Saturday, February 25, 2023

The NEW BIRTH: What it IS, and what it is NOT

 

The NEW BIRTH: What it IS and IS NOT

(Pastor Terry L. Reese; Valley GBC of Armagh, PA; 2/24/23)

 


A. What this change is NOT: it is not the work of man!

1. The New Birth is NOT procured by church ordinances. Simon Magus was water-baptized—and unregenerate! (Acts 8:13,20-23).

 

2. A good education is not regeneration. Education may serve to restrain men's lusts—but cannot change their innermost hearts. A wolf in chains is restrained from causing harm—but it is still a wolf!

 

3. Natural progress in outward maturity is not the new birth. As men progress in age and maturity, they often turn from youthful indiscretions and outwardly embrace a more discreet and respectable lifestyle. However, such self-reformation is not redemptive change nor spiritual regeneration!

 

4. Zeal & regularity in religious observance is not the new birth. One may engage in all the outward duties of religion—and yet remain utterly lost & unregenerate (Acts 26:4-5, Matt. 23:15)! 

 

5. The New Birth isn’t simply a “flash-in-the-pan” emotional experiencethat eventually fades into oblivion (Matt 13:20-21, 1John 2:19). Many persons momentarily experience the pangs of a troubled conscience—only to return to their own “vomit” (2 Pet. 2:22): cf., Pharaoh, Esau, Simon Magus, Felix, Judas, etc.

 

B. What this change IS. This change is real & profound—a man is literally transformed by God into a new creature (2 Cor. 5:17)!

 

1. Regeneration results in a change of qualities, or dispositions (Eph. 4:22-24, Gal. 5:17-24, Rom. 6:1-14).

 

2. It is a supernatural change. He who is born again is born of the Spirit (John 3:5). Man cannot effect this change (Jer. 13:23)but the God who raises the spiritually dead can (Ezek. 36:26, John 1:13)!

 

3. It is a change into the Likeness of Christ (2 Cor. 3:18), which is God’s eternal plan for His elect (Rom. 8:29).

 

4. It is an entire & extensive change: the whole man (mind, will, soul, etc.) is regenerated (2 Cor. 5:17:All things become new…").

 

5. It brings a new freedom from sin (John 8:34-36; Rom. 6:16-18)!

 

6. It is irreversible—it is a permanent & lasting change (John 6:37-40, 10:27-30; Philip. 1:6, Rom. 8:29-30).

 

7. The agent of regeneration: the Word of God (1 Pet. 1:23). God appoints means that attend His Divine activity: evangelism (Matt. 28:19-20; Rom. 10:13-15) and prayer (Rom. 10:1; 1Tim. 2:1).

Wednesday, February 22, 2023

The Terror of a King (Dan. 5:5d-7a)

 

v. 5d: “and the king saw the part of the hand that wrote.”

o   Note the emphasis upon the fact that the King himself was an eyewitness—ensuring that the dreadful apparition could not be dismissed by Belshazzar as a false report born out of fancy, or perhaps an alcohol-fueled delusion arising from the bosom of the intoxicated.

 


v. 6a: “Then the king's countenance changed…”

o   The term translated “countenance” literally refers to “brightness,” or bright looks; the color drained from Belshazzar’s face as he beheld the spectral apparition.

 

o   Instantly, the King has returned to sobriety and his grand theatrical display of bravado has vanished!

 

“Behold, Reader! on what a slender thread the happiness of man hangs, when in a moment the appearance on a wall can snap it asunder!”Robert Hawker, Poor Man’s Commentary

 

v. 6b: “and his thoughts alarmed him…”

o   Precisely WHY his mind was troubled and filled with terror by the awful apparition is not directly specified—yet we may conjecture the following…

 

·         In general, we may observe that men are terrified by an encounter with the transcendent—what Rudolf Otto (The Idea of the Holy, 1917) has described as the numinous—referring to an awe-inspiring and fear-inducing encounter with the Holy (cf., Ex. 34:30). The Holy is that which is wholly other and above, and which lies outside the normal experience of man. Biblically, the term Holy primarily refers to that which is transcendent; the popular idea of holiness as a moral purity is a secondary idea that is contained within the first. Note how sinful men reacted to an encounter with a Holy God in the Person of Christ:

Luke 5:8: And seeing [the miracle of the great catch], Simon Peter fell at the knees of Jesus, saying, Depart from me, for I am a sinful man, Lord.

Luke 8:37: And all the multitude of the neighborhood of the Gadarenes were seized with a great fear [with reference to the healing of the demoniac]. And they asked Him to depart from them. And entering into the boat, He returned.

 

·         In this specific case, Belshazzar was doubtless aware that the dreadful apparition was connected to his acts of blasphemy against the God of Israel (vv. 2-4)—the very same God that his grandfather Nebuchadnezzar had also offended (4:28-33), resulting in catastrophic judgment—of which Belshazzar was fully aware (vv. 18-22)! The dormant conscience was at last awakened!


v. 6c: “…so that the joints of his loins were loosed…” [KJV]

o   Loins is commonly understood to refer to that area engirdled by the belt—an area serving as the seat of a man’s strength; Belshazzar’s strength thus departed.

 

o   Belshazzar loses control of his lower extremities and is apparently either unable, or barely able, to stand.

 

o   Some commentators have also apprehended within this statement the suggestion that Belshazzar may also have lost control of his bladder, or perhaps his bowels—and thus became incontinent!

 

o   Isaiah 45:1 may contain a reference to this event in speaking of the triumphs of the Persian conqueror Cyrus the Great, who would strip rival kings—including Belshazzar—of their dignity, power, and sovereignty.

 

“Thus says the LORD to Cyrus His anointed, whom I have taken by the right hand, to subdue nations before him and to loose the loins of kings…”

 

v. 6d: “…and his knees knocked against each other.”

o   A further expression of the king’s overwhelming fear. The great Assyrian city of Nineveh had experienced a similar terror in the day of its downfall:

 

Nahum 2:11: She is emptied! Yes, she is desolate and waste! Hearts are melting and knees knocking! Also anguish is in the whole body and all their faces are grown pale!

 

o   How quickly passes the mirthful delight of the wicked! Solomon compares their moment of glee to a fire fueled by thorns: pointlessly, it crackles merrily with a great noise and a grand show of flame—but only for a brief moment, rapidly burning itself out and accomplishing nothing!

 

Eccl. 7:6: For as the crackling of thorns under a pot, so is the laughter of the fools; this also is vanity.

 

o   Henry Cowles, in his old commentary on Daniel (1867), paints a vivid picture of this scene, reminding us that the terror experienced by Belshazzar will ultimately be visited upon all sinners:

 

It is an appalling scene when a sinning mortal knows that the Great God has come to meet him in the very midst of his sins! Belshazzar might well stand aghast to find him- self thus confronted face to face with the dread Jehovah whom he is purposely insulting! He has a sense of a present Power, more than human, in that strange hand, writing unknown words on his palace-wall, and a guilty conscience helps him to forecast some fearful doom! The brightness of his countenance is gone (so the original imports); his mind is fearfully agitated; his knees smite against each other. How changed the scene from the glee of his blasphemous revelry to this paleness of cheek, convulsion of frame, remorse of conscience, and dread foreboding of doom! Many a sinner has had a like experience, and other thousands must have it!

 

Heb 10:31: It is a fearful thing to fall into the hands of the living God.

 

o   The guilt-induced terror generated by the awful specter causes the king to lose composure before the eyes of his shocked courtiers in much the same manner as Shakespeare’s Macbeth, upon encountering Banquo’s ghost (Act 3, Scene 4).

v. 7a: “The king cried aloud…

o   A further indication of the king’s lack of composure is revealed as he disregards appearances and desperately cries for his appointed “experts” in matters pertaining to the supernatural.  

 

v. 7b: “…to bring in the astrologers, the Chaldeans, and the soothsayers…”

 

o   The list of enumerated classes indicates that the entire college of such “experts” were subject to the royal summons, as in 2:2 & 4:4 5:11—though reference to the “magicians” (Heb., charṭôm) is absent. Some have seen some significance in this—arguing that Belshazzar was deliberately avoiding contact with Daniel, who was referred to as their president in 4:9. As Keil & Delitzsch argue, however, this suggestion is most improbable, in that v. 8 indicates that all classes of wise men were summoned upon this grave occasion (“all the king's wise men came in”).

 

o   Furthermore, by this time, the octogenarian Daniel appears to have been placed “on the shelf” by the regime, no longer actively functioning at court as the chief administrator over the company of magi (cf., vv. 11-16). It should be remembered that there had been several regime-changes subsequent to the death of Daniel’s great royal patron, King Nebuchadnezzar.

 

o   These “experts,” with remarkable consistency, had long-proven unsuccessful at such interpretive efforts in the past (Dan. 2:10-11, 4:7)—yet the king impulsively and intuitively turns to them as a source of divine wisdom. Sadly, the ungodly have a persistent pattern of preferring the smooth counsel and worldly wisdom of spiritual humbugs and imposters over the genuine knowledge and revelation that is provided by authentic and accredited messengers of God (1 Kings 22:5-8).

 

2 Tim. 4:3-4: For the time is coming when people will not endure sound teaching, but having itching ears they will accumulate for themselves teachers to suit their own passions, and will turn away from listening to the truth and wander off into myths.

 

As with the prior courtly narratives of chapters 2 and 4, it will once again be demonstrated through the failure of the wise men that the world by its wisdom did not know God…(1 Cor. 1:21).

 

o   How is it, we may ask, that the king did not initially choose to reactivate the forgotten Daniel, in light of Belshazzar’s personal knowledge of the events of chapter 4 (Dan. 5:22)? Note Calvin’s comments on this passage, underlining the doctrine of the entire (or total) depravity of natural man:

 

“When God sets before him the sign of his judgment, he calls together the magi and the Chaldeans, and passes by Daniel. And what possible excuse can he have for this? We have seen, as I have said, how very prone men are to be deluded by Satan’s impostures, and the well-known proverb becomes true—The world loves to be deceived!”

 “…We see, then, how blind King Belshazzar was, since he closed his eyes to the light offered him. So in the present day almost all the world continues in blindness; it is not allowed to wander in darkness, but when light shines upon it, it closes its eyes, rejects God’s grace, and purposely desires to cast itself headlong. This conduct is far too common.” (John Calvin, Commentary on Daniel)

The wicked, in the end, are “hostile” both to the Father (Rom. 8:7) and His Anointed One (Ps. 2:2)—who is the Truth Personified (John 14:6)—and thus despise His truth and prefer the darkness (John 3:19-20; 7:7, 8:40, 45; 2 Thess. 2:10-12).

 

John 3:19-20:  And this is the judgment: the light has come into the world, and people loved the darkness rather than the light because their works were evil.  For everyone who does wicked things hates the light and does not come to the light, lest his works should be exposed.

 

v. 7c: “‘Any man who can read this inscription and explain its interpretation…’”

o   The fact that the court’s wise men were both unable (due to their spiritual deficiencies) and unwilling to venture an interpretation (probably sensing the ominous, as in 4:7) is no great puzzle. Less clear is their apparent inability to even be able to read the text of the mysterious message. Various suggestions have been proposed as to why the message and its interpretation were indiscernible to both the king and his college of wise men (v. 8), including the following:

 

o   …While the language was Aramaic, the particular characters employed were the older, pre-Exilic form of Hebrew script (i.e., paleo-Hebrew), as opposed to today’s familiar Aramaic (“Assyrian”) square script, or block-lettering;

 


o   …The simple words themselves—common Aramaic ones—were not undiscernible—only their meaningful interpretation. Thus, the thought here would be that the wise men could not read understandingly (but note the seemingly clear and contrary testimony of v. 8, if taken at face value);

 

o   …The absence of later Masoretic vowel points and accents served to obscure the legibility of the message, which was written purely in consonant-form (“How are you this afternoon?” = “HW R Y THS FTRNN”—or perhaps even “HWRYTHSFTRNN”);

 

o   …The script was laid-out in some sort of unusual or unconventional form, order, or pattern, which contributed to its illegibility, and consequently, to the interpretive difficulty.

 

o   Ultimately, the validity of any of the above proposed solutions resists positive confirmation and absolute certainty, and should thus not serve to obscure the central point that Daniel alone—God’s accredited messenger (Dan. 2:47; 4:9, 18)—was able to understand and interpret the message due to Sovereign Divine intervention and influence.

 

Monday, February 6, 2023

The Doctrine of Total Depravity

 

The Doctrine of Total (or Pervasive) Depravity & Inability

by Pastor Terry Reese, Valley GBC of Armagh, PA; 2/5/23

 

The teaching of the 16th century Reformers concerning the Total Depravity of Man has long been distorted, reviled, and ridiculed by humanistic and worldly thinkers as something that reflects a gloomy and misanthropic contempt for the Human Race, representing an unacceptable brand of pessimism with regard to the matter of human potential for self-reformation.  Indeed, even within the ranks of today’s popular brand of Evangelicalism, the doctrine represents a difficulty for some professing believers.

 

Despite all of this, however, TRUTH is neither a matter of personal sentiment, nor a matter of popular acclamation. Rather, Doctrinal Truth is something that is determined by its conformity to our sole Authoritative Rule of Faith—the Holy Scriptures. Despite popular disapproval, Total Depravity must be deemed not only one of the clearest teachings of the Bible, but also as a core-essential of the Faith. Without a true sense of this doctrine, not only will one’s entire



concept of Man be distorted, (leading to wide misconceptions and practical consequences with regard to every aspect of human activity—i.e., our domestic, social, scientific, economic, and political lives, etc.), but its denial will also deform our true and deeper understanding of such matters as God & His providence, sin & salvation, grace & justice, and Divine sovereign election and predestination. Indeed, the entirely gracious nature of our salvation is bound in this matter (Eph. 2:1-10).

 

What we DO NOT mean in using this terminology! Total depravity (sometimes called Pervasive Depravity or Total Inability) is not to be regarded identified with the concept of utter depravity. The Doctrine does not, for example, maintain the position that fallen Natural Man is absolutely incapable of doing any form of good whatsoever. Nor does it affirm that fallen humanity is utterly destitute of conscience or of some degree of moral sense. Nor does the Doctrine attempt to maintain that unsaved and unregenerate Men are as utterly wicked as they possibly could be (which, again, would be utter depravity, versus total depravity), or that all men are equally deficient in all areas with regard to their personal failings. 

 

WHAT DO we mean, then, in employing this term “Total Depravity?” That great Genevan, the Reformer John Calvin, who perhaps possessed the single greatest theological mind amongst the Reformers, once spoke of the Doctrine in this manner:

“All men are conceived in sin, and born the children of wrath, indisposed to all saving good, propense to evil, dead in sin, and the slaves of sin; and without the regenerating grace of the Holy Spirit, they neither are willing nor able to return to God, to correct their depraved nature, or to dispose themselves to the correction of it.”

 

The concept of Total Depravity thus speaks on several different levels pertaining to the corruption of man’s moral and spiritual nature as a result of Original Sin.

 

Firstly, it speaks as to the universality of the corruption of the Human Race; All of Mankind, as a total unit, is corrupted.

 

Gen. 6:5: “Then the LORD saw that the wickedness of man was great on the earth, and that every intent of the thoughts of his heart was only evil continually.”

 

Secondly, it speaks as to the comprehensiveness of our individual corruption. No part of the individual man has been left untainted; all of man’s faculties and all aspects of his nature—indeed, his total Being—has been corrupted and affected. This extensive depravity has permeated every aspect of man’s nature—physical, spiritual, mental, and emotional; his heart, mind, and conscience are tainted and perverted.

 

Jer. 17:9: "The heart is more deceitful than all else And is desperately sick; Who can understand it?”

 

Because no part of our nature has been left untouched by sin, no action of ours can thus be deemed wholly good in God’s sight.

 

Isa. 64:6: “For all of us have become like one who is unclean, And all our righteous deeds are like a filthy garment; And all of us wither like a leaf, And our iniquities, like the wind, take us away.”

 

As Arthur C. Custance has observed the following:

“In so far as motive determines the moral character and spiritual significance of an act, every deed has something of sinfulness about it because man's will is fatally corrupted by his fallen nature. Not all motives are equally sinful, but no motive is wholly pure. Hence, from a moral and spiritual point of view, human activity is always poisoned as to its motive, to a greater or lesser extent. This fundamental impurity of motive is the reason for saying that man is totally depraved.”

 

Thirdly: the concept of Total Depravity thus also embraces the concept of total inability: Man can do nothing in-and-of himself to achieve or initiate his personal salvation. There is absolutely nothing within man that gives him any sort of salvific merit, and furthermore, Natural Man is also utterly blind and spiritually dead (as opposed to merely spiritually sick). If a man is to be saved, God must condescendingly reach down and rescue him by initiating the process through a special work of Divine Grace, thereby regenerating the man’s heart and effectually drawing him into a saving knowledge of Jesus Christ.

 

1 Cor. 2:14: “But a natural man does not accept the things of the Spirit of God, for they are foolishness to him; and he cannot understand them, because they are spiritually appraised.”

 

Eph 2:4-5: “But God, being rich in mercy, because of His great love with which He loved us, even when we were dead in our transgressions, made us alive together with Christ (by grace you have been saved)…”

 

John 15:5 "I am the vine, you are the branches; he who abides in Me and I in him, he bears much fruit, for apart from Me you can do nothing.”

 

Because Total Depravity is true, it follows as night follows the day that the Doctrines of Unconditional Election and Irresistible (or Efficacious) Grace are also true. Unconditional Election refers to the fact that God has unconditionally chosen a portion of the Human Race unto personal salvation in accordance with His own Sovereign plan to bring eternal glory unto Himself, and not according to any foreseen faith, merit, or ability within the Man.

 

Rom 9:16: “So then it does not depend on the man who wills or the man who runs, but on God who has mercy.”

 

Rom. 8:29-30: For those whom He foreknew, He also predestined to become conformed to the image of His Son, so that He would be the firstborn among many brethren; and these whom He predestined, He also called; and these whom He called, He also justified; and these whom He justified, He also glorified.

 

Since Natural Man is spiritually dead in his sins, God must both initiate process and effectually draw the man to salvation. Note the declaration of Christ:

 

John 6:37 "All that the Father gives Me will come to Me, and the one who comes to Me I will certainly not cast out.”

 

John 6:44 "No one can come to Me unless the Father who sent Me draws him; and I will raise him up on the last day.”

 

Thus, the principle of GRACE is completely realized in the matter of our salvation. There is nothing in which we can boast—even in our faith!

 

Eph. 2:8-9: “For by grace you have been saved through faith; and that not of yourselves, it is the gift of God; not as a result of works, so that no one may boast.”