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		<title>How to Handle Criticism</title>
		<link>http://www.newcovpres.com/archives/1047</link>
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		<pubDate>Sat, 19 Nov 2011 13:24:18 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[One area of Christian living that has received little to no attention (outside of the book of Proverbs) is that of how to receive and give criticism. With the exception of a few chapters written here or there, there is a surprising absence of material on this important subject. A few years ago Dr. Joel &#8230; <a href="http://www.newcovpres.com/archives/1047" class="more-link" >read on <span class="meta-nav">&#8594;</span></a>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>One area of Christian living that has received little to no attention  (outside of the book of Proverbs) is that of how to receive and give  criticism. With the exception of a few chapters written here or there,  there is a surprising absence of material on this important subject. A  few years ago Dr. Joel Beeke gave a lecture on how ministers ought to  approach criticism. Every pastor would benefit from listening to this  lecture. I have been immensely helped by Beeke’s thoughts, and sense my  own need to repeatedly listen to the wisdom in it. You can find that  lecture <a href="http://www.sermonaudio.com/sermoninfo.asp?SID=11811131940">here</a>. The other helpful work that I would recommend is Alfred Poirer’s,<em> <a href="http://www.peacemaker.net/site/apps/nlnet/content3.aspx?c=aqKFLTOBIpH&amp;b=1084263&amp;ct=1245843">The Cross and Criticism</a></em>.  Poirer does an excellent job of placing criticism in light of the  Gospel. Despite the lack of substantive, biblical material on this  subject, I’m sure that you will find these two works to be welcomed  resources.</p>
<p>This post was written by Rev. Nick Batzig, minister of New Covenant Presbyterian &#8211; a PCA <a href="../">church in Richmond Hill, GA</a>. Richmond Hill is a suburb of Savannah, GA. New Covenant is a <a href="http://www.newcovpres.com">church plant in Savannah, GA</a>. </p>
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		<title>Sinclair Ferguson Lectures on Marriage and Parenting</title>
		<link>http://www.newcovpres.com/archives/1046</link>
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		<pubDate>Sat, 19 Nov 2011 13:22:24 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[In 2006, Sinclair Ferguson gave two lectures in Greenville, SC on the subject of parenting. I happened to be in attendance with my wife. We were expecting our first child at the time and I found the lectures to be challenging and thought-provoking. They set the tone for a biblical approach to marriage and parenting. &#8230; <a href="http://www.newcovpres.com/archives/1046" class="more-link" >read on <span class="meta-nav">&#8594;</span></a>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In 2006, Sinclair Ferguson gave two lectures in Greenville, SC on the  subject of parenting. I happened to be in attendance with my wife. We  were expecting our first child at the time and I found the lectures to  be challenging and thought-provoking. They set the tone for a biblical  approach to marriage and parenting. In each, Dr. Ferguson seeks to stir  up our confidence in the word of God as the all-sufficient means for  God-honoring homes. You can listen to or download both below:</p>
<p><a href="http://www.sermonaudio.com/sermoninfo.asp?SID=1118111951410">The Man of the House</a><br />
<a href="http://www.sermonaudio.com/sermoninfo.asp?SID=1118112044530">Solid Foundations</a></p>
<p>This post was written by Rev. Nick Batzig, minister of New Covenant Presbyterian &#8211; a PCA <a href="../">church in Richmond Hill, GA</a>. Richmond Hill is a suburb of Savannah, GA. New Covenant is a <a href="http://www.newcovpres.com">church plant in Savannah, GA</a>. </p>
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		<title>The Marrow of Modern Divinity</title>
		<link>http://www.newcovpres.com/archives/1045</link>
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		<pubDate>Sat, 19 Nov 2011 13:20:41 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[I’ve come to believe that one of the most significant theological controversies the modern church must acquaint itself with is the controversy surrounding the Marrow of Modern Divinity. The issues concerning Law and Gospel, legal and evangelical repentance, and the free offer of the Gospel to the unconverted are all bound up with the Marrow &#8230; <a href="http://www.newcovpres.com/archives/1045" class="more-link" >read on <span class="meta-nav">&#8594;</span></a>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I’ve come to believe that one of the most significant theological  controversies the modern church must acquaint itself with is the  controversy surrounding the <em>Marrow of Modern Divinity</em>. The  issues concerning Law and Gospel, legal and evangelical repentance, and  the free offer of the Gospel to the unconverted are all bound up with  the Marrow Controversy. Thomas Boston, and Ralph and Ebenezer Erskine  are among the more well known Marrowmen. You can find Christian Focus’  newly reprinted edition of the <em>Marrow of Modern Divinity</em> (with Boston’s Notes and introductions by Phil Ryken and William Vandoodewaard) <a href="http://www.wtsbooks.com/product-exec/product_id/6630/nm/Marrow+of+Modern+Divinity+%28Hardcover%29?utm_source=nbatzig&amp;utm_medium=blogpartners">here</a>. I would also be remiss if I did not recommend Sinclair Ferguson’s outstanding lectures on the Marrow. You can find them <a href="http://www.sermonaudio.com/search.asp?speakerWithinSource=&amp;subsetCat=&amp;subsetItem=&amp;mediatype=&amp;includekeywords=&amp;exactverse=&amp;keyword=Marrow+controversy&amp;keyworddesc=Marrow+controversy&amp;currsection=&amp;AudioOnly=false&amp;speakerwithin=Sinclair&amp;x=0&amp;y=0">here</a>. You can also find other helpful lectures <a href="http://www.sermonaudio.com/search.asp?keyword=Marrow%20controversy">here</a> and <a href="http://www.sermonaudio.com/sermoninfo.asp?SID=830101643360">here</a>. Perhaps the most careful treatment of the Marrow controversy in print is William Vandoodewarrd’s <em><a href="http://www.wtsbooks.com/product-exec/product_id/7973/nm/The+Marrow+Controversy+and+Seceder+Tradition%3A+Atonement%2C+Saving+Faith%2C+and+the+Gospel+Offer+in+Scotland+%281718-1799%29+%28Paperback%29?utm_source=nbatzig&amp;utm_medium=blogpartners">The Marrow Controversy and Seceeder Tradition</a></em>. Please spend the time familiarizing yourself with the Marrow theology.</p>
<p>This post was written by Rev. Nick Batzig, minister of New Covenant Presbyterian &#8211; a PCA <a href="../">church in Richmond Hill, GA</a>. Richmond Hill is a suburb of Savannah, GA. New Covenant is a <a href="http://www.newcovpres.com">church plant in Savannah, GA</a>. </p>
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		<title>The Double Crucifixion</title>
		<link>http://www.newcovpres.com/archives/1036</link>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 07 Oct 2011 12:28:47 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[William Still explained–in the most vivid way–the reality of the double crucifixion spoken of in Gal. 6:14. There, Paul wrote about the division God sets between redeemed man and the fallen world on account of the crucifixion of Christ. He wrote: We like to think of the double crucifixion, envisaged here, in theatrical terms. There &#8230; <a href="http://www.newcovpres.com/archives/1036" class="more-link" >read on <span class="meta-nav">&#8594;</span></a>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>William Still explained–in the most vivid way–the reality of the double crucifixion spoken of in Gal. 6:14. There, Paul wrote about the division God sets between redeemed man and the fallen world on account of the crucifixion of Christ. He wrote:<strong> </strong></p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;"><span style="color: #000080;">We like to think of the double crucifixion, envisaged here, in theatrical terms. There stand the world, and there stand I, and between us stands the cross. Viewed from the world’s side I am crossed out, because branded with that hateful cross the world has no time for me. Viewed from my side the world is crossed out, for through my faith in Christ’s death I have also died to the world; so that I and the world are agreed on one thing, and one only; that through Christ we have equally and mutually no time for each other.1</span></p>
<p>1. Still, William <em>Notes on Galatians </em>(Aberdeen: Didasko Press, 1972) pp. 110-111</p>
<p>This post was written by Rev. Nick Batzig, minister of New Covenant Presbyterian &#8211; a PCA <a href="http://www.newcovpres.com">church in Richmond Hill, GA</a>. Richmond Hill is a suburb of Savannah, GA. New Covenant is a <a href="http://www.newcovpres.com">church plant in Savannah, GA</a>. </p>
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		<title>Don&#8217;t Waste Your Grill</title>
		<link>http://www.newcovpres.com/archives/1021</link>
		<comments>http://www.newcovpres.com/archives/1021#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 27 Sep 2011 19:35:17 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[As a church planter in North America, I am constantly forced to consider the most advantageous ways of reaching our community with the Gospel. While missionaries and pastors in third world countries, and the 10/40 window, have many difficulties and challenges that I may never know personally, I have been called by God to spread &#8230; <a href="http://www.newcovpres.com/archives/1021" class="more-link" >read on <span class="meta-nav">&#8594;</span></a>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>As a church planter in North America, I am constantly forced to consider the most advantageous ways of reaching our community with the Gospel. While missionaries and pastors in third world countries, and the 10/40 window, have many difficulties and challenges that I may never know personally, I have been called by God to spread the Gospel throughout the Southeast region of Coastal Georgia. In the spirit of cultural contextualization, I have learned that two things are of supreme importance to the residents of Coastal Georgia: (1) grills, and (2) boats. In so much as I understand the idea of being missional, I have come to realize that we should use everything we have to reach the lost with the Gospel of Christ. This means that we must use our grills and boats for Jesus. I don&#8217;t know anyone who doesn&#8217;t like eating food or gong out on a boat (starting with me!). So&#8230;instead of railing on the people of God for owning grills and boats (something that seems to be the default, guilt-driven position of Christian discipleship these days) why not encourage the members of our congregations to use their grills and boats for Jesus. When we come to understand that everything we do should be done to the glory of God then we will begin viewing our possessions as instruments of evangelism, rather than merely objects of self-pleasure. If all we are doing is heaping up possessions for our own pleasures and for the advancement of cloistered communities, then all that awaits us is a certain fearful expectation of judgment (James 5:1-5); however, if we see them as means to a Gospel end, then they may serve to be instruments for advancing the Kingdom of God. We would do well to remember Joseph of Arimethea&#8211;who used his wealth to honor the deceased Savior; or those women who supported the Savior with their finances during the days of His earthly ministry. We should also remember Martha, who opened her home and kitchen to Christ. We who live in North America are all rich on the global socio-economic scale. Out of desire to deal with what is sometimes unfounded personal guilt, we have a propensity to condemn the rich&#8211;rather than encourage them to use what the Lord has given them for the spread of His Gospel. In 1988 J. I. Packer, in his article &#8220;The Christian and God&#8217;s World&#8221; (Collected Shorter Writings vol. 2 pp. 271 ff.) made a fascinating observation about the unique role Americans could have in the evangelization of the world&#8211;in part, on account of our financial prosperity:</p>
<p>&#8220;Why do I feel this strongly? Why, because of the unique significant vocation that God appears to have given to the United States of America in the modern world.</p>
<p>Theologians, as you know, distinguish between special grace, the grace that saves sinners by turning them to Christ  and that builds up the church in and through Christ, and common grace the grace of providential action&#8211;sometimes kindly, sometimes severe&#8211;that restrains sin, maintains some order and some justice in our fallen communities and so provokes a milieu in which the Gospel and the work of special grace can go forward. When Paul directs Christians to pray for rulers &#8216;that we [believers] may live peaceful and quiet lives in all godliness and holiness&#8217; (1 Timothy 2:2), his words clearly express this view of common grace serving the interests of special grace.</p>
<p>I see the United States as having at this time a unique role in the world at both levels of divine operation. I might perhaps be able to see this more clearly than a native American ever could, simply because I look at it from outside. As a non-American, I do not endorse any form of utopian triumphalism, the secular counterpart of the Pilgrims hope of building new Jerusalem in Massachusetts, that periodically breaks surface in the American mind and that looks to outsiders so ominously like the pride that goes on before a fall. The idea that America is God&#8217;s most favoured nation and always will  be is a snare and a delusion that can only tap America&#8217;s spiritual strength in the way that Alexander Solzhenitsyn and Malcolm Muggeridge think has happened already.  Do not, I beg you, fall victim to any such notion as that.</p>
<p>Nonetheless, I want to go on record as saying to you, and about you, the two things that now follow, and I ask you to hear me well.</p>
<p>First, as regards special grace The United States of America is a nation of almost a quarter of a billion people. Of these, 65 percent claim a church connection, and something between 20 and 40 million&#8211;maybe one is ten, maybe one in five profess to be born again evangelical Christians. The United States has a conversionists fork religion that gives great support to evangelicalism&#8230;What it boils down to is that among the larger nations, only the United States has both the manpower and the money to sustain evangelical world mission for the next generation, and this gives America a uniquely important role in the global strategy of the kingdom of God at the present time.1</p>
<p>What Packer so insightfully observed is that American prosperity does not need to be seen as an enemy of the Gospel, rather it may still be used to support and further the Kingdom of God in the world. It is not sinful&#8211;in and of itself&#8211;to have possessions. It is the love of money that is the root of all kinds of evil (1 Timothy 6:10). Dangerous though it may be to have great possessions, it may also be a great benefit to the church of Jesus Christ if we use our goods for His glory and the advancement of His Kingdom. While some need to do as Jesus said to the rich, young ruler (i.e. &#8220;Go and sell all that you have and follow Me.&#8221;), still others need to heed the words of the apostle Paul, &#8220;Command those who are rich in this present age not to be haughty, nor to trust in uncertain riches but in the living God, who gives us richly all things to enjoy&#8221; (1 timothy 6:17). May we never waste our possessions when what we have may be used to advance the Kingdom of God and our Lord Jesus Christ. Don&#8217;t waste your grill; rather use it for Christ!</p>
<p>1. Packer, J. I. Collected Shorter Writings (Carlisle, Cumbria: Paternoster Press, 1998) vol. 2, p. 271 ff.</p>
<p>Nicholas T. Batzig is the organizing pastor/church planter of New Covenant Presbyterian Church, a PCA <em><a href="http://www.newcovpres.com/">church in Richmond Hill, Georgia</a>.</em>. Richmond Hill is a suburb of Savannah, GA. New Covenant is a <a href="http://www.newcovpres.com">church plant in Savannah, GA</a>. </p>
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		<title>The Astonishment of Jesus</title>
		<link>http://www.newcovpres.com/archives/1024</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 27 Sep 2011 19:30:55 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[It is not often that we think about the way in which the sinless God-Man&#8211;living in the world that He and His Father had created, and yet, living among fallen mankind&#8211;was affected by His surroundings. The Scriptures speak of Christ&#8217;s astonishment at the unbelief and the faith of the men He had made&#8211;in response to &#8230; <a href="http://www.newcovpres.com/archives/1024" class="more-link" >read on <span class="meta-nav">&#8594;</span></a>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>It is not often that we think about the way in which the sinless  God-Man&#8211;living in the world that He and His Father had created, and  yet, living among fallen mankind&#8211;was affected by His surroundings. The  Scriptures speak of Christ&#8217;s astonishment at the unbelief and the faith  of the men He had made&#8211;in response to His claims about Himself. William  Law, in his though-provoking little book <em><a href="http://books.google.com/books?pg=PA117&amp;dq=Law+the+emotions+of+Jesus&amp;id=e6c9AAAAYAAJ#v=onepage&amp;q&amp;f=false">The Emotions of Jesus</a></em>, offers some meditations on the astonishment of Jesus in His earthly ministry. Law noted:</p>
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<p>Though  little is directly reported of it in the Gospels, this also belonged to  the perfection of our Lord Jesus. No one has ever lived in such a  marvelous world as He, to whom &#8220;the glory in the grass and splendor in  the flower &#8221; continually revealed the diviner miracle of a Heavenly  Father&#8217;s munificent love and care. No one ever felt as He did the wonder  of God—the infinite majesty and the infinite tenderness, the infinite  purity and infinite forgiveness of God. No one has ever felt as He did  the wonder of man, of the human soul with its heights and depths, its  heroisms of love and loyalty, virtue and self-sacrifice, its marvels too  of baseness and ingratitude—the amazingness of sin.</p>
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<p>Yet  it was not the virtues or the vices of men that most excited the wonder  of Jesus. What He is expressly said to have shown Himself astonished at  was their faith and unbelief.1 When He came to His own and His own  received Him not, He was stirred out of His habitual calm. He was not  taken by surprise. He recognized that His was the common experience of  God&#8217;s messengers: &#8220;A prophet is not without honor, save in his own  country and among his own kin.&#8221; Still, He marveled at it. Such  blindness, such perversity is really amazing, nor does it become less so  by repetition. And when He came to those to whom He was a stranger,  like a Roman centurion or a woman of Canaan, and they showed a  penetrating insight into His character, and received Him with prompt  welcome and vigorous faith, again He marveled. <em>If. </em>was  wonderful that they whose faith had such distances to travel and such  obstacles to surmount should unerringly find their way to Him—a thing to  think upon with wondering thankfulness.</p>
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<p>The  instance of faith which specially excited His wonder and admiration was  that of a Roman officer, who, when he sought from Jesus the healing of a  favorite slave, expressed his conviction that Jesus could bring this  about from the spot where He was standing as easily as by His actual  presence at the sick-bed. &#8220;For I myself,&#8221; he says, &#8220;am a man of  subordinate rank, owing obedience to my superiors; and I again have  under me soldiers, and when I say to one, Go, he goes; and to another,  Come, he comes; and to my servant, Do this, he does it&#8221; And he is sure  that Jesus in the region of His activity is vested with an authority no  less efficacious and far-reaching. If at the word of a centurion the  well-drilled cohort moved like a piece of perfect mechanism, at the word  of Jesus the legions of heaven, the angels of healing, will instantly  obey. It was at this Jesus marveled. He had never before found faith  like this, so swift yet so sure, flying like an arrow to the heart of  truth. He had not found it in His own disciples; He had not found it in  all Israel, not in a single representative of a nation whose history was  shot through with religious ideas and hopes. It was reserved for this  Gentile, this mere hanger-on to the skirts of the Chosen People, to form  this original and daring conception of Christ&#8217;s power, to see under the  humble exterior of the Prophet of Nazareth the great Commander of the  invisible powers of the Kingdom of God, and to set on His head the  Messiah&#8217;s crown.</p>
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<p>It  is evident that the element of unexpectedness entered into this wonder  of Jesus. To find such faith in such a quarter was to come upon an Elim  in an arid wilderness. The centurion was a pioneer soul, who followed no  man&#8217;s lead, but made a path in which others should follow. The story of  every mission field has to tell of such pioneer souls; everywhere,  indeed, they are the makers of history in the Kingdom of God. Yet our  Lord&#8217;s wonder is not merely the wonder of surprise; it is the deeper  wonder of admiration. Such faith as the centurion&#8217;s is wonderful in  itself, not merely because of its exceptional circumstances. There is  something marvelous in all religious faith. So marvelous is it that to  Jesus it once seemed a question worth asking, whether at His coming He  should find faith in the earth. We think it wonderful if any man is an  infidel, whereas really it is much more marvelous that any man is a  believer. Just as we esteem it strange if any one is dumb, or lacks any  of his senses, or is an idiot, whereas the true marvel is not dumbness  but speech, not idiocy but intelligence; so, I say, the most wonderful  thing about the human soul is not its worldliness, its atheism, but is  its persistent and unconquerable faith in God and the spiritual world.</p>
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<p>1 Wickedness has its marvels as well as goodness; unbelief as well as faith.</p>
<p><em>Nicholas T. Batzig is the organizing pastor/church planter of New Covenant Presbyterian Church, a PCA <a href="../">church in Richmond Hill, Georgia</a>.</em> Richmond Hill is a suburb of Savannah, GA. New Covenant is a <a href="http://www.newcovpres.com">church plant in Savannah, GA</a>. </p>
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		<title>The Flesh/Spirit Distiniction in Paul</title>
		<link>http://www.newcovpres.com/archives/1025</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 27 Sep 2011 19:25:38 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[One of the most important, and yet most difficult, elements of Pauline theology is the Apostle&#8217;s use of the flesh/Spirit (σὰρξ/πνεῦμα) antithesis. The antithetical construct is preeminently found in Romans and Galatians, and can really only be understood in its fullest significance when viewed through the lens of both the Historia and the Ordo Salutis.Throughout &#8230; <a href="http://www.newcovpres.com/archives/1025" class="more-link" >read on <span class="meta-nav">&#8594;</span></a>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>One of the most important, and yet most difficult, elements of Pauline theology is the Apostle&#8217;s use of the flesh/Spirit (σὰρξ/πνεῦμα)  antithesis. The antithetical construct is preeminently found in Romans  and Galatians, and can really only be understood in its fullest  significance when viewed through the lens of both the <em>Historia</em> and the <em>Ordo</em> <em>Salutis</em>.Throughout  church history, an emphasis on the latter aspect has held center stage  in sermons and expositions, where the war between the flesh and the  Spirit has been emphasized in the realm of the Christian life. Such a  reading has been called the <em>existential</em> or <em>experiential</em> approach. It has sometimes been referred to as the <em>anthropological</em> interpretation&#8211;as it would also certainly be right to call it the <em>applicatory </em>approach. A <em>prima facia</em> reading, lends to the idea that this is the chief meaning of Paul&#8217;s use  of the σὰρξ /πνεῦμα contrast; but is it the only way that Paul employs  it? Many modern theologians tend to adopt a redemptive-historical (<em>Historia Salutis) </em>understanding  of the antithesis&#8211;insisting that Paul unfolds an &#8220;old age/new age&#8221;  redemptive-historical use of the &#8220;flesh/Spirit&#8221; antithesis. Among the  proponents of this view are Herman Ridderbos and Meredith Kline.  Building on the work of Ridderbos, Walter Russel sought to more fully  explain and develop the redemptive-historical interpretation in his  article &#8220;<a href="http://www.google.com/url?sa=t&amp;source=web&amp;cd=4&amp;ved=0CDcQFjAD&amp;url=http%3A%2F%2Ffaculty.gordon.edu%2Fhu%2Fbi%2FTed_Hildebrandt%2FNTeSources%2FNTArticles%2FWTJ-NT%2FRussell-Gal5-WTJ.pdf&amp;rct=j&amp;q=flesh%20adn%20spirit%20redemoptive%20historical&amp;ei=LE97TrLhGpLBtgeDmJwQ&amp;usg=AFQjCNHQshm_VAbjHNzp8ZoM-hnEV2E8tQ&amp;sig2=vubhS8SKl1EdX-vTpCAGDQ&amp;cad=rja">The Apostle Paul&#8217;s Redemptive Historical Argumentation in Galatians 5:13-26</a>.&#8221;  Ed Welch leans toward such a view for the Christian counseling movement  contra Jay Adams (see the fascinating interchange that takes place in <a href="http://feedingonchrist.com/files/2011/09/Welchs-Response-to-Adams.pdf">Welch&#8217;s critique of Jay Adams&#8217; traditional position</a>, as well as <a href="http://www.nouthetic.org/component/content/article/6-resources/452-what-alternative.html">Jay&#8217;s full response to Welch&#8217;s redemptive -historical position</a>).  So how does one choose between the older &#8220;existential&#8221; (or  experiential) interpretation vs. the redemptive-historical  interpretation? Does one have to choose between one or the other? Or do  both, in some way, hold a relationship to one another in the Pauline  corpus? In order to answer these questions we must give consideration to  the Pauline use of the contrast.</p>
<p>In order to come to any sort of  settled position with regard to this discussion we must begin with  definitions. Since Ridderbos is, in many respects, treated as the father  of this redemptive-historical interpretation of the σαρκός/πνεῦμα  antithesis, it is fitting that we give consideration to his explanation  of Paul&#8217;s redemptive-historical use of this framework. He wrote:</p>
<p>In Paul flesh&#8230;is not primarily an existential notion, but a redemptive-historical one. <strong>Flesh is the mode of existence of man and the world before the fullness of the times appeared.</strong> Flesh is man and world in the powers of darkness. And opposing this is  the Spirit, the Pneuma, not first and foremost as an individual  experience, not even in the first place as an individual reversal, but  as a new way of existence which became present time with the coming of  Christ. Thus Paul can say in Romans 8:9: &#8220;But ye are not in the flesh  but in the Spirit.&#8221; This being in the Spirit is not a mystical, but an  eschatological, redemptive-historical category. It means: You are no  longer in the power of the old aeon; you have passed into the new one,  you are under a different authority.</p>
<p>At this point, questions may be raised with regard to Ridderbos&#8217; precise language concerning the <em>flesh</em> and the fulness of the times (a phrase that clearly has biblical precedent, see Gal. 4:4). Limiting of the use of the word <em>flesh</em> to the historical period prior to the incarnation might seem somewhat  reductionistic and overly simplistic. In fact, such a construct may do  damage to the Christological nature of covenantal history. For instance,  one may be tempted to conclude that the Spirit of Christ was not active  in the lives of the saints under the Old Covenant. Such a view would  fly squarely against the testimony of Scripture. Even in a strongly  redemptive-historical book like Galatians, we are told that Abraham had  the Spirit. The blessing of Abraham was, in large part, understood to be  the reception of the Spirit. Certainly the blessing of Abraham was the  imputed righteousness of Christ by faith alone&#8211; but this faith is the  product of the saving influence of the promised Spirit. If this language  is taken as referring to the age of fallenness as marked by the period  of time prior to the incarnation, there could certainly be grounds for  accepting it; but as it stands it is a less than helpful generalization.</p>
<p>Perhaps,  as Russel suggests, something of a refining of Ridderbos&#8217;  redemptive-historical explanation is needed. Russel attempts to do so by  suggesting that σὰρξ appears in the book of Galatians in three spheres:  the <em>ethnic</em>, the <em>temporal cultic</em>, and the <em>ethical result</em>. Granting the legitimacy of the last two aspects, we must insist on  a more elastic understanding of the <em>flesh</em> that includes (1) everything bound up in <em>the present evil age, </em>(2) with the <em>temporal form of religion</em> as most fully expressed in the now obsolete nature of the preparatory elements of the Mosaic Law, and (3) with the <em>ethical </em>sphere in which men live contrary to the will of God. In this way, the <em>flesh </em>would  not be limited to the redemptive historical era prior to the coming of  Christ in the fulness of time, rather it is the entire period of this  fallen world until the consummation. Surely the age of the Spirit is the  age that manifested itself in the fullness of time when Christ entered  the world, fulfilled the Covenant conditions, secured salvation, rose to  newness of life, ushered into the new creation and poured out the life  giving Spirit at Pentecost.</p>
<p>In seeking to defend a redemptive-historical view of <em>flesh </em>and <em>Spirit</em>, Russel explains:</p>
<p>An  interpretation of the flesh/Spirit antithesis in light of redemption  history is not as unlikely as one may first think if we recognize the  centrality of the redemptive-historical framework in Paul&#8217;s theology.  Paul expresses this framework by numerous perspectives or metaphors  through which he views the historical progress of redemption. For  example, the following are suggestive of the pervasiveness of this  framework: from the first Adam to the last Adam (Rom 5:12-21; 1 Cor  15:20-28), from childhood to adulthood inthe developmental periods of  God&#8217;s children (Gal 3:23-4:7), from the Abrahamic to Mosaic covenants in  the covenantal development (Gal 3:15-22), from the present age to the  age-to-come (Gal 1:4; Rom 12:1-2), from the kingdom of darkness to the  kingdom of his beloved Son (Col 2:13-14), from mystery to co-heirs  regarding the Gentile inclusion (Eph 3:1-13), and from the natural body  to the spiritual body (1 Cor 15:35-58). Paul&#8217;s use of the σὰρξ/πνεῦμα  perspective as a redemptive-historical lens is even more pervasive than  any of the above schemas (e.g., Galatians 3-6; Romans 7-8; Phil 3:3-4; 1  Cor 3:1-3; etc.). However, the interpretation of this schema as parts  of persons rather than modes of existence has muddled Paul&#8217;s historical  emphasis and contributed to an existential and dehistoricizing  understanding of the apostle.</p>
<p>In the book of Galatians, Paul  places &#8220;works of the law&#8221; under the heading of &#8220;flesh&#8221; (see Gal. 5:18), a  word which in its characteristic Pauline usage denotes human nature in  its falleness apart from the regenerating grace and sanctifying power of  the Holy Spirit. Works of the law fall into this category because they  deceive a person into thinking he can be justified before God by His own  strength and religious endeavors. In this sense, the idea of <em>flesh</em> as a redemptive historical category goes back prior to the Mosaic economy to the Adamic administration. All men are <em>in Adam</em> by nature. This is synonymous with being <em>in the flesh</em>. To be <em>in Christ </em>is one and the same with being <em>in the Spirit. </em>This is to say that the Adam/Christ contrast parallels the flesh/Spirit contrast. Sinclair Ferguson writes:</p>
<p>It  is now widely recognized that in Paul&#8217;s writings the antithesis between  flesh and S/spirit reflects a supra-individual dimension. The  characteristic of life in the flesh includes self-absorption,  self-reliance an indulgence, dependance on outward ceremony and ritual  instead of inward spiritual reality, and clinging to the shadow instead  of to Christ (Gal. 3:3; 5:19-21).</p>
<p>This  is, in fact, but the breathing out of an atmosphere of spiritual  pollution which has been earlier breathed in. The flesh is an entire  world of existence. It stands along side Adam and the present aeon as a  fragmented world order. To be &#8220;in the flesh&#8221; is contrasted with being  &#8220;in the Spirit&#8221; in a way that is clearly parallel to and interconnected  with the contrast between being in Adam and being in Christ, belonging  to the present aeon and belonging to the new eschatological age  inaugurated by the triumph of Christ and the gift of the Spirit (Rom.  5:12; 8:27).</p>
<p>Prior  to union with Christ, those in Adam are &#8220;in&#8221; and live &#8220;according to the  flesh.&#8221; Now in Christ they &#8220;in the Spirit&#8221; and live &#8220;according to the  Spirit.&#8221; Paul pointedly says that Christian believers are not in the  flesh (<em>en sarki</em>) but in the Spirit (<em>en pneumati</em>) (Rom. 8:9). The antithesis is radical and complete.</p>
<p>The  book of Galatians holds a place of supreme importance in this  discussion for two very obvious reasons. First, the apostle is dealing  with the issue of Judaizers insisting on a &#8220;fleshly ordinance&#8221; (i.e.  circumcision) for justification. This &#8220;fleshly ordinance&#8221; belonged to  the old age of the Mosaic economy&#8211;with all of its earthly and typical  cultic ordinances. In redemptive-history these belonged to the Covenant  of Grace, and God&#8217;s plan of redemption in Christ. They pointed past  themselves to the coming Savior. But, when they were taken out of their  redemptive context and were trusted in as a way of salvation&#8211;they  became a stumbling block to the self-righteous. They were, in one very  real sense, perfect ordinances to reflect fleshly religion if they were  not submitted to the gracious purposes of God in giving them. The  fleshly ordinances pointed to the heavenly Savior, but they also became  of stumbling-block to the unbelieving Jews on account of their temporal  and typical nature. As Geerhardus Vos noted:</p>
<p>Something  of this bitter taste of transitoriness enters even into the Old  Testament consciousness of salvation&#8230;Paul means to say, that in  receiving the glory, and losing it, and hiding its loss, [Moses] served  the symbolic function of illustrating, in the first place, the glory of  the Old Covenant, in the second place its transitoriness, and in the  third place the ignorance of Israel in regard to what was taking place.  The chief point of ignorance of the people related to the eclipse and  abrogation their institutions would suffer. But the symbolism permits of  being generalized, so as to include all the limitations of  self-knowledge and self-understanding under which the Old Covenant  labored. As a matter of fact Paul immediately afterwards extends it to  Israel&#8217;s entire reading of the law, that is, to Israel&#8217;s  self-interpretation and Scripture-interpretation on a large scale.  Ignorance as to the end would easily produce ignorance or imperfect  understanding with reference to the whole order of things under which  the people were living.<strong> Everything temporal and provisional,  especially if it does not know itself as such, is apt to wear a veil. It  often lacks the faculty of discriminating between what is higher and  lower in its composition.</strong> Things that are ends and things that  are mere means to an end are not always clearly separated. Every  preparatory stage in the history of redemption can fully understand  itself only in the light of that which fulfills it. The veil of the Old  Covenant is lifted only in Christ.</p>
<p>It is in this sense that we can  say that the Torah became&#8211;though it was not originally given by God to  be&#8211;the perfect form of &#8220;fleshly religion&#8221; when extrapolated from its  Christological context. The divinely constructed typical and preparatory  rites, when taken into the hand of the earthly-minded religious  zealots, became a perfected form of earthly religion. This is the nature  of what Paul is dealing with in Galatians. The Judaizers were insisting  on the &#8220;fleshly sign&#8221; (and every subsequent legal prescription) for  acceptance with God. It was an attempt to obtain the promise of God by  human effort in the context of the revealed law of God. Just as Ishmael  was born &#8220;according to the flesh&#8221; (i.e. by Abraham&#8217;s human effort to  fulfill the promise of God), so too the Judaizers were enslaved under a  &#8220;fleshly&#8221; way of life. Paul draws out the weakness and unprofitableness  of the law of God in this context and likens it to the enslaving nature  of pagan religion. In essence, the apostle&#8217;s argument is that whether  you were putting yourself under the God-ordained rules and regulations  for justification or under the self-imposed rules and regulations of  pagan cultic practices you were actually enslaving yourself to the  &#8220;elemental principle of the world&#8221; (For a basic development of this idea  see <a href="http://feedingonchrist.com/the-elemental-principles-of-world/">this post</a>). A redemptive-historical understanding of  <em>flesh </em>in this sense may be understood to be a shorthand for the fallen world system (i.e. <em>the present evil age</em>, Gal. 1:6) with all of its forms and rituals. The <em>flesh&#8211;t</em>hough  not exclusively referring to Judaism&#8211;nevertheless, did not excluded  those who were seeking justification by the &#8220;works of the law.&#8221; In Paul,  the &#8220;works of the law&#8221; and the &#8220;flesh&#8221; are sometimes used synonymously.  Russel proposes this aspect as being the <em>temporal</em> dimension of the σὰρξ/πνεῦμα opposition. He writes:</p>
<p>σὰρξ  and πνεῦμα now oppose each other temporally: σὰρξ represents an  earlier, preparatory, and now inferior era of redemptive history because  of its linkage to Torah (3:19-4:11). To advocate living κατὰ τῆς σαρκός  as the Judaizers were doing (e.g., 4:23, 29) is to advocate an  anachronistic set of standards, namely, living according to the rule of  the σὰρξ instead of according to the rule of the πνεῦμα. Such an  anachronistic rule negates the eschatological effects of Christ&#8217;s  crucifixion (1:4; 2:19-21; 3:1; 6:12-16). His crucifixion negated σὰρξ  (6:15) and its power over Christians (5:24).</p>
<p>Secondly, the book of  Galatians has the lengthiest explanation of the ethical dimension,  namely, &#8220;the works of the flesh&#8221; and &#8220;the fruits of the Spirit.&#8221; Though  the redemptive-historical dimension under-girds the ethical, the ethical  stands out preeminently as the battle between virtue and vices in the  Christian. As Martin Luther once wrote, &#8220;The Christian is simultaneously  a sinner and a saint.&#8221; There is an opposition that exists in the life  of the believers, in which he or she moves from the desires of the old  man to the desires of the new in a constant, continual conflict. Though  some may chalk this up as being spiritual schizophrenia, it is rather  the reality of believers living in the <em>already </em>of the eschaton. Until we are with Christ, we live in the sphere of the <em>flesh</em>, though we are in the <em>Spirit</em>. It is incumbent upon the saints to engage in hand-to-hand combat with the <em>flesh</em> that is ever present with them. The flesh and the Spirit cannot live  together in an armistice. Rather, the believer has died with Christ to  the power of the flesh, and therefore is under the dominion of the  Spirit. According to Ridderbos, the Pauline teaching concerning life  &#8220;after the flesh,&#8221; in Gal. 5:16-18, does not refer to some  redemptive-historical mode of existence in the strictest sense, rather  it is &#8220;the life which becomes dominant when freedom in Christ is either  denied or abused.&#8221; This statement alone shows that Ridderbos was willing  to make the shift from the redemptive-historical to the applicatory  categories. In a sense, it may be best articulated as &#8220;a mutual  informing&#8221; of the two positions. We often fall into the trap of making  two things that are not contradictory in and of themselves &#8220;mutually  exclusive.&#8221; This is a common error, and one that we should always ask  ourselves if we are doing.</p>
<p>While more work must be done with  regard to this all-important subject, it is abundantly clear that the  σὰρξ/πνεῦμα antithesis hold a primary place in Pauline theology.  Whatever view we may adopt, may we grow in our understanding of its  significance for our spiritual life.<br />
<em>Nicholas T. Batzig is the organizing pastor/church planter of New Covenant Presbyterian Church, a PCA <a href="../">church in Richmond Hill, Georgia</a>.</em> Richmond Hill is a suburb of Savannah, GA. New Covenant is a <a href="http://www.newcovpres.com">church plant in Savannah, GA</a>. </p>
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		<title>Luther and Calvin on Galatians 5:6</title>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 27 Sep 2011 19:20:27 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[When he comes to the fifth chapter  in his Commentary on Galatians (i.e. the imperatival section of the book), Martin Luther carefully explained the language of &#8220;faith working through love&#8221;&#8211;as it is found in Galatians 5:6. Note how carefully Luther defines the relationship between faith that justifies apart from anything we do, and how that faith &#8230; <a href="http://www.newcovpres.com/archives/1027" class="more-link" >read on <span class="meta-nav">&#8594;</span></a>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>When he comes to the fifth chapter  in his <em><a href="http://books.google.com/books?id=PvVLAAAAYAAJ&amp;printsec=frontcover&amp;dq=luther+Galatians&amp;hl=en&amp;ei=HpJzTsGaKIW2twengKnMDA&amp;sa=X&amp;oi=book_result&amp;ct=result&amp;resnum=8&amp;ved=0CFAQ6AEwBw#v=onepage&amp;q&amp;f=false">Commentary on Galatians</a> </em>(i.e.  the imperatival section of the book), Martin Luther carefully explained  the language of &#8220;faith working through love&#8221;&#8211;as it is found in  Galatians 5:6. Note how carefully Luther defines the relationship  between faith that justifies apart from anything we do, and how that  faith then goes on to work through love unto sanctified living:</p>
<p><em>&#8220;For in Jesus Christ neither circumcision avails any thing, neither uncircumcision, but faith which works by love&#8221; (Gal. 5:6).</em></p>
<p>That  is to say, faith which is not feigned nor hypocritical, but true and  lively. This is that faith which exercises and requires good works  through love. It is as much as to say, he that will be a true Christian  indeed, or one of Christ&#8217;s kingdom, must be a true believer. Now he does  not truly believe, if works of charity do not follow his faith. So on  both hands, as well on the right hand as on the left, he [i.e. Paul]  shuts hypocrites out of Christ&#8217;s kingdom. On the left hand, he shuts out  the Jews, and all such as will work their own salvation, saying, &#8220;In  Christ neither circumcision,&#8221; that is to say, no works, no service, no  worshipping, no kind of life in the world, but faith, without any trust  in works or merits, avails before God. On the right hand he shuts out  all slothful and idle persons, which say, if faith justify without  works, then let us work nothing, but let us only believe and do what we  list. Not so, you enemies of grace; Paul says otherwise. And although it  is true, that faith alone justifies, yet he speaks here of faith in  another respect; that is to say, that, after it hath justified, it is  not idle, but occupied and exercised in working through love. Paul,  therefore, in this place, sets forth the whole life of a Christian man,  namely, that inwardly it consists in faith towards God, and outwardly in  charity and good works toward our neighbor. So that a man is a perfect  Christian inwardly through faith before God, who has no need of our  works; and outwardly before men, whom our faith profits nothing, but  only our charity or our works. Therefore, when we have heard or  understood of this form of Christian life, <em>viz</em>., that it is  faith and charity, (as I have said,) it is not yet declared what faith  or what charity is; for this is another question. For as touching faith,  or the inward nature, force, and use of faith, he hath spoken before,  where he showed that it is our righteousness, or rather our  justification before God. Here he joins it with charity and works, that  is to say, he speaks of the external office thereof, which is to stir us  up to do good works, and to bring forth in us the fruits of charity, to  the profit of our neighbor.</p>
<p>Note that John Calvin, in his <a href="http://www.ccel.org/ccel/calvin/calcom41.iii.vii.i.html">Commentary on Galatians</a>,  also makes the same careful distinction between the role of faith in  justification and the role of faith working through love in  sanctification:</p>
<p>With  respect to the present passage, Paul enters into no dispute whether  love cooperates with faith in justification; but, in order to avoid the  appearance of representing Christians as idle and as resembling blocks  of wood, he points out what are the true exercises of believers. <em>When  you are engaged in discussing the question of justification, beware of  allowing any mention to be made of love or of works, but resolutely  adhere to the exclusive particle</em>. Paul does not here treat of  justification, or assign any part of the praise of it to love. Had he  done so, the same argument would prove that circumcision and ceremonies,  at a former period, had some share in justifying a sinner. As in Christ  Jesus he commends faith accompanied by love, so before the coming of  Christ ceremonies were required. But this has nothing to do with  obtaining righteousness, as the Papists themselves allow; and neither  must it be supposed that love possesses any such influence.</p>
<p>&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;</p>
<p>The  Westminster Divines (who do not hesitate to say that the grace of love  is present in the heart of the believer when he first believes)  explicitly note that it is not any other grace working with faith that  justifies guilty sinners; it is by the instrumentality of faith alone:</p>
<p>Question 73: How does faith justify a sinner in the sight of God?</p>
<p>Answer:  Faith justifies a sinner in the sight of God, not because of those  other graces which do always accompany it, or of good works that are the  fruits of it, nor as if the grace of faith, or any act thereof, were  imputed to him for his justification; but only as it is an instrument by  which he receives and applies Christ and his righteousness.</p>
<p><em>Nicholas T. Batzig is the organizing pastor/church planter of New Covenant Presbyterian Church, a PCA <a href="../">church in Richmond Hill, Georgia</a>.</em> Richmond Hill is a suburb of Savannah, GA. New Covenant is a <a href="http://www.newcovpres.com">church plant in Savannah, GA</a>. </p>
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