Thursday, September 19, 2024

Some Personal Updates//Amazon UK Wishlist for those who wish to help with my forthcoming move

I will be moving back to Ireland on October 25th, so:


(1) If you want to hang out with me between now and then, reach out and we can try to swing something.

(2) I hope to be back sometime in 2025

(3) I will be employed//working via distance with a great organization (with great people, too) so I will be busy.

(4) I will need to leave somethings here in the USA, so I set up an Amazon UK wishlist for those who wish to help:

Amazon UK Wishlist (alt. one can still use Paypal and/or Venmo [though once I am back in Ireland, I may need to retire Venmo for a season])

Thanks!


Wednesday, September 18, 2024

Daniel W. Hieber, ‘dog’ vs. ‘horse’ in Native American languages

Another nail in the coffin of those who scoff at the concept of "Loan shifting":

 

‘dog’ vs. ‘horse’ in Native American languages


 

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Excerpts from Synopsis of a Purer Theology

  

The following are excerpts from:

 

Synopsis of a Purer Theology, ed. William Den Boer and Remer A. Faber, 2 vols. (trans. Riemer A. Faber; Davenant Press, 2024)

 

It is based on disputations held between 1620-1625 by four Reformed Protestant professors at Leiden University, shortly after the Synod of Dort (1618-1619).

 

Disputation 7:

 

41. Yet although ‘Elohim occasionally is expressed for only one person of the Trinity (as in Ps 45:7), nevertheless the title does not function exclusively, but inclusively through a synecdochical expression, whereby the other persons are included within the name of one person by metonymy—sometimes on account of the unity of essence that is common to the three persons, sometimes on account of the mutual interexistencse of the persons. (1:75)

 

Disputation 8:

 

18. From the fundamental observations that were put forth previously it is clear whether or not the Son of God is rightly called “God of himself.” Certain Jesuits, in line with that scurrilous Génébrard, maliciously accused Calvin of holding to the latter view, even though Bellarmine pleased in his defense. For we assert that, if one considers his deity or essence as absolute, the Son of God rightly is and is called autotheos [God of himself] as some of the church-fathers also called him in this regard. Yet, if you consider the same essence as existence in the Son under a certain and distinct mode of subsistence, then He is God of God, light of light, as defined in the Nicene Creed. (1:82)

 

Disputation 15:

 

19. Since this miraculous mode of conception is unique to Christ and applies to no-one besides him, we exempt no other person from the stain of original sin, nor even the chosen blessed virgin, bearer of God, whom we (with Epiphanius) “do not consider to have been generated outside of human nature, but, like all people, from the seed of a man and the womb of a woman” (Epiphanius, Collyridian Heresy, 79). Accordingly, she was subject to the law that is common to all, as she was in need of Christ the Redeemer, whom she acknowledged as her Savior (Luke 1:47). She was subject to the hardships of the body and ultimately death, and she is to be found in the company of all who have sinned in Adam, who are all mortal, for all of whom Christ died (Rom 5:12; 2 Cor 5:15). (1:148)

 

Disputation 28:

 

34. And this intercession, or appeal, by Christ consists of these three features: 1) that Christ brought his atoning sacrifice into the very sanctuary of heaven to sanctify it for us, and there to appear before the face of God on our behalf (Heb. 9:23-24). 2) that by his will and burning desire, just as he had done earlier while on earth (John 17:11, 15, 24), etc.) so also in heaven with the Father he asks earnestly that the power and efficacy of his death be applied to us for our salvation, as can be seen from Zech 1:12 and John 14:16 as well as Acts 2:33. Finally, 3) that by what he has merited and his own desire, he causes the prayers that we pour out in his name to be pleasing and acceptable to God the Father (John 14:6 and 13, likewise 1 John 2:1, 2). (1:325)

 

38. However, though we are accused of it, we do not deny the fact that saints are able to fall from time to time, and through the weakness of their flesh they can fall seriously into trivial and even very grievous sins. Or, we state positively that in an absolute sense it is impossible for saints to lose their faith; but it is possible in a limited way, only as much as he is allowed within the gracious promises of Christ, the faithful safekeeping of the Holy Spirit, and God’s unchangeable decree concerning their salvation. For we openly admit that, considering Satan’s powers and the infirmities of believers, if they should be left to themselves then they could fall away and perish at any moment. But we deny that believers also lose their faith, or fall away from grace to the point that they actually become unbelievers and enemies of God, like sinners who have not been born again. For God does not treat them strictly according to the Law, even though they incur his fatherly displeasure, and they bring upon themselves a liability to damnation and lose their present aptitude for entering the kingdom of heaven if they are considered only in and of themselves. And we grant that in that interval, before the act of faith and repentance is renewed, such a sinner, although he is elect, does go about deserving damnation, even though by God’s firm decree in Christ he will be declared innocent. But after, by God’s decree and grace, he will have returned to the right way, through a renewed, second act of faith and obedience—the first act of which is the seed of regeneration--, he is preserved fully restored with those fundamental gifts without which the spiritual life does not exist. And this renewal comes not by the decision or will of believers but by the special love of God and the divine operation and the intercession and safekeeping of Christ. (1:368)

 

Disputation 43:

 

No sacraments are absolutely necessary for salvation. (2:560)

 

No unbelieving person becomes a partaker of the thing that is signified in the sacrament. (2:560)

 

Disputation 44:

 

14. Moreover, all members of the orthodox church must in every way strive to seek baptism for themselves or for their children from none other than the pastors of the orthodox church, lest they be seen to have a part in the false teaching and unjust works of darkness. Nevertheless, if some people have been baptized already by false teachers who employ the form for baptism directly upside down, we state that orthodox shepherds should not perform their baptism all over again. But there is a different reason for others who do deny those teachings directly or who do change the form for baptism, as it was judged concerning the Paulinists at the Synod of Nicaea. For in this case the true baptism is not repeated, but a false baptism which is no baptism—conferred by a church which is no church—replaces the true and genuine one in the church of Christ. (2:565)

 

43. Moreover, when we say “men” we mean living men, not deceased ones, as opposed to the Corinthians who used to baptize even the dead, making abuse of the apostle’s passage: “otherwise what would those people do who are baptized on behalf of the dead?” (1 Cor 15:29). But it is something quite different to be baptized on behalf of the dead than to baptize the dead. For they can be said to be baptized on behalf of the dead who are being baptized unto the mortification of the flesh, or even unto the fate of being subjected to the slandering and persecutions of this world and carry about in their bodies the nekrōsis, that is, the dying of the Lord Jesus, as the apostle says in 2 Cor 4:10. (2:572-73)

 

Disputation 46:

 

46. It is to no avail also that Bellarmine based the sacrifice of Christ in the sacrament of the Eucharist on the slaying of the Paschal lamb in 1 Cor 5:7, and also on the prophecy of Mal 1:11 about the minhah, or pure offering, that is to be offered to God throughout the world under the new covenant. Malachi could not have meant hereby that the expiatory offering of the mass corresponds to that of the Jews, since the hypothesis of Bellarmine and the other Romanists, the mass is a bloodless offering. But all the expiatory offerings under the Old Testament were bloody ones, not to mention the fact that the Jewish offerings were expiatory only in a typical and denotative sense, while in the blasphemous meaning of the papal teachers and mass is truly, properly expiatory. Therefore, it remains that if by the teaching of holy Scripture there is but one unique sacrifice of the cross (in the proper sense of the word) that was prefigured by the Jewish expiatory sacrifices, it must be that what Malachi foretold about the spiritual and eucharistic worship of God that would be established among the nations by the preaching of the Gospel should be taken in a metaphorical sense. (2:624)

 

Disputation 48:

 

27. And at this point the question arises whether it is permitted, if the number of those who sin in doctrine or in manner of life is a large one, to make use of excluding them from the sacraments, or of excommunicating them. The cause of the doubt here is that, although this authority was given to build up, and not to break down, from this sort of separation one should expect the breaking down rather than the upbuilding of the church. And therefore, Augustine maintained that this spiritual sword should not be drawn against the drunkards in Africa because of the large number of those who sinned.

 

28. We, however, answer this question by posing a distinction: if a larger part of the church is led astray into a fundamental error or heresy and cannot be recalled to the way despite every attempt at remedy, the following remedy still remains for the pious pastors who preside over the sounder part, namely that they may, together with those who are right-minded, separate themselves from the community of those who are heterodox. And although they do not have the power to use this discipline against them by condemning them openly because of the strength of those who mislead, yet at least by acting openly they can secede from them and condemn the heresy. In this manner Christ gives the warning in Matt 7:15, “Beware the false prophets,” and in John 10:5, “Christ’s sheep do not know the voice of a stranger and therefore they flee from him.” Similarly, Rom 16:17: “I warn you, brothers, that you watch carefully those who cause discord or scandals contrary to the doctrine which you have learned, and stay away from them.” And in the same manner in the old church the orthodox seceded from the Arians, and our ancestors and forefathers in previous ages seceded from the superstition and synagogue of the Antichrist.

 

29. But if a wicked lifestyle infects a large part of the flock, in the way that the prophets everywhere lament over the Israelite church, then here again a distinction must be made. For their this great number defends its wicked manner of life by means of doctrine, or if it does not make a defense by means of doctrine, then at least it pursues that doctrine by its evil actions. And if it does defend its wicked manner of life by means of doctrine, as formerly the Nicolaitans and that Jezebel did, who by means of prophecy seduced Christ’s servants to prostitution, then concerning them we should decide in the same way whereby we previously taught that heretics out to be treated, i.e., either by means of a public sentencing of excommunication, or, if because of their great number and strength this cannot be done, to secede from them. [That is what] Christ commanded the angel of the church at Thyatira and Ephesus concerning the Nicolaitans and that Jezebel (Rev 2:6 and 20), on the basis of Christ’s declaration in Matt 5:19: “Whoever breaks one of the least of these commandments, and teaches other man so, will be called least in the kingdom of heaven.” (2:664-65)

 

 

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Tuesday, September 17, 2024

Adolf Schlatter (1852-1938) on Paul's Theology of Baptism in Romans 6

  

 

The substantiating sentence speaks expressly of the participation in the death of Jesus which the believer receives by means of Jesus’ association with him. This association begins with baptism. For this reason Paul explains what took place in baptism; it happened, without exception, to all who have been baptized. The only provision was that they were to be baptized into Christ, because there were also many other baptisms at that time. The effect of baptism assumes that it unites with Christ; Paul did not expect that effect from the water or from the degree of understanding or faith exercised in the act by the one being baptized or by the baptizer. But because the believer was baptized into Christ, he was baptized into his death; hence it is true of him that he died to sin. On account of Jesus’ death Jesus has the authority to forgive his sin and to save him from guilt and form the power of his sinful will; for this reason baptism receives its content and importance from his death.

 

In order to explain the effect Paul expects from baptism, the preposition eis in baptisthēnai eis Christon eis ton thanaton autou is frequently filled with mystical sentiments. Here to be baptized “into him and into his death” occurs when the believer focuses his thinking and feeling intently upon Christ and approximates his death. Yet the new assertions cannot be severed from the first part of the letter, nor do they permit us to construe a relationship with Jesus other than established by faith. This faith is actualized by the whole person, in complete sobriety, in the broad daylight of consciousness. An element of mystery enters faith in Jesus, as well as baptism, because his divine work grants Jesus the power to shape the individual’s inner life. Paul always considered the one who associates his human life with those have been apprehended by his message and his bequest. The one who receives baptism focuses his thinking and volition on him and on his death; yet in him he also finds the one who shapes his innermost life, as the potter forms his clay (9:21, 23). By means of God’s creative power, Jesus turns his death into the death of his own. Paul’s final explanation in regard to this is that through Christ’s association with his own, they are moved by his Spirit (8:9). (Adolf Schlatter, Romans: The Righteousness of God [trans. Siegfried S. Schatzmann; Peabody, Mass.: Hendrickson, 1995], 136-37)

 

 

 

 

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Charlie Trimm on a possible explanation of the origin of כידון

  

Several weapons were found in sanctuaries in Ugarit, which might have been viewed as divine weapons. A king of Alalakh refers to defeating his enemies with the help of a divine weapon. The Old Testament assigns several divine weapons to YHWH, including a bow and arrows, a mace, and a spear (Hab 3:911) and foreign nations, such as Assyria, are called the “the rod of my anger” (Isa 10:5). In spite of these texts, the Old Testament records YHWH giving his weapon to a human leader in only one case, and that was only in a highly restricted sense. When YHWH addressed Moses at the burning bush, he commanded Moses to perform a series of signs with his shepherd staff (Exod 4:24). A little later, he ordered Moses to take  “this staff” with him when he went to Egypt (Exod 4:17), and the narrator records that he left with “the staff of God” (Exod 4:20). It appears that YHWH consecrated Moses’s staff to become the staff of God, which Moses then employed before several of the plagues. However, Moses only used the staff after YHWH instructed him how to use it each time, and eventually he was censured by YHWH when he used the staff incorrectly (Num 20:113). It is also possible that the “commander of YHWH’s army” in Josh 5:1315 gave his sword to Joshua as part of a royal ritual. If this theory was correct, it would explain the origin of the “javelin” ( כידון ) that Joshua held up in a later battle. However, the text provides little indication that he is handing Joshua a weapon and the words of the general focus attention on the need for Joshua to submit to YHWH’s instructions, not on giving Joshua greater ability to fight. (Charlie Trimm, Fighting for the King and the Gods: A Survey of Warfare in the Ancient Near East [Resources for Biblical Study 88], Atlanta: SBL Press, 2017], 616)

 

 

 

 

 

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Charlie Trimm on the Use of a scimitar-like weapon in ancient Egypt

  

Although swords are the most famous hand-to-hand weapon in the Western world, they were less common in the ancient Near East. One reason for this is that they were more difficult to construct, as the entire blade needed to be of metal rather than simply attaching a head to a piece of wood (as was done with a mace or an axe). The most common sword in Egypt was the sickle-sword (khopesh sword), which looked like a harvesting sickle (somewhat like a scimitar) and was used during the Middle and New Kingdom . . .(Charlie Trimm, Fighting for the King and the Gods: A Survey of Warfare in the Ancient Near East [Resources for Biblical Study 88], Atlanta: SBL Press, 2017], 516)

 

Here are figures 7.3 and 7.4 from ibid., 518:

 


 

 

 

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Gary Habermas on the Differences between the Resurrection Accounts in the Pauline Epistles and the Gospels

  

Of course, there are still differences between the resurrection appearance details as described in the Gospel narratives and the brief statements in Paul’s Epistles. Hence, while Paul likewise accepts the notion of bodily resurrection appearances, the descriptive approaches vary. Many of the differences may be due to the Gospel authors narrating their stories, while the epistolary genre is entirely different, given brief statements of the reported earliest beliefs instead of detailed accounts. For example, Paul never describes (or even mentions directly) an empty tomb. Nor does Paul state that Jesus’s female followers held him by the ankles after his resurrection (Matt 28:9; John 20:17), that Jesus otherwise offered to be touched (cf. Luke 24:39-40; John 20:17, 27), or that he ate food in the presence of his followers (Luke 24:41-43; Acts 10:41, or as implied in John 21:9, 12). Consider this, though: these situations may have been described much differently if Paul had written a Gospel. But whereas the Gospel narratives in Matthew, Luke, and John make it clear throughout in their descriptions that Jesus’s appearances were bodily in nature, Paul also develops his view in other more theoretical ways in his teaching that he also thought that Jesus appeared bodily. Paul communicated his ideas in a variety of ways, such as by elaborating on his Pharisaic background views of both corporal and bodily resurrection, plus his teachings that the righteous would inherit a refurbished earthly creation (which would seem rather irrelevant or even just plain metaphysical nonsense for Platonic disembodied spirits!) Most of all, Paul’s notion of the resurrection body is further indicated by his usage and interaction between crucial terms such as sōma, anastasis, egeirō, and especially exanastasin in Phil 3:11, or similar phrases where the concept of anastasis was combined with ek nekron (as in Phil 3:11b; 1 Cor 15:12; or Rom 8:11). In these instances, especially for the Pharisees and in the majority Jewish parlance, this would most likely indicate that for Paul, the sōma that went down into the ground in burial was essentially the same sōma that emerged in the resurrection appearances (as in the creedal statement in 1 Cor 15:3-5). Of course, there were significant changes in resurrection bodies too, as Paul argues rather pointedly, especially in 1 Cor 15:35-45. It is even obvious in the Gospels that there were differences in Jesus’s resurrection body, such as when Jesus appeared and disappeared, or when he was already gone when the tomb was opened. Moreover, Jesus’s wounds were already healed, and he no longer suffered any pain, and so on. But Jesus’s physical body had died, was buried, was raised, and appeared afterward—that is, what “went down” in death and burial returned in the resurrection and appearances. Though there were marked differences, Jesus had not ceased having (or being) a body—his own body. This is why many scholars have added that an empty tomb is implied in the pre-Pauline creedal statement in 1 Cor 15:4 as well as in Paul’s other teachings on these matters. (See the critical works listed above by Wright, Cook, Licona, and Gundry). As Cook declares succinctly on the opening page of his treatise, his primary hypothesis that “there is no fundamental difference between Paul’s conception of the resurrection body and that of the Gospels” (Empty Tomb, 1). To be sure, the notions were expressed differently in the Gospels and in Paul, but the shared concept is that of the same raised body instead of a raised and glorified spirit. (Gary R. Habermas, On the Resurrection, 4 vols. [Brentwood, Tenn.: B&H Academic, 2024], 2:696 n. 25

 

 

 

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Gary Habermas on the Conversion of James, the Brother of Jesus

  

Further, how are we to account similarly for the conversion of Jesus’s skeptical brother James? Along with his family members, James’s earlier stance was apparently to reject Jesus and his message along with joining the public sentiment (hoi par’ autou) that Jesus was out of his mind (exestē, Mark 3:21, 31-35; John 7:3-5). Yet later, after he met the risen Jesus, James appears to have been converted from his early position to his subsequent leadership of the Jerusalem church.

 

Admittedly, this was a rather abrupt about-face for James—a change from thinking that his brother was mentally ill to following him even to the point of being willing to be stoned to death for his belief in him (Josephus, Ant. 20.9.1). The majority opinion among critical scholars is that the apparent and awe-inspiring changes in James was due to an appearance of the risen Jesus. This event was recorded in both the very early creedal tradition in 1 Cor 15:7 as well as narrated briefly in chapter 8 of the later, noncanonical Gospel of the Hebrews.

 

James’s move away from his previous unbelief has to be accounted for adequately both in his conversion and in his leadership position in the early church. Scarcely has anyone stated this more succinctly than critical scholar Reginald H. Fuller, who went as far as to retort, “It might be said that if there were no record of an appearance to James the Lord’s brother in the New Testament we should have to invent one in order to account for his post-resurrection conversion and rapid advance.” (Reginald H. Fuller, The Formation of the Resurrection Narratives, 2nd ed. [New York: Macmillan, 1980], 37, after citing Gal 2:1-10, 12; Acts 15:13; 21:18). Quite similarly, N. T. Wright also asserts regarding Jesus’s brother James, “it is difficult to account for his centrality and unrivalled leadership unless he was himself known to have seen the risen Jesus.” (Wright, Resurrection of the Son of God, 325. Wright likewise follows the majority view that James probably came to believe in Jesus due to a resurrection appearance [560]) (Gary R. Habermas, On the Resurrection, 4 vols. [Brentwood, Tenn.: B&H Academic, 2024], 2:460-61)

 

 

The Greek text in Mark 3:21, 31-35 is difficult in its own right, such as regarding the question of the identity of those who attempted to restrain Jesus. The Greek literally indicates that these were people nearby (hoi par’ autou), but both the way the terms are used plus Jesus seemingly ignoring his family, at least temporally (3:31-35), favors the notion that Jesus’s family agreed with this public sentiment. IT no doubt looked embarrassing for both Jesus and his family, hence raising its likelihood of authenticity. (Ibid., 460 n. 64)

 

 

 

 

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Example of Gary Habermas vs. David Hume on Miracles

  

Referring to Hume’s example of iron floating in the air, Adams commented that even a man can cause iron or lead objects to fly through the air or to be suspended in water by his own human power exerted against nature. (Gary R. Habermas, On the Resurrection, 4 vols. [Brentwood, Tenn.: B&H Academic, 2024], 2:74)

 

Luke Adam’s iron example, it may be added today along these same lines of thought that humans can, by their own power, even send spacecraft through and far beyond earth’s gravity and out into the far reaches of our solar system. While the spacecraft did not, strictly speaking, “break” a law of nature at all, they overcame or superseded what in Hume’s day would never have been thought possible. Furthermore, such spacecraft were powered by a stronger force than nature’s laws, though these were not supernatural forces at all. What’s more, the laws were still firmly in place both before as well as after the spacecraft passed through, with absolutely no ill effects. If there were a God with certain attributes who chose to act in nature by a still stronger power, why should this be deemed an impossibility, with the laws of nature returning to their normal course immediately afterward? How could Hume disallow this argument? (Ibid., 74 n. 47)

 

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Example of the Many Medical Problems for the Swoon Hypothesis

 

 

For most medical researchers, by far the most common cause postulated for the death of Jesus by crucifixion is asphyxiation or suffocation. In fact, as remarked in the earlier treatment in this study on Jesus’s death by crucifixion, it is likely that this option garners more total adherents than all the other medical options combined.

 

The asphyxiation explanation is often presented similarly. When an adult male is hung so that the weight of the body pulls downward, the intercostal, pectoral, and deltoid muscles surrounding the lungs tend to constrict them. When this occurs, the victim can still inhale with difficulty, though it is increasingly difficult to exhale. Of course, the inability to either inhale or exhale causes asphyxiation quite quickly.

 

Unless the process is halted, death will occur. Moreover, being nailed to a wooden cross, which is by far the most common description in the ancient world, would cause far more stress on the body.

 

On this explanation, the centurion at the crucifixion site did not need a medical degree or modern technologies such as those supplied by EKGs or EEGs to determine if the offenders were dead. IF the victim had been hanging in the “low” position on the cross for any significant amount of time, death would result, whether the individual was in a coma, faking death, or just plain worn out. The position of the person’s body would provide much of the necessary information, since further up-and-down movements would obviously signal the more time was needed before death would ensue.

 

Death could be prolonged for perhaps even a considerable time if the victim could continually push down on their severely injured feet, pull up with their like-wise brutally wounded arms and wrists, and contort their pain-wracked bodies into new positions to relieve the stress on their lungs in order to breathe. Even this drawn-out, incredibly painful process, recurring repeatedly, probably only resulted in just a few brief, halting and wheezing gasps before the person sank back down again. This obviously would be an incredibly painful process, especially given that nails were most often used. Further, such constant actions would quickly tire out a victim. Not being bale to continue these movements meant certain death in the low position, so there was a constant and repeated choice between staying alive or giving up and dying.

 

But if the legs of the crucified person were smashed or severed, as with an instrument like a heavy mallet or an axe, the ability to push up to breathe certainly would be, at the very least, severely restricted if not thereby made impossible. This would be in addition to the effect of the blow itself on the substantially weakened human body and perhaps the impending shock as well.

 

For many reasons, then, asphyxiation has easily been the most popular choice among medical researchers to explain the chief factor in what was probably a multifaceted cause of Jesus’s death due to the process of crucifixion, perhaps even more than the other medical options combined. OF course, as mentioned often in this study, the most popular views are not always correct. But whatever combination of factors may have been involved the actual, physical process of Jesus’s death by crucifixion, several additional considerations indicate clearly that Jesus was certainly dead when his body was placed in the tomb. This last fact is easily the most crucial consideration here, as greed by the vast majority of critical scholars such as those listed above. (Gary R. Habermas, On the Resurrection, 4 vols. [Brentwood, Tenn.: B&H Academic, 2024], 2:478-80)

 

 

 

 

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Monday, September 16, 2024

William McKane: Jeremiah 23:24 is not about the Omnipresence of God

  

If vv. 25–32 are explicable as a prose commentary on the preceding poetry, there is a presumption that they were originally contiguous with vv. 16–22 and that this connection has been broken by the subsequent insertion of vv. 23f. which contain an affirmation that God is all-seeing and misses nothing. It may have been thought that this had some appositeness as a theological comment: God was not deceived by the activities of prophets who falsely laid claim to his authority for what they said; there was no way of throwing dust in his eyes or making him suppose that a spurious prophetic activity was a genuine one. There is a need to work very hard in order to establish the relevance of the insertion and the person responsible for it may not have been so greatly exercised about its relevance. At any rate vv. 23f. are not concerned with transcendence and immanence in relation to God (pace Volz, Rudolph, Weiser, Nicholson) and these verses have no intrinsic connection with any context in chapter 23. (William McKane, A Critical and Exegetical Commentary on Jeremiah, 2 vols. [International Critical Commentary; Edinburgh: T&T Clark International, 1986], 1:587, emphasis in bold added)

 

 

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Adolf Schlatter (1852-1938) vs. the concept of "legal fiction"

 

 

The notion of “appearance, fiction, label” is not associated with Paul’s use of the term “reckoning.” A logisomos is indispensable when, in concrete dealings, the action one precipitates a situation for the other that requires him to make a new decision. By means of the logismos he establishes how he will arrange the new relationship. Inherent in the divine logismos is the divine power. The individual is what the divine verdict expresses about him. There is no room here for an “as if” scenario, as if the righteousness produced by the individual himself were authentic and that which God accorded to him were fictitious. Anyone who reasons this way disconnects his knowledge of God from the formation of his conviction; he does not reason in faith. (Adolf Schlatter, Romans: The Righteousness of God [trans. Siegfried S. Schatzmann; Peabody, Mass.: Hendrickson, 1995], 110)

 

 

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Sunday, September 15, 2024

Samuel Zinner on the "evil inclination" (יצר הרע) in the Apocryphon of James

 Apocryphon of James 7:12-21 reads:

 

Rather be
eager on your own and,
if possible, be first before
me, for thus
the Father will love you.
Become those who hate
hypocrisy and intention that’s
evil, for intention
is what produces hypocrisy,
and hypocrisy is far from
Truth. . . . (Samuel Zinner, The Apocryphon of James (NHC I, 2): A Commentary with Complete Facsimiles, Transcription, and Translation [Luminescence Academic Series 1; Grand Rapids, Mich.: Luminescence, L.L.C., Publisher, 2024], 45)

 

Zinner provides this cleaned-up translation elsewhere in his volume:

 

“Be eager to be saved without being urged. Rather, be ready on your own and, if possible, get there before me, because the Father will love you.

 

“Come to hate hypocrisy and evil intention, because intention is that gives birth to hypocrisy, and hypocrisy is far from the truth.” (Ibid., 118, emphasis in original)

 

Commenting on the “evil intention” or yetzer hara, Zinner wrote:

 

“Evil intention.” This refers to the יצר הרע, the so-called evil inclination, imagination, or intention. Compare Gen 8:21, “for the imagination (יצר) of man’s heart is evil (רע) from his youth. Although “hypocrisy is far from the truth” clearly pertains to morality and ethics, one could also understand the statement from within a Platonic epistemological framework, namely, pretense is far from the ideal archetype of truth. Note well that Ap. Jas. states “because intention is what gives birth to hypocrisy,” not “because evil intention is what gives birth to hypocrisy.” We could explain this in two ways. First, the author may have simply wanted to avoid too much repetition. Second, and preferable, would be that the author first uses the phrase “evil intention” to reflect what would become a well-known Rabbinic two-word phrase, and then condenses this to the biblical use of יצר by itself, as in Gen 8:21, where not the evil inclination is said to be evil, but the inclination in general or as such is declared evil. (Samuel Zinner, The Apocryphon of James (NHC I, 2): A Commentary with Complete Facsimiles, Transcription, and Translation [Luminescence Academic Series 1; Grand Rapids, Mich.: Luminescence, L.L.C., Publisher, 2024], )

 

 

 

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B. J. Allen, "Striving for Obedience While Relying on Grace"

  

Striving for Obedience While Relying on Grace

 

While being perfect is not a requirement for Christ’s grace, this truth does not excuse us from trying. The idea that we do not need to try for perfection is like a child asking his parent to teach him to ride a bike but then refusing to push the pedals. Christ’s atonement is meant to help us learn how to be perfect. Therefore, if we are not trying for perfection, we have missed the point of the Atonement altogether.

 

Some struggle with the balance of grace and obedience. Perhaps some infer that if we talk about salvation’s dependence on grace, then people may think salvation’s dependence on grace, then people may think salvation requires little effort. However, we should not equate an emphasis on grace with a de-emphasis on obedience. Grace and obedience can coexist. When a true understanding of grace is coupled with a true knowledge of the Atonement’s purpose, the desire to be our best becomes instinctive. As we truly comprehend that Christ’s mission is to help us become something great, we naturally want to strive for greatness.

 

While some may fear that stressing grace without obedience will cause idleness, stressing obedience without grace can cause hopelessness. President M. Russell Ballard taught, “Unfortunately, there are some within the Church who have become so preoccupied with performing good works that they forget that those works—as good as they may be—are hollow unless they are accompanied by a complete dependence on Christ.” (M. Russell Ballard, “Building Bridges of Understanding,” Ensign, June 1998) To this same point, those who focus solely on what they lack in “good works” are often ridden with guilt from never measuring up; they believe Satan’s false narrative that their level of perfection equates to the level of God’s love for them. I fear that sometimes we inadvertently help Satan pound this belief into ourselves and others. Perhaps in our desire to emphasize that obedience shows our love for God (see John 14:15), we inadvertently teach that God loves only the obedient. I believe part of why I was so anxious as a child and obsessive about my own worthiness before God was because I did not understand the Savior’s compensatory role in helping me learn obedience. To use President Ballard’s words, I had “become so preoccupied with performing good works” that I had forgotten my “complete dependence on Christ.” In time, I came to better understand the Savior’s role, which gave me more hope to keep trying. I had an even stronger desire to stay on the covenant path when I found out I was not walking the path alone.

 

In His godly omniscience, our Heavenly Father anticipates the day when His children are perfectly obedient, but HE does not expect it in this world. Our role in partaking of our Savior’s compensating power is to do our best while realizing that He is the One who does the perfecting, just as Moroni taught that “by his grace [we] may be perfect in Christ” (Moroni 10:32). (B. J. Allen, The Compensating Power of Christ: How Christ’s Atonement Rights the Wrongs of an Unfair World and Imperfect People [American Fork, Utah: Covenant Communications, Inc., 2024], 145-47)

 

 

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Heber J. Grant on the Importance of the Prophet Joseph Smith (Octoebr 1939)

  

 

A MIGHTY PEOPLE

 

God predicted things through the Prophet Joseph Smith that have been fulfilled. He said that "the Saints should continue to suffer much affliction and would be driven to the Rocky Mountains. Many would apostatize, others would be put to death by our persecutors or lose their lives in consequence of exposure or disease, and some would go to assist in making settlements and building cities and see the Saints become a mighty people in the midst of the Rocky Mountains."

 

Are we a mighty people? We are. 6800 men holding the priesthood were in this building last night. No other people in the world like us; no other people with the power that we have here, because we are following a prophet of the living God, the man whom God chose to organize this Church, and whom he visited and to whom he introduced his beloved Son. I have met hundreds of men who have said, "If it were not for Joseph Smith I could accept your religion." Any man who does not believe in Joseph Smith as a prophet of the true and the living God has no right to be in this Church. That revelation to Joseph Smith is the foundation stone. If Joseph Smith did not have that interview with God and Jesus Christ the whole Mormon fabric is a failure and a fraud. It is not worth anything on earth. But God did come, God did introduce his Son, God did inspire that man to organize the Church of Jesus Christ, and all the opposition of the world is not able to withstand the truth. It is flourishing, it is growing, and it will grow more. (Heber J. Grant, Conference Report [October 1939]: 128)

 

 

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