Good Samaritan (Luk 10)

Out of the crowds that followed Jesus , a lawyer stepped forth one day with a question to test the new rabbi: “Master, what shall I do to inherit eternal life?” (Luk 10:25). Was this a sincere question or another attempt to catch him at his words? Whichever it was, Jesus treated the question and the questioner respectfully. His first answer, however, was not really an answer at all, but rather another question, which turned the testing back upon the lawyer. It would lead him, if he had an open mind, to a searching self-examination of belief and practice: “What is written in the law? How readest thou?” (Luk 10:26).

“And he answering said, ‘Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy strength, and with all thy mind: and thy neighbour as thyself’ ” (Luk 10:27).

It was an excellent answer, showing an insight into the law born of deep and prayerful study. He had thus linked together two commandments from separate parts of the Torah (Deu 6:5; Lev 19:18). On a later occasion Jesus himself did the very same thing in response to the query as to what was the greatest commandment (Mat 22:39).

“And Jesus said unto him, ‘Thou hast answered right: this do, and thou shalt live’ ” (Luk 10:28).

There is a great gulf between reason and response, between theory and practice, between hearing and doing. To so answer was relatively easy; to do was another matter altogether. And so it is for all of us: Love as a Biblical concept, and the mystical expression of love for God, are often on the lips of His children. But the practical expression of that love is a difficult business.

The lawyer now sought “to justify himself” (Luk 10:29): “Who is my neighbour?” Evidently he thought the first part of the great commandment was no problem for him; after all, what right-thinking, religious person did not love God with all his being? But the penetrating gaze of this rabbi and the finality of his admonition — “This DO!” — left even this confident lawyer a trifle uneasy at his position in regard to the second half. In so asking he betrayed the weakness of those who concentrated upon the meticulous observance of the law; he was anxious to know the exact limits of his obligations. Who were those who in his particular situation had claims upon him? Was it not possible that he was already obeying the law — even in this matter?

As he so often did, Jesus answered a question with a parable that at first glance was not an answer at all. It was a story, however, which would be very familiar to his listeners.

A certain man was descending the dreaded “Way of Blood” that led from Jerusalem to Jericho. Though it was a dangerous journey — for the twists and turns of the rocky path offered numerous places for brigands to hide — he traveled alone. And, sure enough, he fell among cruel thieves and was left to die.

It so happened that a priest came down by that way, and passed by on “the other side”; likewise, a Levite. These paragons of sacrifice and ritual would not be detoured from the fulfillment of their duties; with averted eyes they hastened on. One can imagine the many possible ways by which they would have sought to justify themselves in such neglect. Perhaps they were even so close together that each was aware of the other’s failure as well as his own.

The priest might have thought: ‘My work is most important; I will let this lesser Levite behind me tend to this rather unpleasant business.’ And the Levite might well have said to himself: ‘The priest did not bother; and his calling to keep the Law is higher than mine; why should I?’ None of us are such strangers to the act of self-justification that these excuses or a dozen like them would seem totally unreasonable. No doubt we can all recall “reasons” for failing to do our duty that were just as flimsy when later held up to the clear light of Scripture.

And looking upon him, they both passed by on the other side! The lesson is obvious: this man was a “stranger” to them; why should they be inconvenienced by someone who might be a grievous sinner? Indeed, perhaps they feared defilement! ‘We might be partakers of this man’s sins.’ In Christ’s analogy they plainly loved self more than they loved any “neighbor”. This was a fault no less to be rebuked simply because it was induced by a rigid doctrinal view of “holiness”. Their special Bible interpretations added to their legalistic duties (“Touch not, handle not the unclean thing”), but those same interpretations sadly detracted from what they should have readily recognized as practical duties. The lesson must not be lost on us. (A few years ago an ecclesia planned a special lecture, with considerable advertising. A large number of visitors attended, but of them all only one finally accepted the Truth and was baptized. And she did not attend because of any media advertising, but solely because — on the very day of the lecture — a brother played the part of “Good Samaritan” to a motorist in distress.)

But a certain Samaritan — one of the race despised by the “elite” Pharisaic Jews — happened also to come that way. Having compassion upon the fallen Jew, whom he might have left to his fate with more justification than did the other two, he went to him. Binding up his wounds, setting him on his own beast, he brought him safely to the inn. In so doing, the Samaritan brought upon himself grave personal danger — the thieves might have still been around. Furthermore, it was a messy and troublesome job to bind up the man’s wounds. And also, he experienced a real material loss; two pence was not a small sum (by Mat 20:2 it would represent two days’ wages).

Christ himself is to be seen in the parable. Surely it is worth noting that his enemies at least once denounced him as a Samaritan (Joh 8:48), perhaps in reference to the peculiar circumstances of the marriage of Joseph and Mary, or perhaps because of his fearless association with that hated nation (Joh 4:40). Christ is our neighbor, coming near to us in our fallen condition, showing mercy to those who do not deserve it. We have all descended the road of blood toward the city of the curse (Jos 6:26); we have all been wounded by sin and we have all lain near death. At great personal risk and inconvenience and loss, even at the expense of legal defilement, Christ has stopped, and stooped, to help us. He has reinforced that lesson: “Go, and do thou likewise!”

The Samaritan in the parable is pictured as telling the innkeeper, into whose hands he committed the wounded man: “Whatsoever you spend in his care, even if it be more than I have given you, I will repay you” (Luk 10:35). Those who follow his example, even at risk to themselves, who go the extra mile to bear with and help a fallen brother, to bind up wounds in the ecclesia, pouring in the oil of kindness and love… those who do such things will never lose anything. There is no danger in such a policy of self-sacrifice. “I will repay thee”, are the words of Christ.

“And be ye kind one to another, tenderhearted, forgiving one another, even as God for Christ’s sake hath forgiven you” (Eph 4:32).

“Christ suffered for us, leaving us an example, that ye should follow his steps” (1Pe 2:21).

And now the lawyer’s question is put to him: “Which of these three was neighbour to the man who fell among thieves?” The answer was inescapable, but even then the fastidious Jew could not bring himself to name the man by race. So instead: “He that shewed mercy on him.” A neighbor is one who shows mercy, who offers help and love to those who do not deserve it. Even the most blatant self-interest leads us to love those who love us; there is no special sacrifice in this. True love that emulates the Master must stretch out to include those who may be separated from us. Ceremonial purity may pass by on the other side, holding its garments aloof, that it be not touched by the fallen condition of others. But true love looks upon misfortune, stops to help, binds up wounds, pouring in wine and oil, and walks step by step with those who have fallen, until they all come safely to the inn.

Before we go too far afield to find the neighbors we should love, let us look around us, at a divided, problem-riddled Christadelphia. Let us consider the brethren who hold the Truth just as we do, but who need a helping hand to be bound again to the brotherhood. Let us consider our attitudes toward those “other groups” who may be so close to us in beliefs but whom we put so far away in practice; are they our “Samaritans”?

“The Samaritans were neighbours in the most literal sense, but as for loving them, that seemed impossible. Christ loved them and caused his disciples to marvel at the manner in which he spake to the woman at Jacob’s well and afterwards to others who came out to hear him. The Jews as a whole almost made it a part of their religion to hate the Samaritans, and if they were able to analyze their own feelings they would probably have to admit that the hatred was directly traceable to the fact of their being such near neighbours. This is a common weakness of poor human nature. Those who are near but not quite with us arouse more bitterness of feelings than complete strangers. Then when such an evil feeling has been once started, the deceitful heart begins to build up fancies to justify the hatred, thus further traducing those who have already been wronged” (GL 66).

Good shepherd

The Good Shepherd

“On the roads of Palestine, and on the hills, you see the good shepherd. He comes along at the head of his flock, generally carrying over his shoulders a lamb or an injured sheep.

“A most remarkable thing is the sympathy that exists between him and his flock. He never drives them as our own shepherds drive their sheep. He always walks at their head, leading them along the roads and over the hills to new pasture: and, as he goes, he sometimes talks to them in a loud sing-song voice, using a weird language unlike anything I have ever heard in my life.

“Early one morning I saw an extraordinary sight not far from Bethlehem. Two shepherds had evidently spent the night with their flocks in a cave. The sheep were all mixed together and the time had come for the shepherds to go in different directions. One of the shepherds stood some distance from the sheep and began to call. First one, then another, then four or five animals ran toward him; and so until he had counted his whole flock.

“More interesting than the sight of this was the knowledge that Jesus must have seen exactly the same sight and described it in his own words: ‘He calleth his own sheep by name, and leadeth them out. And when he putteth forth his own sheep, he goeth before them, and the sheep follow him: for they know his voice. And a stranger they will not follow…’ This parable spake Jesus unto them. ‘I am the good shepherd, and know my sheep, and am known of mine’ ” (HVM 154).

“I notice that some of the flock keep near the shepherd, and follow whithersoever he goes, without the least hesitation, while others stray about on either side, or loiter far behind; and he often turns round and scolds them in a sharp, stern cry.

“Not unlike the Good Shepherd. Indeed, I never ride over these hills, clothed with flocks, without meditating upon this delightful theme. Our Saviour says that the good shepherd, when he putteth forth his own sheep, goeth before them, and they follow (John 10:4). This is true to the letter. They are so tame and so trained that they follow their keeper with the utmost docility… Any one that wanders is sure to get into trouble.

“Some sheep always keep near the shepherd, and are his special favorites. Each of them has a name, to which it answers joyfully; and the kind shepherd is ever distributing to them choice portions which he gathers for that purpose. These are the contented and happy ones. They are in no danger of getting lost or into mischief, nor do wild beasts and thieves come near them. The great body, however, are mere worldlings, intent upon their own pleasures or selfish interests. They run from bush to bush, searching for variety or delicacies, and only now and then lift their heads to see where the shepherd is…

“Did you ever see a shepherd gather the lambs in his arms, and carry them in his bosom (Isa 40:11)? Often; and he will gently lead along the mothers, in those times when to overdrive them even for a single day would be fatal (Gen 33:13)” (LB 202-205).

Gospel, the

“Go ye into all the world, and preach the gospel to every creature. He that believeth and is baptized shall be saved; but he that believeth not shall be damned” (Mar 16:15,16).

“But when they believed Philip preaching the things concerning the kingdom of God, and the name of Jesus Christ, they were baptized, both men and women” (Acts 8:12).

“For I [Paul] am not ashamed of the gospel of Christ: for it is the power of God unto salvation to every one that believeth; to the Jew first, and also to the Greek” (Rom 1:16).

“And the scripture, foreseeing that God would justify the heathen through faith, preached before the gospel unto Abraham, saying, In thee shall all nations be blessed” (Gal 3:8).

The word ‘gospel’ means ‘good news or tidings’. It comes from the Greek word ‘euangelion”, which occurs 101 times in the New Testament. Although the word ‘gospel’ is a New Testament word, its roots are firmly fixed in the Old Testament. As Gal 3:8 (see above) shows, the gospel was preached thousands of years before Jesus was born. To understand the good news preached by Jesus and his disciples, the good news taken by Paul out into the Roman Empire, the good news we receive today, we must appreciate that its origins are to be found at the beginning of time. Indeed, the Apostle Peter states that the gospel he preached had been preached “since the world began” (Acts 3:21). The four references above set out clearly the importance of the gospel and give a framework for understanding it:

  1. to believe the gospel brings salvation
  2. to disregard the gospel brings damnation
  3. if the gospel is believed then baptism must follow
  4. the gospel message is information about the Kingdom of God and the work of the Lord Jesus Christ
  5. the hope of salvation is available to all men and women of all nationalities
  6. faith (belief) that God will accomplish His purpose of bringing salvation through Jesus comes through hearing the gospel message
  7. the gospel we receive today is the same gospel that Abraham believed 4,000 years ago.

The gospel in both Old and New Testaments

The writings of the Apostle Paul show clearly that the gospel message existed before he began his ministry. Before the Lord Jesus Christ was born it was spoken of by the prophets of the Old Testament, preached to Israel in the wilderness and believed and acted on by Abraham (Rom 1:1,2; 2Ti 3:15; Heb 4:2; Gal 3:6-9).

The New Testament describes the gospel as “the hope of Israel”, and Paul and all those who accepted and believed this gospel identified their faith with that of Abraham and faithful men and women in Israel of old (Acts 26:6,7; 28:20; Rom 4:11; Gal 3:29).

The work of Jesus was “to confirm the promises made unto the fathers: and that the Gentiles might glorify God for His mercy” (Rom 15:8,9). The gospel/good news is that God through Christ fulfils the promises to Abraham and Israel, and thus opens up a way of salvation, that all men and women might have eternal life in His Kingdom on this earth (Acts 13:32-39). Resurrection from the dead, a physical experience, is the great hope enshrined in the promises of God, and faith in this is at the heart of the true gospel (1Co 15:20-26; Psa 71:20,21; Isa 26:19; Joh 11:21-27). Abraham had faith in the resurrection from the dead, as Heb 11:13-19 shows. Two incidents in his life especially demonstrate this. Gen 15 shows Abraham asking, “whereby shall I know that I shall inherit [the land]?” (v 8), and he is reassured that, even though he will die “in a good old age”, God has made a covenant with him to give him his eternal inheritance (vv 15,18). Gen 22 contains the story of Abraham being prepared to offer his son Isaac, and in so doing demonstrating his faith in resurrection from the dead (Heb 11:19).

The things concerning the Kingdom

When Philip preached the gospel to the people in Samaria, “the things concerning the kingdom of God” were an important part (Acts 8:12). It was necessary for people to know and understand about the Kingdom prior to being baptized. This Kingdom was the one that Abraham believed in and looked forward to, being described in the promises made by God to him (Gen 12:1-3; 13:14-17; Gen 15). Abraham expected the Kingdom to be on the earth, as can be seen from Rom 4:13: “For the promise, that he should be the heir of the world, was not to Abraham, or to his seed, through the law, but through the righteousness of faith”. Stephen, the first martyr, points out that Abraham still awaits the fulfillment of the promises made by God concerning the earthly Kingdom: “He [God] gave him none inheritance in it, no, not so much as to set his foot on: yet He promised that He would give it to him for a possession” (Acts 7:5). Heb 11:39,40 confirms that Abraham will inherit this earthly Kingdom along with faithful believers at a future time.

Jesus “went about… preaching the gospel of the kingdom”, as did his disciples (Mat 4:23; Luk 9:2,6,11). When he was born, the message of the angel was, “the Lord God shall give unto him the throne of his father David: and he shall reign over the house of Jacob for ever; and of his kingdom there shall be no end” (Luk 1:32,33). Here is the link to the descendants of Abraham, showing that the Kingdom will be an everlasting Kingdom reigned over by Christ.

Jesus taught his followers to pray, “Thy kingdom come. Thy will be done in earth, as it is in heaven” (Mat 6:10), having the same expectation as that of Abraham. Along with his teaching, Jesus performed miracles, which gave a cameo of what the Kingdom will be like. The blind received sight, the deaf heard, the lame walked, disease was cured; he even raised the dead. The poor were justly treated and the hungry fed. Even the wind and waves obeyed his voice. His teaching showed men and women how to live and worship. This was a foretaste of the Kingdom spoken of by the prophets (Isa 35; Psa 37:11; 72; Mic 4:1-4).

The things concerning the name of Jesus Christ

To live for ever in this wonderful Kingdom it will be necessary for death to be overcome. Death is a punishment for sin, and every one save Christ deserves to die (Gen 3:17-19; Rom 5:12). As Paul says, “the wages of sin is death”; but he goes on to say, “…but the gift of God is eternal life through Jesus Christ our Lord” (Rom 6:23). That is why Christ says, “Your father Abraham rejoiced to see my day: and he saw it, and was glad” (Joh 8:56). Abraham looked forward to the time when the Son of God would make it possible for death to be overcome through his sinless life. Hebrews confirms that Jesus came to put away sin, and in his sacrifice our sins are forgiven (Heb 9:11,12,26; 10:10). Jesus did not die instead of us, but his sacrifice is the means by which our sins are forgiven and we can be made immortal (1Co 15:3,4,20-23).

Paul teaches that it is belief in the things of the Kingdom and the work of Jesus that leads to baptism into the saving name of Jesus (Rom 6:1-6), and in baptism we are linked to Abraham and his faith (Gal 3:26-29).

So the gospel that has been preached for thousands of years holds out to all men and women the hope of eternal life in God’s Kingdom on the earth reigned over by Jesus Christ.

Gospel and its social implications

Through the years we have all spent considerable time studying Bible prophecy and the events surrounding Jesus’ Second Coming. But we may have been less interested or concerned with the social and ethical consequences of our prophetic faith. The obvious danger of this deficiency is that we may be tempted to draw simplistic political conclusions from our study of prophetic details.

Many of us believe that, according to Bible prophecy, a Last Days Arab confederacy will attempt to annihilate Israel (Psa 83:1-8; Zec 14). Many of us also believe that the leader of such a confederacy will be a Middle East political figure, probably an Islamic Arab. Some others think the leader will be a Russian political figure. Either way, it is also believed, with good reason, that such an anti-Israel force will be destroyed by divine power.

What political conclusions do we draw from this? We might conclude that God is siding with the modern state of Israel and against the “evil” Arabs and/or the “evil” Russians. This in turn might lead us to endorse any and all of Israel’s actions, no matter how immoral or unjust. The irony is: we could end up favoring completely unbelieving Jews against Palestinian or Russian Christians.

The apostle Peter told Cornelius and his family:

“God does not show favoritism but accepts men from every nation who fear him and do what is right” (Acts 10:34,35).

And the apostle Paul wrote:

“You are all sons of God through faith in Christ Jesus, for all of you who were baptized into Christ have clothed yourselves with Christ. There is neither Jew nor Greek… “

— he could as easily have written, “neither Jew nor Arab, neither American nor Russian nor Iraqi nor Palestinian” —

“… slave nor free, male nor female, for you are all one in Christ Jesus” (Gal 3:26-28).

So, even if the final enemy of God (according to prophecy) will be an Arab (or a Russian) leading an Arab and/or Muslim coalition, this does not mean that all present-day Arabs (or Russians) are enemies of God. Nor will it mean that every Arab will prove to be evil when that time does come. During the holocaust, not every German was a Nazi. Some German Christians protested Hitler’s actions. Some even risked their own lives to save Jews.

Similarly, not every Jew or Israeli is a child of God. When some of the Jewish elite questioned Jesus’ teaching, and protested that “Abraham is our father” (John 8:39), Jesus disagreed:

“If you were Abraham’s children… then you would do the things Abraham did… You belong to your father, the devil… “

— a charge equivalent to “seed of the serpent” or “brood of vipers” (Mat 3:7; 23:33) —

“… He who belongs to God hears what God says. The reason you do not hear is that you do not belong to God” (John 8:39,47).

God is not on the side of modern Israel as opposed to the Arabs. He is rather on the side of His children, those from all nations who have called on the name of the Lord (Rom 10:11-13).

But, having said this, we should not conclude either that God has rejected natural Israel:

“Did God reject his people? By no means! I am an Israelite myself, a descendant of Abraham, from the tribe of Benjamin. God did not reject his people, whom he foreknew” (Rom 11:1,2).

And so there is a very real tension in our prophetic studies… because Last Days prophecies do indicate that God will save Israel from the hostile Arab forces that opppose it. Can we resolve this tension?

Yes, by understanding that God will save Israel (really, a remnant of Israel) not because they are natural sons of Abraham, but because they (the remnant) will have become true believers in the God of Abraham and the Son of that God:

“If they do not persist in unbelief, they will be grafted in, for God is able to graft them in again… Israel has experienced a hardening in part until the full number of the Gentiles has come in. And so all [true] Israel will be saved, as it is written: ‘The deliverer will come from Zion; he will turn godlessness away from Jacob. And this is my covenant with them when I take away their sins’ ” (Rom 11:23,25-27).

The phrase “when I take away their sins” indicates a cleansing for Israel (true Israel, the “remnant”), brought about through their repentance and faith (see, for example, Zec 12:10 — 13:3, which is the prelude to Zec 14).

But we do well to remember, in the meantime, that God is not truly on the side of unbelievers (no matter what their ethnicity), and that we must be careful not to champion nationalistic states when their actions are ungodly. In the conflicts yet to come, we must favor neither nationalistic Israel nor nationalistic Arab, but Christ!

“If you belong to Christ, then [and then only] you are [truly] Abraham’s seed, and heirs according to the promise” (Gal 3:29).


Acknowledgment: Some of the above is drawn from an article by Mark Mattison in The Restitution Herald, Oct-Nov 1994.

Gossip

Gossip:

Psa 19:14: Notice that God links the words of our mouth and the meditations of our heart.

Gossip defined: Idle or malicious talk about someone with a desire or intention to injure him or her in some fashion.

God places gossip in the most complete list of sins in the Bible and shows how it is interrelated with all these sins: (a) Rom 1:28-31: No wonder God hates it; (b) 2Ti 3:1-3 (slanderous); (c) Exo 20:12-16 (false testimony); (d) Pro 6:16-19 (false witness, dissension).

The issue for the believer is that gossip does not fit who we are. The idea that a person could be praying and talking to God, while at the same time destroying someone with gossip simply doesn’t work.

Why do people engage in gossip?

  • Pride.
  • It is a means by which they can express their anger or their bitterness toward someone without confronting them.

  • People gossip to pull others down to their level… or

  • To destroy someone else.
  • Or perhaps simply because they have a careless tongue.

  • It is the influence of other people.

Consequences in the life of the person who is the object of the gossip:

  1. Pain.
  2. Suffering.
  3. Hurt.
  4. Intense pain.

Some say they have the right to speak the truth. You may have a legal right to speak the truth, but you don’t have a Biblical right to say everything you know.

Consequences for the one who gossips:

  • Mat 12:33,34.
  • Mat 15:10,11.

  • Gossip defiles the one who practices it.

  • It reveals his/her lack of discipline.

  • It shows he/she is ruled by sin.

  • It drives godly people away from him/her.

  • It destroys his/her fellowship with God.

Little minds discuss people. Average minds discuss events. Great minds discuss ideas.

Cautions:

  • Pro 20:19.
  • Do not associate with a gossip.

  • Eph 4:29-30.

  • It grieves the Holy Spirit when a person is gossiping.

How to cure gossip:

  • Repentance.
  • The gossiper may need to make restitution, but you must be careful because that can sometimes only increase the problem.

  • Don’t associate with gossips.

  • Pray for the person.

For whom Christ died (CMPA)

“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). “And truly our fellowship is with the Father, and with his Son Jesus Christ… and the blood of Jesus Christ his Son cleanseth us from all sin” (1Jo 1:3-7). (Scriptural quotations in the text are either AV or RV.)

Why then should it be that of all things that have divided brethren over the years, the most deep-seated and long-lived controversies have centred upon the nature of the act which revealed the love of God, the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ and the true meaning of fellowship? The answer is twofold. First, brethren have in all sincerity, and rightly, insisted that seriously inadequate ideas about the Atonement can be no proper basis for a fellowship built upon “our common salvation”. Although John speaks of walking in light or darkness as the test of fellowship which God applies, the darkness of the understanding does also alienate from the life of God. Secondly, however, understanding has often been clouded by the use of non-scriptural phrases, or even words of scripture abstracted from a context, to be bandied about in discussion. The truth is that slogans are a counterfeit coinage in the exchange of Scriptural ideas. So phrases like “clean flesh”, “free life”, “defiled Christ”, and even the hyphenated phrase “sin-in-the-flesh”, carrying their own emotional overtones, not to mention shades of meaning, for different people who use them, have degraded the discussion of a majestic theme into a wrangle and barred the way to a common understanding of Scriptural truth.

One thing is certain. If it pleased God in His love to give His Son to die for us, it was to inspire us to love in our turn: for the Father, and the Son, and one another. We shall not have begun to understand the mystery of the death of Christ, no matter how exact our knowledge of the facts, if what we know leaves us with any will to bite and devour one another. The most elementary first principles of the meaning of the death of our Lord will have passed us by if in any way our acquaintance with it allows us to breathe out threatenings and slaughter against one another, or unsubmissively to go about to establish our own righteousness. The sufferings of Christ teach us not only truth, but a frame of mind: for they that are Christ’s have crucified the flesh, with its affections and lusts. Paul is writing in the shadow of the cross when he writes: “Use not your freedom for an occasion to the flesh, but through love be servants one to another.” (John 3:16 ; Rom 5:8 ; 1Jo 4 :11; Phi 2:5; Gal 5:13-26; Rom 10:3; Acts 9:1.)

Another thing is no less certain. If God could foreshadow the offering of His Son in terms of many different sacrifices, and prefigure his work by means of an elaborate Tabernacle, and of priests in robes of intricate design, then we shall not be able to express the work he did in a set phrase or two of our own making, and suppose that we have comprehended it all. If the New Testament can speak of the death of Christ in relation to us as though it were the ransoming of slaves, or the crucifixion and burial of his friends as well as himself, or being washed clean by sprinkling of his blood, or the making and sealing of a covenant, and in other ways yet, any simple statements we might make on this subject, even when they are true and helpful, must inevitably leave much unsaid. It follows from this that any knowledge we have at any time on this subject should continue to grow as our experience, both of life and of the Word of God, becomes deeper and richer, and new needs call forth new understanding. (Much of Exo-Num, and the summaries in Heb 1-10; Mat 20:28; Rom 6:1-11; Col 2: 11-l5; Heb 9:11-14; 12:24; 9:20; Col 1:24.)

A third thing is as sure. The cross of Christ will not be so hard to receive that only the learned in the Law can profit from it. There is enough in its scope to occupy all our hearts and minds for all our life: there is meaning enough in a simple and faithful acceptance of its call to give us grace and peace from that point on, and teach us love and forbearance with one another. No words of ours, however true, will exhaust the riches of a subject so vast:

“O the depth of the riches both of the wisdom and the knowledge of God! how unsearchable are his judgments, and his ways past tracing out! For who hath known the mind of the Lord? or who hath been his counsellor?” (Rom 11:33-34).

Our Need and Helplessness

We must start at this point, for otherwise we shall have no conception of what redemption means. We shall have no real understanding of what it is from which we seek deliverance. Even worse, we might be looking for the wrong thing: forgiveness without strings and without real repentance, or even a sort of legal bargain which will grant us righteousness without real effort or response from us.

The Bible is very plain. Of the nature of Adam after he fell there is no doubt. In the day that he sinned he was condemned to death. From that moment he was as good as dead. “By one man sin entered into the world and death by sin.” All of us, save One, actually do sin and all, without any exception at all, are faced with the urge to do so, which is part and parcel of our fallen nature.

History shows it: the Fall of Adam was followed by the murder of Abel, and then by the multiplication of wickedness which arose from the indulgence of “every imagination of the thought of man’s heart”. (Gen 3; Rom 5:12; 3:23; Heb 4:15; Gen 4; 6:5.)

Precept shows it too: the last quotation was almost a statement of what man’s heart is like, and immediately following the Flood God pronounces that “the imagination of man’s heart is evil from his youth”, a very plain statement of where sin springs from, stating equally plainly that we are not only tempted to sin from without: the temptation is there, powerful and urgent within. As James puts it, “Every man is tempted when he is drawn away of his own lusts, and enticed.” The same root source of all our sinning is found in Jeremiah’s statement, “The heart of man is deceitful above all things, and it is desperately sick.” Paul makes the terrible statement that God gave hardened sinners over “in the lust of their own hearts” to all the evils to which they were abandoned. His picture of himself as of a man striving (so long as he was without Christ) helplessly against sin that dwelleth in him, unable to resist that which his enlightened conscience taught him to hate, is that of a man whose own desires war in his members against the will of God (like “your lusts that war in your members” of James). It leads him to the conclusion that good laws can never make a man good, because they are “weak through the flesh”. And to Paul the flesh is a term which denotes the natural man, whose natural works he lists as “fornication, uncleanness, lasciviousness, idolatry, sorcery, enmities, strife, jealousies, wraths, factions, divisions, heresies, envyings, drunkenness, revellings, and such like” (that expressive etcetera at the end revealing that there is no limit to the things of which the natural man is capable, and to which he is by nature disposed). (Gen 8:21; Jam 1:14; Jer 17:9; Rom 1:24, and throughout Rom 1-3; 7:1-24; 8:3; Jam 4:1; Gal 5:19-21.)

We need only the Lord Jesus’ own confirmation of our position. And this he provides when he rejects the idea that defilement comes from outside, and tells us quite plainly whence come all our promptings to evil:

“That which proceedeth out of the man, that defileth the man. For from within, out of the heart of men, evil thoughts proceed, fornication, thefts, murders, adulteries, coveting, wickedness, deceit, lasciviousness, an evil eye, railing, pride, foolishness: all these evil things proceed from within, and defile the man” (Mark 7:1-23).

So there we have our human nature: through no fault of our own each one of us inherits desire contrary to the will of God. This is the “law of sin in our members”. When we indulge it we actually commit sin. Our nature can only be like that of Adam after the Fall; nor can it be said that terms like “clean” or “undefiled” are in accord with the Scripture teaching set out above. So long as this nature is with us we are unfit for the Kingdom of God. That is why a man needs to be born again, and why the Lord Jesus Christ died and rose again to make this possible. (John 3:3-5; Gal 5: 21; 1Co 6:10.)

Like Unto His Brethren

Of course, the Lord Jesus Christ was born Son of God, as well as Son of man. And a very important thing it is that God was his Father. Yet it is vital to establish that the Lord’s bodily nature was like our own, temptations and all. It is very readily done: he was made of a woman made under the Law; he was made in the likeness of men; because the children whom he came to redeem are of flesh and blood, he also himself in like manner partook of the same, he was made in all points like his brethren; he was sent in the likeness of sinful flesh. No distinction is ever made between the fleshly nature of the Lord and that of the rest of men: and therefore, having shown what this heritage implies in the way of temptation for us, we have already shown it for the Lord too. Those same desires which are strong in us, and which we fail to resist, were strong in him also. (Gal 4:4; Phi 2:7-8; Heb 2:14; 2:17; Rom 8:3.)

So, notwithstanding his divine sonship, he learned obedience by the things that he suffered. He was tempted in all points like ourselves. It was with strong crying and tears that he endured his trials. No matter by what means they came to him in the wilderness, his temptations, the desire for food, for popularity and for power, were keenly felt in his heart and had to be rejected. When meditating entirely within himself he could contemplate the possibility of seeking escape from his hour rather than glorifying the name of God. He knew the attractiveness of deliverance from his foes with the help of twelve legions of angels, and needed to put aside the thought. Being a man he needed the conscious and continuous discipline of emptying himself, taking on himself the form of a servant, becoming and remaining obedient, even unto the death of the cross. His temptations were so like our own that, as our High Priest, he draws constantly upon the recollection of his own trials as he resisted temptation, and so can be touched with the feeling of our infirmities, able to succour them that are tempted because he suffered under temptation himself. (Heb 5:8; 4:15; 2:18; Mat 4:1-11; John 12:27; Phi 2:5-8.)

Even though he did no sin, and all his words and deeds were pure from his youth up, he was not prepared to allow men to call him good, as with the inherent and unassailable goodness which belongs to God. When he used the word we translate “perfect” about himself, it was only of what he would become as a result of his death and resurrection. When the Letter to the Hebrews uses the same word three times about him, it is again what he had achieved by his death. God made him perfect by suffering; being made perfect he became the Author of eternal salvation; the word of God’s promise appoints the Son as priest, perfected for evermore. The Bible recognizes throughout the weakness of the Son of God in the days of his flesh, and places in his reliance upon the Word of God and upon the strength he sought from Him the credit for his victory: ”The Lord is at my right hand, therefore I shall not be moved.” (Mark 10:17-18; Luke 13:32; Heb 2:10; 5:9; 7:28; Psa 16:8.)

When Paul speaks of Jesus as coming “in the likeness of sinful flesh” (or flesh of sin), or “in the likeness of men”, he cannot be understood as meaning that Jesus’ make-up resembled these things, but was in reality different. In both cases he clearly means that, though our human nature left to itself had failed to overcome sin, when God sent His own Son born in the same human nature the victory was achieved. That the Lord’s fleshly nature was that of Adam after he fell, is seen in the fact that he offered up prayers “with strong crying and tears, unto him that was able to save him from death: and was heard in that he feared. Though he were a Son, yet learned he obedience by the things which he suffered.” There is no need to rush to the Lord’s defence as though there were any discredit to him in having been born with a nature prone to sin. This was his lot, which he accepted and overcame. Far greater was the triumph of battling against sin in a body where a fallen nature was entrenched, than would have been the case had he commenced in innocence with a human nature unspoiled by heritage from Adam. And far greater was his brotherhood in affliction, and now in mediation, with his brethren, when we acknowledge that he conquered that very nature, with all its urge to turn away from God, which we know in our own consciences so well. There is real meaning in the words “to put away sin by the sacrifice of himself” when this is acknowledged; and in the fullest possible sense he destroyed the devil through death on the cross when, after the pattern of the serpent which Moses lifted up in the wilderness, he finally put away the power of sin from himself, and became the priest who can lead us in ultimate victory over the same power. (Rom 8:3; Phi 2:7; Heb 5:7-8; 9:26; John 3:14; Num 21:9.)

Yet though the Lord had our nature, to brandish when speaking of him the words “defiled”, “cursed”, or “condemned”, is both unseemly and beyond the warrant of Scripture. No defiled word or deed ever escaped him, and it were far better to concentrate on his behaviour (“who did no sin, neither was guile found in his mouth”), in spite of the limitations which he shared with us all. And though it is true that fleshly nature is unfitted for immortality or for eternal fellowship with God, it is foolish to speak as though the beloved Son was estranged from his Father by his nature. All the evidence of his life, his prayers, his Father’s commendation (at baptism, transfiguration and close to the time of the cross) is that he and his Father shared the closest communion, save for the briefest necessary moment on the cross itself. During his mortal life the Son was loved and cherished by his Father. No doubt it would have been otherwise had he turned aside to fulfil the lusts of the flesh, but this he never did. And as we trust through his work that we, now in this time, may be regarded as sons of the Father despite the weakness and proneness to sin which still exists in our members, we should rejoice in the Father’s help and companionship for the Son in his struggle against sin, rather than invent an estrangement which corresponds to nothing real in the Gospel record of the relationship between the Father and his beloved Son.

The only association of the idea of a curse with Christ is in connection with the curse of the Law where Christ is spoken of as having “become a curse for us”, a reference, neither to his nature nor to any failure to keep “all things which are written in the book of the law to do them”, but to the manner of the death by which he glorified God.

If the word “condemnation” is used at all in relation to our Lord, we must carefully guard against the misunderstandings which this term could introduce. Like us, our Lord Jesus was subject to infirmity and mortality, as his mission required. But no condemnation which would imply guilt or God’s displeasure can be affirmed of the beloved Son of the Father. Jesus was unique among men in that his constant submission to the will of God ensured unbroken fellowship with his Father. (1Pe 2:22; Mat 3:17; 11:27; 17:5; John 3:35; 11:41,42; 12:28; Gal 3: 10-14.)

This, of course, brings us to the point where we must consider the Father’s part in the work of His Son. Jesus was like us in his fleshly nature: and this he successfully overcame, so that at his death “the prince of this world” could come and find nothing in him. All this had been kept at bay while he lived, and all the weakness of flesh was now to be destroyed in his death. Yet, as no man had the right to make himself a priest, so has no man the right to make himself a saviour. Only God could appoint the man and the time. No man left to himself can achieve spotless righteousness. So, of necessity, when righteousness was achieved, it had to be by one given unfettered access to God, who chose of his own free will to accept it (“Not my will, but thine, be done”). Sonship of the Father conveyed an insight, an intimacy with his God, an unequalled knowledge of what was in man, fitting him eminently to be the Saviour — if only he would choose to be so. It conveyed peculiar temptations, too, such as other men do not know (for which of us would make himself a laughing stock by trying to turn stones into bread? or commit suicide by throwing himself unsupported from great heights? or think of snapping his fingers to make the world his kingdom? Yet all these things were possible to him, and with hard travail, and by constant trust in his Father, were rejected). Sonship of God did not make him sinless, but it did make sinlessness possible. And when all was done, it was plain to all concerned that the work was a work of God, without whom sinlessness could not have been achieved. In asking His righteous Son to die, the Father showed how the power of sin could be brought to an end. In granting him life when he had died, He showed that the victory was won indeed, and in appointing him a mediator for his brethren He made accessible to us, through him, all the blessings which he was sent to bring. (John 14:30; Heb 5:4-5; Luke 22:42; 4:1-13.)

A Merciful and Faithful High Priest

We have purposely kept words like sacrifice, atonement, and priest to a minimum. This is not because they are either unimportant or irrelevant, but because many of our difficulties arise from a failure to remember that the fundamental thing in the purpose of God was always intended to be the coming, life, death, resurrection, ascension, and return of the Lord Jesus Christ. All the types and shadows pointed to him, and were there because of that. He was what he was, and did what he did, because this was the purpose of God in him, and not because of what the types said. They did nothing to take away sin; it was impossible that they ever could. They helped men to remember that sin was real (“a remembrance made every year”) and they pointed to the time when it really would be conquered. So in the providence of God they were made available to do the best that pictures and symbols can do to point to the real thing.

And so we see the Lord Jesus Christ risen from the dead and seated at the right hand of God. He has overcome for himself the power of sin and has been granted endless life as the proper outcome. He has taught us the reality and the power of sin, and bids us surrender in baptism all our confidence in ourselves. This baptism joins us with the message of his cross, and teaches us that our old man must be crucified with him with its affections and lusts, and then buried with him. It joins us also with the hope of his new life, giving us an introduction into the presence of the Father through him, and telling us that, just as the Father forgives our past sins as a whole, when we surrender in baptism, so He is active through His Son in hearing our prayers for forgiveness, and for spiritual help now. And that Son is the more able to help from the knowledge of temptation and its power, which he faced and defeated in his life and finally in his death. Our acceptance of the cross is the acceptance of the righteousness of God — and also of His grace and love; it is the acceptance of the helplessness of our nature — and also of the way of help through Christ; it is the thankful receiving of forgiveness and reconciliation — and also the promise that sin may be forgiven yet, and the man of God progressively strengthened unto all good works.

It is, moreover, the joining together in one body by the cross of diverse people, of many races and different temperaments, called upon to make real in their life of fellowship the love of Christ, who, having loved his own which were in the world, loved them to the end. It is a topic not for strife but for endless contemplation in growing wonder. Its very humiliation, which the Lord endured first and which Paul commends to us (“Let this mind be in you which was also in Christ Jesus”), makes it imperative that our new calling be fulfilled in love and forbearance one of another. And if we should find it needful to debate and to instruct, then, on pain of our own rejection before God, it must be in a spirit which would never willingly, through any folly, or arrogance of ours, endanger the salvation of him, of anyone, for whom Christ died.

COMMITTEE OF THE CHRISTADELPHIAN

July, 1971

Forsaken

“My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?” (Psa 22:1).

These words are quoted by Jesus as he hung on the cross (Mat 27:46; Mar 15:34; Luk 24:44). But was this literally true? Was Jesus actually abandoned by his Father? The answer must be: “NO!”:

  1. In quoting Psa 22, Jesus switched from the Hebrew azavtani (which means “forsaken me”) to the Aramaic sabachthani (which may mean “entangled me”: the same word occurs in Gen 22:13 for the “thicket” in which the sacrificial ram was found). So perhaps this should be read: ‘My God, my God, thou hast [an assertion, not a question!] ensnared and provided ME as the sacrificial victim!’

  2. If Jesus were abandoned by his Father, then the vivid and twice-repeated type of Gen 22 — which is suggested by the above — is quite misleading! “They went both of them together (the Father and the Son)” (Gen 22:6,8). The Father went with the Son to the cross (cp Rom 8:31,32, which is citing Gen 22:12).

  3. The idea that God abandoned His Son is so important, if true, that it ought to be supported by more than one solitary verse.

  4. Psa 22:24 is explicit that Jesus was NOT left without divine help.

  5. The emphasis of such passages as Psa 18:4-17 is so strong as to require not desertion, but actually its very opposite.

  6. Other Messianic psalms speak of alarm or doubt such as is natural to human weakness (Psa 94:17-19, RV mg; Psa 71:9-12; 73:13,17,21,22; 42:5; 116:11). As lesser mortals experience a sense of loneliness and helplessness, so also must have Jesus. But in neither their case nor his was it true.

  7. “I will never leave thee nor forsake thee” was spoken to the first “Jesus” (Joshua: Jos 1:5), and applied to those in Christ (Heb 13:5). Then, is it conceivable that the servant is greater than his Lord?

  8. Psa 22:1 may carry the meaning: ‘Why does my God LET IT APPEAR to these my enemies that I am utterly forsaken?’ This is the very idea in Isa 49:14,15.

  9. Jesus cites “My God, my God, why have… ” as simply a reference to the psalm itself, to call the attention of those nearby to the whole of the psalm that was being fulfilled before their eyes.

  10. Other possibilities? Ever since Gethsemane, there had been no angels to strengthen or sustain him.

  11. Or… Jesus felt the removal of the Holy Spirit.

Gaal: redeemer

The Gaal/Redeemer

The Heb word gaal, or goel, has been translated “kinsman” (Num 5:8), “avenger” (Num 35:12), “revenger” (Num 35:19-27), “kinsfolk” (1Ki 16:11), “redeemer” (Job 19:25), “near kinsman” (Rth 2:20; 3:9), and “deliver” (Psa 119:154).

When God Himself proclaims Himself to be the Redeemer, He announces that He will become “next of kin” to those whom He will save. How did the great Creator become near of kin to us? By manifesting Himself in the flesh (2Co 5:19-21; Rom 8:3), through the birth of a Son who will bear the image and stamp of His character, while at the same time being a man.

Redemption of a Land Inheritance

The Land belongs to God, and individual Israelites never really owned it (Lev 25:23), though they were given the exclusive right to it so long as they kept the law. If a man fell into debt, and had to mortgage the land he inherited, it became the duty of the Gaal to purchase it, so as to retain possession of it in the family (Lev 25:23-27). On the year of Jubilee, however, the land which had passed out of the hands of the inheritor, reverted back to him; and therefore was redeemed by God Himself (Lev 25:9,10). Meanwhile, the Gaal acted on behalf of God.

The Land of Promise, which passed into the hands of strangers when Israel was taken into captivity, shall be redeemed by the true Gaal: God manifested in His Son (Psa 74:2; Isa 52:9).

Redemption of Slaves

If an Israelite, through poverty or any other reason, were sold into slavery to a stranger, it was the duty of the Gaal to redeem him, and thus restore him to freedom (Lev 25:47-53).

Through sin, man finds himself in bondage to the law of sin and death (Rom 7:3; 8:2), and utterly unable to redeem himself (Psa 49:7,8). But God, the Gaal of Israel, having manifested Himself in flesh in the person of the Lord Jesus Christ, assumes the position of near kinsman, and so the price of redemption is paid (1Pe 1:18,19; 1Co 6:20; 7:23).

Preserver of the Family

The next of kin also had the duty of preserving the family by marrying the widow of a deceased brother if he had died childless (Deu 25:5-10). Under such a law, the continuity of the family was maintained, even though its continuance may have been threatened by folly or disaster. The duty of Preserver of the Family is clearly linked with the duty to redeem the land inheritance. Boa, acting as the Gaal, made it possible for Ruth the alien to have fellowship with Israel, and a covenant relationship with God.

The Lord Jesus, as Gaal, has done likewise for us who are Gentiles (Eph 2:11-13; 3:6).

“For the grace of God that brings salvation has appeared to all men. It teaches us to say ‘No’ to ungodliness and worldly passions, and to live self-controlled, upright and godly lives in this present age, while we wait for the blessed hope — the glorious appearlng of our great God and Savior, Jesus Christ, who gave himself for us to REDEEM us from all wickedness, and to purify for himself a people that are his very own, eager to do what is good” (Tit 2:11-14).

(Adapted from HPM)

Gal, overview

Author: Paul

Time: AD 49

Summary: The letter to the believers in Galatia focuses on the divisions that Jewish Christians were causing among new Gentile converts. These “Judaizers” were trying to convince the Gentiles that they needed to be circumcised and to keep the ritual law in order to be saved. Paul argues that both Jew and Gentile alike enjoy in Christ complete salvation. Reliance on the Law was only a bondage to death and could not produce life-giving freedom, as only Christ could grant that freedom. Paul was showing that all legalistic variations of the Gospel are perversions of it and should be shown as such.

Judaizers: It could not have been easy for any Jew to ignore the things that he had been taught from childhood, especially fundamental things like circumcision, the observance of special feasts and the offering of sacrifices. Only the spiritually-minded, who had been taught by the Law of their own sinfulness and had come to understand their need for a redeemer, would have been ready to make the transition to Christianity.

Those who had kept the Law as a duty of conscience would have seen change as a betrayal of all their principles. Also, they would have seen it as forsaking all the privileges of their race. They would have assumed that the good things promised were theirs by keeping the rituals and they would have vigorously opposed any individual or sect that threatened their inheritance. It is not surprising therefore that the Jews posed a very real threat to the early ecclesias.

There was a class of Jew, however, who wanted a foot in both camps. He wanted the benefits of Christianity but wanted to avoid the wrath of the ritualistic Jewish elders. These Jews taught that Christianity was of the Jews and therefore it was necessary for its adherents to observe the Law and to be circumcised.

Indeed there was a decided reluctance in the early church to preach to the Gentiles at all. Although Jesus had told his disciples to go into all the world and preach the gospel to every creature, it still required a special vision to Peter and the gifts of the Holy Spirit to certain Gentiles before they were accepted as candidates for baptism. Even then, after a special council held at Jerusalem, it was recommended that certain aspects of the Law should be observed by the Gentiles, for they said, “Moses of old time hath in every city them that preach him, being read in the synagogue every Sabbath day.”

Of course these stipulations were only a temporary measure. The limitations were given for peace in the early church and not as an essential for salvation. It should be noted that the counsel given did not include circumcision (Acts 15:14,29).

Thus a group of Jews known as Judaizers arose. From the Biblical records, it would appear that wherever Paul established an ecclesia, they would follow and would teach the necessity for circumcision. They are mentioned in the Acts of the Apostles and in most of the epistles of Paul but in none so prominently as in his letter to the Galatians. It was in Galatia they seemed to have had most success; so much so that Paul was discredited and the gospel seriously threatened. Paul feared for the ecclesias and was roused to set the record straight. Accordingly, his attack upon Judaism was dauntless and devastating.

Key verse: “We, too, have put our faith in Christ Jesus that we may be justified by faith in Christ and not by observing the law, because by observing the law no one will be justified” (Gal 2:16).

Outline

1. Introduction: Gal 1:1-9
a) Greetings: Gal 1:1-5
b) Purpose of letter: Gal 1:6-9
2. Paul’s defense of his apostleship: Gal 1:10 – 2:14
a) Paul called by God: Gal 1:10-24
b) Paul accepted by apostles: Gal 2:1-10
c) Paul opposes Peter at Antioch: Gal 2:11-14
3. Salvation by faith not law: Gal 2:15 – 4:31
a) Justified by faith in Christ: Gal 2:15-21
b) The Galatians’ experience at conversion: Gal 3:1-5
c) Experience of Abraham: Gal 3:6-9
d) Curse of the law: Gal 3:10-14
e) Promises before the law: Gal 3:15-18
f) Purpose of the law: Gal 3:19-25
g) Sons not slaves: Gal 3:26 – 4:11
h) Personal appeal: Gal 4:12-20
i) Allegory of Hagar and Sarah: Gal 4:21-31
4. The life of liberty and faith: Gal 5:1 – 6:10
a) Exhortation to freedom: Gal 5:1-12
b) Liberty is not license: Gal 5:13-15
c) Life by the Spirit, not by the flesh: Gal 5:13-26
d Doing good to all: Gal 6:1-10
5. Conclusion: Gal 6:11-18

Gambling

Why should a Christadelphian avoid gambling?

First, its motive is a bad frame of mind: greed, or covetousness. And there are lots of passages about that.

Second, gambling exemplifies a bad principle, that is, that wealth should be dependent on “chance” and not on services rendered (the sweat of the brow, figuratively). Does God bless the throw of the dice, or the spin of the wheel? Or the speed of one horse versus another (Psa 147:10)?

The third charge against gambling concerns its bad social effects. The gambler’s loss often leads to suffering for his wife (or — perhaps — her husband) and children; debt sometimes follows, and then theft or other illegal activities in an attempt to recoup the losses.

I suppose all of the above can be a ‘tough sell’, since the word itself does not occur in the Bible.

But the Bible does refer, unfavorably, to the gods “Fortune” and “Destiny”. Kind of like “Lady Luck”!:

“But as for you who forsake the LORD and forget my holy mountain, who spread a table for Fortune and fill bowls of mixed wine for Destiny” (Isa 65:11, NIV).

The NIV capitalizes both of these. They are proper names.

Apparently, both “Fortune” and “Destiny” were pagan gods. Some commentators will point out that “Fortune” (Heb “Gad”) was a Syrian deity of good fortune, and that “Destiny” (Heb “Meniy”) was another deity of Canaan.

Lady Luck actually IS the Roman goddess Fortuna. Fortuna was the patroness of gamblers, and so a favorite of soldiers. She survived into the middle ages as “Dame Fortune”, who dished out good and bad luck at random, using a device rather like a roulette wheel or “wheel of fortune” to pick recipients or victims.


Is gambling forbidden in scripture? While we may understand that it is wrong to play the lottery or to gamble, is there any scriptural proof that these practices are forbidden?

This issue is not one that is easy to resolve with a “thus saith the Lord”. There are scriptural approaches and we will do our best to provide you with some direction on the subject. I will relate my comments only to minor activities such as lotteries and raffles. I am confident that no reasonable brother would attempt to justify an addiction to the evils associated with high stakes gambling.

Covetousness?

One of the factors involved in this discussion is motivation. Why do we gamble? What is our real objective? It may be that the desire to be a winner in “Powerball” is rooted in covetousness. The master has seen fit to address this common weakness of the flesh in these words: “Take heed, and beware of covetousness: for a man’s life consisteth not in the abundance of the things which he possesseth” (Luk 12:15).

This instruction was not unique. It was included in the ten commandments: “Thou shalt not covet thy neighbour’s house, thou shalt not covet thy neighbour’s wife, nor his manservant, nor his maidservant, nor his ox, nor his ass, nor any thing that is thy neighbour’s” (Exo 20:17).

We are also instructed by the Apostle Paul: “Know ye not that the unrighteous shall not inherit the kingdom of God? Be not deceived: neither fornicators, nor idolaters, nor adulterers, nor effeminate, nor abusers of themselves with mankind, nor thieves, nor covetous, nor drunkards, nor revilers, nor extortioners, shall inherit the kingdom of God” (1Co 6:9,10).

Covetous is a word that means: “desiring more, eager for gain”. It is a word that can easily be applied to gambling, which incidentally means to “risk loss in order to gain an advantage”.

The same message is presented again in Col 3:2,5: “Set your affection on things above, not on things on the earth… Mortify therefore your members which are upon the earth; fornication, uncleanness, inordinate affection, evil concupiscence, and covetousness, which is idolatry.”

The word “covetousness” in this verse relates to avarice and greediness. “Concupiscence” means to desire, to long for or lust after. These are both characteristics which we are told to mortify — to destroy in our flesh. If our gambling is motivated by covetousness, or evil concupiscence, then it is clearly forbidden. The answer for each of us is in a honest self examination of our own heart.

Liberty?

On the other hand, it can be argued that the purchase of lottery tickets and or certain forms of gambling are harmless. Some are convinced that these matters should be treated as one of those Rom 14 issues. We are told in that chapter to “let every man be fully persuaded in his own mind” (Rom 14:5). “Happy is he that condemneth not himself in that thing which he alloweth” (v 22).

For those who choose gambling as one of their own forms of liberty, the Apostle Paul has this recommendation: “All things are lawful unto me, but all things are not expedient: all things are lawful for me, but I will not be brought under the power of any” (1Co 6:12).

In 1Co 10 he repeats this advice with an addition: “Everything is permissible — but not everything is beneficial. Everything is permissible- but not everything is constructive. Nobody should seek his own good, but the good of others” (1Co 10:23, NIV).

We do have certain freedoms in Christ. All of these liberties must be exercised with caution. Our personal freedom may adversely affect our brother, concerning which we read: “It is good neither to eat flesh, nor to drink wine, nor any thing whereby thy brother stumbleth, or is offended, or is made weak” (Rom 14:21). “But take heed lest by any means this liberty of yours become a stumblingblock to them that are weak” (1Co 8:9).

In another example, Peter tells us concerning our freedoms that we should have our “conversation honest among the Gentile… As free, and not using your liberty for a cloak of maliciousness, but as the servants of God” (I Peter 2:12,16).

Who do we Trust?

There are some other factors that should be considered in this discussion. When we gamble, (with a portion of the blessing that God has given to us), we may be placing our trust in the wrong place. Are we hoping for great gain from the devices of the princes of this land? We are told: “Put not your trust in princes, nor in the son of man, in whom there is no help. His breath goeth forth, he returneth to his earth; in that very day his thoughts perish” (Psa 146:3,4).

We know where we ought to place our trust: “Trust in the LORD with all thine heart; and lean not unto thine own understanding” (Pro 3:5). If we desire to increase our goods, then we should “Honour the LORD with thy substance, and with the firstfruits of all thine increase: So shall thy barns be filled with plenty, and thy presses shall burst out with new wine” (Pro 3:9-10).

The master adds this instruction: “Therefore take no thought, saying, What shall we eat? or, What shall we drink? or, Wherewithal shall we be clothed? (For after all these things do the Gentiles seek): for your heavenly Father knoweth that ye have need of all these things. But seek ye first the kingdom of God, and his righteousness; and all these things shall be added unto you. Take therefore no thought for the morrow: for the morrow shall take thought for the things of itself. Sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof” (Mat 6:31-34).

Not my Will?

Our attitude ought to be consistent with that of our master, who in his greatest need could say, “nevertheless not my will, but thine, be done” (Luke 22:42). We would be stretching the point, if we were to attempt to apply his example to our greed. Should we say to the Lord, “Please let me win the lottery, nevertheless, thy will be done”? James reminds us that “Ye ask, and receive not, because ye ask amiss, that ye may consume it upon your lusts” (Jam 4:3).

We may not have considered that the will of the Lord is a key factor in this discussion. In the casting of lots, (which does have a scriptural basis), we are told that the successor to Judas was chosen in this manner: “And they prayed, and said, Thou, Lord, which knowest the hearts of all men, show whether of these two thou hast chosen… And they gave forth their lots; and the lot fell upon Matthias; and he was numbered with the eleven apostles” (Acts 1:24,26).

For further evidence of this principle, we read in Pro 16:33: “The lot is cast into the lap; but the whole disposing thereof is of the LORD” (“every decision is from the LORD”, NIV).

It seems incredible indeed, that we can almost convince ourselves that God will bend His will, to be consistent with ours, when we have placed our hopes for the fulfillment of our dreams on the mammon of unrighteousness.

Conclusion

It is difficult for us to make the positive conclusion that forms of gambling such as the lottery are forbidden. Each of us must look into our own hearts to determine what our own motivation and practice will be. At the same time we are to be careful not to judge the heart of another man’s servant — “to his own master he standeth or falleth” (Rom 14:4).

We conclude with this suggestion: “Let us therefore follow after the things which make for peace, and things wherewith one may edify another” (Rom 14:19).

[Adv]


Also, see Lesson, Addiction.