdue their sin. O my brothers, to some of us atonement by blood is our battle-axe and weapon of war, by which we conquer in our struggle for purity and godliness — a struggle in which we have continued now these many years. By the atoning blood we withstand corruption within and temptation without. This is that weapon which nothing can resist.”

– C.H. Spurgeon sermon The Blood of the Lamb the Conquering Weapon (#2,043, Sept. 9, 1888)