Monday, May 19, 2008

Finally: "We Get It"



In the past few weeks we have been subjected to a
massive barrage of publicity about the 20 pages and
several thousand words which make up a document
titled "An Evangelical Manifesto." It is essentially
the production of social critic Os Guinness, working
with a "Steering Committee" of nominal Evangelical
individuals, and guided in its promotional aspects
by a professional publicity agent. It is a lengthy
dissertation on Mr. Guinness’ opinion of what it
means to be an Evangelical.

The web site lists a lot of signers . . . some totally
invalid (example: the name of the late Jerry Falwell
was added). In another case the name of the president
of a major theological seminary was listed without
his permission. In short, it isn’t the significant
document it was purported to be.

But now Evangelicals – real Evangelicals – have a
new document to sign. It is called the "We Get It"
Declaration, developed by the Cornwall Alliance for
the Stewardship of Creation, and is a Biblical-based
approach to the theory of Global Warming. It is a
brief document, less than one page in length, and
utilizes just over 150 words. Strong, conservative
Evangelical scholars are among the supporters of
the declaration.

This approach to the rush to acceptance of Al Gore’s
Global Warming theory is welcome and important.
We have experienced in recent days an attempt by
the Religious Left to redefine "Evangelicalism" by
moving it away from its main emphasis on the
power of the Gospel to change lives, and "broaden
its agenda" to include poverty, HIV/AIDS, and the
environment. The ability of the Church of Jesus Christ
to bring about social and cultural change and bring
relief to the poor and suffering is based entirely on the
message of the Gospel. Conservative Evangelicals have
always had a strong commitment to all of those issues
as part of the total Gospel message.

The "We Get It" Declaration may be summarized in
these main points: "God said it ...We get it ...They
need it ...Let’s do it." To read the entire Declaration,
and to add your name as a signer, go to:
More about the author

The Evangelical Viewpoint is pleased to present this
new series of essays by Dr. Jerry Beavan, in which he
offers mature discussions of important elements of
the Christian faith, with the goal of helping Christian
believers to live the Christian life more effectively.
At age 89, he already has a lifetime of experiences in
Christian ministry, as a graduate theologian, as a
professor in college and seminary, and as a world
traveler involved in government relations at high
levels, here in America and around the world. The
late Dr. Jerry Falwell referred to him as "one of
God's giants and modern patriarchs." Dr. Billy
Graham said of him, "Jerry Beavan is the architect
of world evangelism as we know it today." Now
living in "active retirement" on America's Pacific
coast, although physically impaired, he is using his
writing skills, via the internet, to help other believers
gain a better understanding of their Christian faith.
He is the author of several works, including his recent
volume, ""A Handbook of Applied Christianity."

Sunday, May 11, 2008

WHO NEEDS ANOTHER "MANIFESTO?"



Some few "Blogs" ago (March 3, 2008), we touched
on the problem of multi-syllablization of the Gospel
which confronts the Christian cause. Cited were these
examples of present-day verbiage often being used in
religious writings: "westernization ...worldview ...
contextualization ... missiological ... Eurocentric ...
Easternize ... Africanize ... sacredness ... universality
... enculturation ... de-westernization... globalization
... venturesomeness ... self-theologizing. And those
are just a few.

The fact is that the Gospel message can still be stated
in simple, easy-to-understand words of just one or two
syllables. There is no need for complex words to define
or explain God’s gift of salvation through faith in Jesus
Christ, or His Great Commission to share that Gospel
message with the whole world.

Nor do we need another "Manifesto" – defined simply
as "a public declaration of policy."

There have been so many such public declarations of
policy through the years. To recall a few, there was
"The Communist Manifesto" by Karl Marx in 1848;
"The 1890 Manifesto" issued by the President of the
Mormon Church to end pluralistic marriages; "A
Christian Manifesto" by Methodist theologian Edwin
Lewis in 1934; "A Christian Manifesto" by Francis
Schaeffer of l’Abri fame in 1981: "The Unabombers
Mainfesto" by Unabomber Theodore Kazynscki in
1995, and the Manifesto of Presidential Wannabe Ron
Paul, "The Revolution," in 2008.

Now a group of Christians of varying persuasions
have produced another such document, titled "An
Evangelical Manifesto." The 20 page document
was released last week at a press conference in
Washington, DC, managed by one of the "Steering
Committee" members, Larry Ross, who has been
serving as the professional publicity agent for Billy
Graham and Rick Warren. Although denied being a
political document, it deals quite extensively with the
right of Christians to become involved in politics,
and its timed release in the nation’s capitol in the
midst of the most intense national partisan political
struggle in years, makes that denial a bit suspect.

The text had as its principal drafter Os Guinness, best
known as a social critic rather than a theologian, but
included in the Steering Committee are some nominal
Evangelical figures: Timothy George of Beeson
Divinity School, Rich Mouw of Fuller Theological
Seminary and David Neff of Christianity Today; all
of them not only signers of this "Manifesto," but also
signers of the Yale University Divinity School’s vague
response to the Islamist scholars’ letter seeking
cooperation between the Christian faith and Islam.

This "Manifesto" uses 20 pages and several thousand
words to define what "Evangelical" is and what it is
not. One of the first evaluations of it from Warren
Smith, writing in One News Now, included these
words, "It contains, like other documents of this kind,
both virtues and flaws. It’s better than most; worse
than some." Mr. Guinness claimed that it took three
years to draft the document. From his viewpoint it
gave him time to include a major premise from his
recent book, "The Case for Civility," and its convoluted
argument for a "civil public square" versus a "naked"
public square on one side, and a "sacred" public square
on the other side.

The process of obtaining signatures to the document
has begun, and will doubtless continue – to what end
or for what purpose, no one can be absolutely certain.

The need for an accurate appreciation of the true
Evangelical position – Evangelicalism – has been with
us since the late Carl Henry’s definitive work, "The
Uneasy Conscience of Modern Fundamentalism" was
published in 1947. The term "Evangelical" has been
both abused and misused in the intervening years.
It is doubtful that social critic Os Guinness’ 20 page
"Manifesto" with or without a long list of signatories
will accomplish anything to correct this problem.

The true Evangelicals, born-again Christians who have
accepted Jesus’ Great Commission to go, preach and
teach, do not need a further explanation of what He
meant. They will simply continue the ministry in which
the Church of Jesus Christ has been engaged since He
announced its formation in the first century, as it is
recorded in Matthew 16:18.


More about the author

The Evangelical Viewpoint is pleased to present this
new series of essays by Dr. Jerry Beavan, in which he
offers mature discussions of important elements of
the Christian faith, with the goal of helping Christian
believers to live the Christian life more effectively.
At age 89, he already has a lifetime of experiences
in Christian ministry, as a graduate theologian, as
a professor in college and seminary, and as a world
traveler involved in government relations at high
levels, here in America and around the world. The
late Dr. Jerry Falwell referred to him as "one of
God's giants and modern patriarchs." Dr. Billy
Graham said of him, "Jerry Beavan is the architect
of world evangelism as we know it today." Now
living in "active retirement" on America's Pacific
coast, although physically impaired, he is using his
writing skills, via the internet, to help other believers
gain a better understanding of their Christian faith.
He is the author of several works, including his recent
volume, ""A Handbook of Applied Christianity."


Wednesday, April 16, 2008

Is Our God a "Risk Taking God?"



The recent ranting of the Rev. Jeremiah Wright,
for 20 years Barack Obama’s pastor, suddenly thrust
their church – Trinity United Church of Christ, a UCC
affiliate -- into the national news. Out of his lengthy
rants the "punch line," so to speak, was Mr. Wright’s
directing his congregation not to say "God Bless
America," but rather "God Damn America."

Feeling it necessary to respond, the UCC went
to the extreme measure of buying a full page ad in –
where else? – the New York Times. They tried to assert
their legitimacy as one of America’s "Main Line" church
denominations, although one of the smallest at just 1.2
million members. UCC was formed in 1957 as the result
of a merger between the Congregational Christian
Church and the Evangelical Reformed Church.

The text of the ad tries to emphasize their history,
tracing their roots to the early American colonists. Among
the "firsts" they brag about are the first foreign missionary
efforts, but that claim is a bit ambiguous since the first
foreign missionary work by American churches was carried
on by the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign
Missions. That organization grew out of the famous
"Haystack Prayer Meeting" by students at Williams College
in 1806. Historians refer to the ABCFM as being
"Congregationalist oriented," but the group’s mission
work involved several denominations, beginning with
thefirst missionaries sent overseas in 1812.

Among other "firsts" which they claim are the
first ordained Afro-American pastor, the first ordained
woman pastor, and the first ordained openly-gay pastor.
It is certainly true that among the Founding Fathers there
were several Congregationalists, but it is a bit of a stretch
to equate the extremely liberal views of the UCC of today
with the doctrinal beliefs of those early Americans.

The closing lines of the ad are worth considering:
"Ours is a risk-taking church, because ours is a risk-
taking God." And then the final words are their current
slogan, "God is still speaking."

"A risk-taking church ... a risk-taking God."

Clever words, perhaps originated by some advertising
agency, but certainly by someone out of touch with the
theological facts concerning our God. "Risk" is defined
in our dictionaries as "the possibility of suffering harm
or loss involving uncertain danger." How - by what
stretch of the mind – can such a concept be attributed
to our God who is omnipotent (all-powerful), and
omniscient (all-wise, all-knowing)? Or to His Church,
the Body and Bride of Christ, the second person of the
Godhead? An all-powerful and all-knowing God cannot
be subject to any risk, nor could He subject His Church
to any risk. The words "risk-taking" cannot in any way
be applied to God or to His Church.

And as for the other clever, advertising agency
phrase, "God is still speaking," yes, of course,
Hespeaks to His own in prayer, and through the
leading of His Holy Spirit, but a deeper meaning of
God’s current speaking is set forth in Hebrews 1:1-2
(NIV), "In the past God spoke to our forefathers
through the prophets at many times and in various
ways, but in these last days He has spoken to us by
His Son, whom He appointed heir of all things, and
through whom He made the universe."

It is spiritually obscene when a misguided man,
embittered by his personal perception of racism in this
country, can command so much attention by the news
media to vent his hatred of this nation. . . and when the
religious denomination which he represents unwittingly
admits to having drifted so far from the doctrinal beliefs
held by those whom they claim to be their historical
antecedents in our nation’s earliest days. Those Founding
Fathers, in their written and spoken expressions of their
faith, made it clear that they were establishing this new
nation on historic Judeo-Christian principles. Those
principles have never changed, but America’s reliance
upon them and adherence to them has deteriorated in
the futile pursuit of "progress" and "diversity."

A far more accurate description of our God than
the UCC’s "risk-taking God" are the words of one of
today’s popular worship hymns, "Our God is an awesome
God, He reigns from heaven above, with wisdom, power
and love, our God is an awesome God." (Lyrics: Michael
W. Smith)


More about the author

The Evangelical Viewpoint is pleased to present this
new series of essays by Dr. Jerry Beavan, in which he
offers mature discussions of important elements of
the Christian faith, with the goal of helping Christian
believers to live the Christian life more effectively.
At age 89, he already has a lifetime of experiences in
Christian ministry, as a graduate theologian, as a
professor in college and seminary, and as a world
traveler involved in government relations at high
levels, here in America and around the world. The
late Dr. Jerry Falwell referred to him as "one of
God's giants and modern patriarchs." Dr. Billy
Graham said of him, "Jerry Beavan is the architect
of world evangelism as we know it today." Now
living in "active retirement" on America's Pacific
coast, although physically impaired, he is using his
writing skills, via the internet, to help other believers
gain a better understanding of their Christian faith.
He is the author of several works, including his recent
volume, ""A Handbook of Applied Christianity."

Thursday, March 27, 2008

Is there such a thing as a "Noble War?"


On the five year anniversary (if it may be called that)
of the war in Iraq, President Bush commented on two
significant events – first, the fact that the war in Iraq
had reached the five year point, and second, the fact
that the number of US military deaths had reached
4,000.


In his remarks recognizing those two events, the
president called the war in Iraq, "noble, necessary,
just." He has so often been forced to the defensive
mode by public opinion, domestic and international,
that two benchmarks of this nature, occurring at the
same time, might well have been expected to produce
a strong defensive statement. And that was about as
strong as any such statement could be.

"Just." Possibly. If the only alternative were to allow
Saddam Hussein to remain in despotic power, holding
the people of Iraq in abject subservience, then it was
probably a just war. Saddam Hussein is gone. He has
been captured by American forces, tried and executed
under Iraqi law. But it can be argued that the war goes
on, even after its just cause has been resolved.

"Necessary." Again, possibly so. Iraq, through the
intransigence of Saddam Hussein, had ignored and for
an extended period of time had refused to comply with
the several resolutions of the United Nations. There is
some grounds for the decision that war was the only
way to bring him, and Iraq, into conformity with what
we consider to be the "civilized world."

"Noble." Ah, there’s the major difficulty. How does
"war" – any war – become "noble?" Once war consisted
of two opposing forces fighting to the death with
stones and clubs. Then with spears and arrows. Then
with guns and cannons. Now with air craft equipped
with guided missiles, poison gas and nuclear bombs.
The same "bottom line" applies through the ages –
war is "to the death."

How can it be noble to commit to death the lives of
any nation’s young men – and women? Not often can
the term "noble" be applied to war. In recent years the
genocide in Rwanda comes to mind. 500,000 human
beings slaughtered, while the United Nations and the
rest of the "civilized world" stood by and did nothing.

Four years after that genocide, Bill Clinton, as the
Commander in Chief of the US Armed Forces, issued
what has been called the "Clinton apology" and
acknowledged his failure to deal with the situation in
Rwanda. There was not then, and has never been, a
formal apology for the inaction of the United Nations,
the United States and the rest of the world community.
That might well have been a "noble" war, if it had ever
occurred.

Or the current situation in Darfur in the Sudan, where
in the past few years similar genocide has killed an
estimated 400,000 Sudanese, with 2.5 million suffering
forced displacement. Again, the "civilized world" has
completely failed, and the slaughter continues. Who
will make the acknowledgment of failure, or perhaps
apologize on behalf of the United Nations, or even the
United States? That, too, might have been considered a
"noble" war, had it ever occurred.

There is a deplorable tendency to treat the reports of
military fatalities almost as numbers on the score board
of an athletic contest. But those numbers do exist. They
are real. In Iraq, in 5 years, there have been 4,000 US
military fatalities. How would today’s anti-war protesters
carrying their placards in the streets and spraying fake
blood on their faces, or camping in protest near President
Bush’s home, have coped with what we older Americans
remember of the 300,000 US military deaths in the 4
years of World War II, or the 35,000 US military deaths
in the 3 years of the Korean conflict, or the 50,000 US
military deaths in the 9 years of the Viet Nam war?

Giving one’s life in defense of one’s country is a noble
act, and each US military death should be so respected.
Whether or not a war which resulted in those deaths was
"noble" is something for historians to decide.

As Christians, our source of authority and guidance, the
Bible, is not bereft of mention of warfare – spiritual and
military. In the synoptic gospels – Matthew, Mark and
Luke – Jesus speaks of warfare (military, not spiritual)
prior to the time of His return. "When you hear of wars
and rumors of wars, do not be alarmed ... nation will
rise against nation, and kingdom against kingdom ..."
(Mark 13: 7,8 NIV) And Jesus spoke of military war in
defining the responsibility of being His disciples, "Or
suppose a king is about to go to war against another
king. Will he not first sit down and consider whether
he is able with ten thousand men to oppose the one
coming against him with twenty thousand?" And Jesus
even explained diplomacy as a possible solution, "If he
is not able, he will send a delegation while the other is
still a long way off and will ask for terms of peace."
(Luke 14, 31-32 NIV)

But Paul took the concept of military war into the realm
of spiritual conflict, "For though we live in the world,
we do not wage war as the world does. The weapons we
fight with are not the weapons of the world. On the
contrary, they have divine power to demolish strongholds.
We demolish arguments and every pretension that sets
itself up against the knowledge of God..." (II Cor. 10: 3-5
NIV) And in his letter to Timothy, he advised the younger
man, "Fight the good fight of the faith. Take hold of the
eternal life to which you were called ..." (I Tim. 6: 12 NIV)

For those of us who can only observe from a distance
the conflicts between nations or ideologies, our recourse
must be to pray for Almighty God to guide the decisions
of those in temporal power with respect to the nobility,
necessity and justice of any future military conflict, any
future war.

More about the author

The Evangelical Viewpoint is pleased to present this
new series of essays by Dr. Jerry Beavan, in which he
offers mature discussions of important elements of
the Christian faith, with the goal of helping Christian
believers to live the Christian life more effectively.
At age 89, he already has a lifetime of experiences in
Christian ministry, as a graduate theologian, as a
professor in college and seminary, and as a world
traveler involved in government relations at high
levels, here in America and around the world. The
late Dr. Jerry Falwell referred to him as "one of
God's giants and modern patriarchs." Dr. Billy
Graham said of him, "Jerry Beavan is the architect
of world evangelism as we know it today." Now
living in "active retirement" on America's Pacific
coast, although physically impaired, he is using his
writing skills, via the internet, to help other believers
gain a better understanding of their Christian faith.
He is the author of several works, including his recent
volume, ""A Handbook of Applied Christianity."

Thursday, March 13, 2008

What Was He Thinking Of?



"That was the first question that came to mind
when the story of New York Governor Eliot Spitzer's
involvement with a prostitution ring was reported
in the media. It is a question that arises when other
very fortunate people risk everything for some trivial
satisfaction." That was the comment by Thomas
Sowell, Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution at
Stanford University in California.


It is the question we might ask concerning New Jersey
Governor James McGreevy who sacrificed his political
career for a homosexual fling, or Senator Larry Craig,
who lost his governmental career for an indiscretion
in a public men’s room . . . and the list goes on . . . all
the way to United States President Bill Clinton with
respect to his relations with a young female employee.


Or from the Christian aspect of life, it is the question
we might ask of Ted Haggard, president of the National
Association of Evangelicals, or James Bakker, of PTL
fame, or Jimmy Swaggart who wept copiously over the
loss of his TV evangelism career. Or of scores of priests
of the Roman Catholic church who abandoned their
vows of service to God to indulge in sexual misconduct
with young children.


There is so much to say . . . there is so much which has
already been said. One comes to the general conclusion
that when caught and exposed, the expressions of
regret are perhaps as much for getting caught as for the
action itself. Essentially what they have demonstrated
with respect to their faith, their beliefs, or their promises
to their fellow-men is cynicism and hypocrisy. Neither
has any part in the Christian life.


Many of the news commentators -- the famous "talking
heads" of TV -- are arguing that Mr. Spitzer should not
be severely punished . . . that he has already given up being
the Governor of New York State . . . and their premise is
that adultery is not a federal offense. This fact may not
mean much to them, but while adultery may not be a
federal offense, it is most certainly a God offense. And
that is an offense before a more exacting court than any
federal court, including the U.S. Supreme Court.


For all such situations, political or religious or business
or sports or just ordinary life practices, the Word of
God is clear, definite and unambiguous. "You shalt not
commit adultery." (Exodus 20:14) But there are other
expressions of guidance in His Word, "Trust in the
Lord with all your heart and lean not on your own
understanding; in all your ways acknowledge Him
and He will make your paths straight." (Proverbs
3: 5,6, NIV) Or the corollary, "Do not put your trust
in princes, in mortal men who cannot save... Blessed
is he whose help is the God of Jacob... the Lord who
remains faithful forever." (Psalm 146: 3-6, NIV)





MORE ABOUT THE AUTHOR


The Evangelical Viewpoint is pleased to present this
new series of essays by Dr. Jerry Beavan, in which
he offers mature discussions of important elements
of the Christian faith, with the goal of helping other
Christian believers to live the Christian life more
effectively. At age 89, he already has a lifetime of
experiences in Christian ministry, as a graduate
theologian, as a professor in college and seminary,
and as a world traveler involved in government
relations at high levels, here in America and around
the world. The late Dr. Jerry Falwell referred to him
as "one of God's giants and modern patriarchs." Dr.
Billy Graham said of him, "Jerry Beavan is the
architect of world evangelism as we know it today."
Now living in "active retirement" on America's Pacific
coast, although physically impaired, he is using his
writing skills, via the internet, to help other believers
gain a better understanding of their Christian faith.
He is the author of several works, including his recent
volume, ""A Handbook of Applied Christianity."


Monday, March 3, 2008

Multi-syllablization Of The Gospel



The Gospel which Jesus told us to go into
all the world and preach to everyone is –
as defined in the Scriptures – a very simple
concept. Just two familiar verses present it
in its totality. "For God so loved the world,
that He gave His only begotten Son, that
whosoever believeth in Him should not
perish, but have everlasting life." (John 3:16)
In reply to the question, "What must I do to
be saved?" Paul and Silas said, "Believe on
the Lord Jesus Christ, and thou shalt be
saved." (Acts 16:31)

A total of just 35 words, only 7 of which (9 if
you include loved and saved) are composed
of more than one syllable.

And yet today’s popular Christian speakers
and neo-theologians have developed a new
vocabulary which they utilize to confuse the
unwary into believing that in today’s world
the Gospel is a complicated concept.

This week a regular monthly Internet news
bulletin for a Christian evangelism project
used words which remind one of the "Newspeak"
language of George Orwell’s novel "1984." Here
are just a few of the words they used to describe
the task of proclaiming the Gospel today:

westernization ... contextualization ... worldview
... missiological ... easternize ... Africanize ...
sacredness ... de-westernization ... Eurocentric ...
venturesomeness ... universality ...missiologist ...
globalization ... enculturation ...self-theologizing.
But that is enough to convey the idea.

Here is one direct quote from their presentation
which illustrates their viewpoint: "The Christian
faith must be rethought, reformulated and lived
anew in each human culture."

It is strange how sincere, well-meaning Christian
believers can go so far afield from Jesus’ Great
Commission, where He said simply: "Go ye into all
the world, and preach the Gospel to every creature."
(Mark 16:15)

It is also strange that an omniscient God did not
have adequate fore-knowledge of any necessity to
use strange sounding, multi-syllabic words to
explain what He meant. Or that Paul, a quite well
educated man, felt that the simple words, "Believe
on the Lord Jesus Christ" were an adequate answer
to the question men would be asking through the
ages to come.

Let’s drop the pseudo-intellectualism, and go back to
the first century basics and preach the Gospel to all
the world, and tell men they must believe to be saved.
It’s just that simple.


More about the author

The Evangelical Viewpoint is pleased to present this
new series of essays by Dr. Jerry Beavan, in which he
offers mature discussions of important elements of
the Christian faith, with the goal of helping Christian
believers to live the Christian life more effectively.
At age 89, he already has a lifetime of experiences in
Christian ministry, as a graduate theologian, as a
professor in college and seminary, and as a world
traveler involved in government relations at high
levels, here in America and around the world. The
late Dr. Jerry Falwell referred to him as "one of
God's giants and modern patriarchs." Dr. Billy
Graham said of him, "Jerry Beavan is the architect
of world evangelism as we know it today." Now
living in "active retirement" on America's Pacific
coast, although physically impaired, he is using his
writing skills, via the internet, to help other believers
gain a better understanding of their Christian faith.
He is the author of several works, including his recent
volume, ""A Handbook of Applied Christianity."


Monday, February 25, 2008

ONE MONTH TO LIVE



If you had
ONE MONTH TO LIVE

Those of us who are involved with computers and the
Internet on a regular basis are very much aware of
the “teaser” ads which appear on our screens several
times each day and we are not often fooled by them.
We are offered phenomenal incomes, great vacations,
incredible discounts on prescription prices, trim and
muscular bodies with substantial weight loss, and
fantastic sexual achievements which make the Islamic
promises to suicide bombers pale by comparison.

But this week there was a different one: “What would
you do if you had only one month to live?”

That sounds like a situation in which any Christian
believer would be interested. It was surely worth opening
for careful consideration. And it proved to be an ad for
a new book with that title, “One Month to Live.” It isn’t
an expensive book -- the list of book sellers referenced
in the ad show the regular retail price as $19.99, and it
is already being discounted to as low as $13.59. Then
there is a church program to go along with the book, and
it costs $149. No discounts for that program were listed.

The title is -- at first glance -- an intriguing one, and opens
the mind’s door to thinking about such a concept. For the
Bible centered Christian it is a bit off base for at least two
reasons; First, the new life that God gave us in John 3:16
(and elsewhere in the Scriptures) is permanent -- “eternal”
-- and not divided into various periods, such as up to now,
and then in a “one month to live” period.

And Second, the return of Jesus Christ is imminent --
He can return at any moment . . . there is no allowance
for that “one month to live” interval.

How we should live, from the moment of receiving God’s
gift of salvation, is clearly set forth throughout the New
Testament. Peter, upon whose statement of faith Jesus
said He would build His church, instructs us in I Peter 3:15,
“be ready always, to give an answer to every man that
asketh you a reason for the hope that is in you.” We are to
be ready to witness “always” not just in some 30 day period
before our death.

Paul, whose writings define the Christian life so clearly,
wrote in Ephesians 4:1, “I beseech you that ye walk worthy
of the vocation wherewith ye are called,” and then gave
some examples, including lowliness, meekness, long -
suffering, etc. Paul did not limit our Christian walk to
the month prior to our death, but set forth those examples
as the way our entire Christian life should be lived.

And finally, Jesus spoke to His followers in Matthew 28:19
and Mark 16:15, telling us to “go into all the world and
preach . . . go and teach all nations.”
He certainly didn’t
limit His Great Commission to the month before we might
die, but gave it as a permanent instruction for all believers.

How should we live at this moment, and throughout our
life,right up to the moment of His return? In Mark 13: 32,
33,37 Jesus gave us instructions concerning His return:
“of that day and hour, knoweth no man . . . take heed,
watch and pray , for ye know not when the time is . . .
what I say unto you, I say unto all: Watch.”

None of us is ever given the assurance of a month to live,
but each moment should be lived as the Scriptures teach . . .
witnessing and watching . . . preaching and teaching . . .
walkingworthy of our calling before Him.


MORE ABOUT THE AUTHOR

The Evangelical Viewpoint is pleased to present this
new series of essays by Dr. Jerry Beavan, in which he
offers mature discussions of important elements of the
Christian faith, with the goal of helping Christian believers
to live the Christian life more effectively. At age 89, he
already has a lifetime of experiences in Christian ministry,
as a graduate theologian, as a professor in college and
seminary, and as a world traveler involved in government
relations at high levels, here in America and around the
world. The late Dr. Jerry Falwell referred to him as "one
of God's giants and modern patriarchs."
Dr. Billy Graham
said of him, "Jerry Beavan is the architect of world
evangelism as we know it today." Now living in "active
retirement" on America's Pacific coast, although physically
impaired, he is using his writing skills, via the internet, to
help other believers gain a better understanding of their
Christian faith. He is the author of several works, including
his recent volume, “A Handbook of Applied Christianity.”


Friday, February 15, 2008

NO WRITERS’ STRIKE FOR PASTORS



There was great rejoicing, or at least a bit more than
mild rejoicing, this past week when it was announced
that the writers’ strike had been settled and American
show business could get back on its regular schedule.
One of the results of the strike was that the stars of the
late night shows were unable to do their usual 5 or 10
minute opening monologue, and all their one-liners and
conversational bits during their shows were simply not
possible. As a result the nation was entertained by some
re-runs of old shows.

The reason? The writers were on strike and no one was
available to write for the stars those entertaining bits
of conversation which they do so well . . . . and which
for so doing they are paid exorbitant salaries, in the
millions of dollars annually.

But during all this strike period, we have not heard of a
single church which canceled its services because there
was no one to write sermons for the pastor.

Those pastors not only write their own sermons, but they
also keep busy visiting the sick, counseling those in need,
marrying couples starting a new life together, baptizing
newcomers to the Christian faith, and conducting funeral
services for those who have passed away.

And they do all those things at salaries which pale into
insignificance when compared to the amounts those
entertainers receive -- people who couldn’t even perform
without someone to write their material for them.
If you never felt that you had reason to appreciate the life
and ministry of your pastor -- well, you now have a very
graphic reason. Take a moment next Sunday to thank him
for never going on strike, and for being faithful to his calling.

MORE ABOUT THE AUTHOR

The Evangelical Viewpoint is pleased to present this
new series of essays by Dr. Jerry Beavan, in which he
offers mature discussions of important elements of the
Christian faith, with the goal of helping Christian believers
to live the Christian life more effectively. At age 89, he
already has a lifetime of experiences in Christian ministry,
as a graduate theologian, as a professor in college and
seminary, and as a world traveler involved in government
relations at high levels, here in America and around the
world. The late Dr. Jerry Falwell referred to him as "one
of God's giants and modern patriarchs."
Dr. Billy Graham
said of him, "Jerry Beavan is the architect of world
evangelism as we know it today." Now living in "active
retirement" on America's Pacific coast, although physically
impaired, he is using his writing skills, via the internet, to
help other believers gain a better understanding of their
Christian faith. He is the author of several works, including
his recent volume, “A Handbook of Applied Christianity.”



Wednesday, February 6, 2008

ARE THE HISTORICAL CREEDS IMPORTANT



ARE THE HISTORICAL CREEDS IMPORTANT
TO THE CHRISTIAN CHURCH TODAY?



In Matthew 16:13-18 it is recorded that Jesus was
discussing with His disciples the reaction of the
populace to Him and His ministry, and He asked
who the people were saying He was. There were a
variety of answers, and He pressed the point, asking
who did the disciples think He was, and Peter spoke
up, saying “Thou art the Christ, the Son of the living
God.” Peter used the term christos, often translated
as “anointed” or “Messiah.”



In His response, Jesus used a precise choice of words,
and in a voice both tenderly loving and mightily
prophetic, said “thou art Peter (petros) and upon
this rock (petra) I will build my church.” The Greek
word petros means a stone which is easily moved, and
that is the way Peter often acted, while the word petra,
which Jesus used in speaking of Peter’s expression of
faith, means a mass of rock, solid and immoveable.



But beyond the play on words, Peter’s affirmation can
well be considered as the first Christian creed. The
word “creed” does not appear in the Bible, but is
derived from the Latin credere, “to believe” or credo,
“I believe.” Historically, the early Christian creeds were
developed essentially as statements of agreements on
the Trinity and Christology, the study of the person of
Christ. Whereas Peter here called Jesus the “Son of the
living God,” John would later speak of Him as God’s
“only begotten Son.” (John 3:16)



The New Testament provides several examples of
creedal statements of belief: in John 1:49 where
Nathanael confessed to Jesus, “Thou art the Son of
God,” or in Acts 8:37 where the Ethiopian eunuch
confessed to Philip, “I believe that Jesus Christ is the
Son of God.”



Foundational to all of the later creeds was the “Rule
of Faith” from St. Irenaeus of Lyons, who had been a
student of Polycarp, who in turn had been a protégé
of John, the beloved disciple of Jesus. It has a date
of approximately 185 AD, and is amazing in how it
expresses a complete statement of the Christian faith.
Jesus had ministered in the first century, and now
just a century later, Irenaeus, who came to be called
the “father of the church,” sets forth a clear statement
of God‘s plan for His creation, which would become
the foundation for the creeds which centuries later
became enduring definitions of the Christian faith.




Some of those historical creeds are familiar to us
today; in order of their dates of adoption, they are
the Nicene Creed, 4th century; the Athanasian Creed,
5th century, and very likely the best known, the
Apostles Creed, adopted probably in the 6th century.




Perhaps a thousand years later, several more specific
expressions of particular denominational aspects of
the Christian faith were adopted, dating from Martin
Luther’s Catechism and Augsburg Confession about
1530, to the Methodist Articles of Religion in 1800.




Probably the best observation as to the value of the
historic Christian teaching, came from the great
British preacher, evangelist and educator, Charles
Haddon Spurgeon, in a lecture to his students in the
mid 1860’s: “You are not such wiseacres as to think
or say that you can expound the Scripture without
the assistance from the works of divine and learned
men who have labored before you in the field of
exposition … It seems odd that certain men who
talk so much of what the Holy Spirit reveals to
themselves, should think so little of what He has
revealed to others.”




No better summary could be given than this brief
one by J. L. Neve in his volume, Churches and Sects
of Christendom: “Creeds, confessions and covenants
… are the expressions of an experience which the
church of Christ has had in its study of Scripture,

in its search for truth, in its conflict with error.”



To answer the initial question, as to whether the
historical creeds are important to the church today
-- yes, they most certainly are. In a time when the
basics or the fundamentals of the Christian faith
are being abandoned, those creeds, conceived and
adopted in the early centuries of the Christian
church, and thus close to the life and ministry of
Jesus Christ, are important as concise statements
of what actually comprises the Christian faith. And
they have stood the test of time for hundreds of
years, actually for more than a millennium.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -




MORE ABOUT THE AUTHOR


The Evangelical Viewpoint is pleased to present this
new series of essays by Dr. Jerry Beavan, in which he
offers mature discussions of important elements of
the Christian faith, with the goal of helping Christian
believers to live the Christian life more effectively.
At age 89, he already has a lifetime of experiences in
Christian ministry, as a graduate theologian, as a
professor in college and seminary, and as a world
traveler involved in government relations at high
levels, here in America and around the world. The
late Dr. Jerry Falwell referred to him as "one of
God's giants and modern patriarchs." Dr. Billy
Graham said of him, "Jerry Beavan is the architect
of world evangelism as we know it today." Now
living in "active retirement" on America's Pacific
coast, although physically impaired, he is using his
writing skills, via the internet, to help other believers
gain a better understanding of their Christian faith.
He is the author of several works, including his recent
volume, “A Handbook of Applied Christianity.”