VibbleSpace
25Aug/100

RSA Animate – An Empathic Society

I like this video on two levels.

First, I druel over the cartooning that is used to communicate complex ideas. That's what I want to do on VibbleSpace.

Second, this is a very compelling presentation that has huge implications for spiritual formation and what it means to be a follower of Jesus in a globalized society.

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23Jul/100

The Servant Songs of Isaiah

OK, roll up the sleeves of your mind, because this section really is going to dig deeper.  The study of Isaiah is a rich and rewarding one, but it is not as easy as it may seem.  For Christians, especially Christians who have been raised in the church, we are very familiar with certain passages that get read at Christmas and Easter every year.  Perhaps we aren’t aware that these sayings come from Isaiah, but we are familiar with phrases like,

“The virgin will be with child and will give birth to a son, and will call him Immanuel,”

and

“For to us a child is born,

to us a son is given,

and the government will be on his shoulders.

And he will be called

Wonderful Counselor, Mighty God,

Everlasting Father, Prince of Peace.”

or

But he was pierced for our transgressions,

he was crushed for our iniquities;

the punishment that brought us peace was upon him,

and by his wounds we are healed.

6 We all, like sheep, have gone astray,

each of us has turned to his own way;

and the LORD has laid on him

the iniquity of us all.”

If we are going to be good students of the Bible we must not be too quick to apply these directly to Jesus.  Scripture must always be read in the context in which it was written.  Isaiah was a preacher, proclaiming a message to the people of Jerusalem during the final days of Hezekiah and into the beginning of the wicked reign of King Manasseh.  Isaiah saw the wickedness of Manasseh and knew that the end was near for Jerusalem and the Temple.  The Babylonians were going to come in and destroy the city (the prophet Jeremiah was the witness to this event), tear down the Temple, and carry the people off to be in exile for 70 years.  This broke Isaiah’s heart.  After chapter 40 of his book, Isaiah began looking past the 70 years of exile and towards the hope of a restored Jerusalem and a people that were reunited with a proper relationship with Yahweh.  When we read Isaiah, and when we read about the Kingdom of God, we must first read it in the very literal, temporal sense of the restoration of the physical city of Jerusalem and the rebuilding of the Temple that took place under the leadership of Zurubbabel, Ezra, and Nehemiah.

With this in mind, we can now turn our attention to an extremely important, yet incredibly enigmatic, central character that recurrs in Isaiah’s teaching.  This is the Servant of the Lord.  Who is the servant?  Is it Isaiah?  Is it Cyrus, king of Persia, who would be the instrument for setting the people free?  Is it Zurubbabel, Ezra, or Nehemiah?  Or is it a future king that would reestablish the kingdom and make up for all the wickedness of the kings that Isaiah had witnessed?  Regardless of who it was, this Servant was also considered to be a Messiah (which simply means, “Annointed One.”  Remember, all the kings were annointed at their coronation and thus were, technically, messiahs).

The purpose for this article is twofold.  First, it is to expose you to the fact that not everyone is quick to attribute the Servant of the Lord in Isaiah to Jesus of Nazareth.  Second, it is to demonstrate just where the connection to Jesus as the Servant from Isaiah comes from.

This will be done in three parts.  First, the Servant Songs themselves.  Second, a commentary that gives a very different read on Isaiah 53 (just to show you the thought process), and third, the biblical connections to Jesus.

The Servant Songs

Isaiah 42:1-9

Isaiah 49:1-7

Isaiah 50:4-9

Isaiah 52:13-53:12

Isaiah 61:1-3

A Different Perspective

53:1-11a, The Many Acknowledge the Servant Has Borne Their Sin.

In thanksgiving psalms, the person rescued speaks of his vindication to the many, but here the many speak while the servant is silent, thus illustrating v. 7 (cf. Ps. 39:2, 9). They can hardly believe their rescue came from one so lowly (Isa. 53:1-3). Servants in the Bible were often of lowly origin: Moses, Gideon, and Jeremiah all reminded God of their lack of talent; even David in the estimate of his family was totally unsuitable as a candidate for kingship (1 Sam. 16:1-13).

In Isa. 53:4-6, the speakers declare the servant has borne their sins. Here we must attempt to answer two difficult questions: who are the speakers, and how does the servant bear others’ sins? The speaker seems to be exiled Israel, not the nations. In Second Isaiah the nations are spectators at the reemergence of Israel. They are part of important scenes as chorus, not protagonist. Israel, therefore, is “the many” whose sin the servant bears.

How does the servant bear the sins of Israel? One must avoid reading nt ideas into the Isaian text (Mark 10:45; 14:24; and parallels use similar language to interpret the death of Jesus) or denying vicarious suffering in the ot simply because it is not found anywhere else. A good starting point is the observation that most Hebrew words for sin can mean both the act and the state resulting from the act. “To bear the sin” therefore means to bear the consequences of sin. The people of the Exile, for example, had to bear the consequences of the sins of their pre-exilic ancestors, “Our fathers sinned and are no more [they are not living so as to suffer the consequences of their act], and we bear their sins” (Lam. 5:7).

How could the servant bear the sin of his contemporaries, “the many”? A partial answer is given by 50:4-11, in which the disciple accepted the sufferings of the Exile as sent by God; he offered his back to the smiters, his cheek to those who plucked his beard. Most of the exiles did not regard the Exile the way the servant did, to judge from the preaching of Jeremiah and Ezekiel. They fled from it, either attempting to return prematurely or giving up all hope of return and settling in. They did not bear the consequences of their sin. True expiation could come about only through obedient submission in the period of punishment and obedient return in the period of restoration. But so long as Israel, in the person of the servant, acted obediently, the nation continued to exist. In 53:4-6, the many finally come to this awareness.

Verses 7-9 speak of an unjust trial ending in a disgraceful death. Actual death seems unlikely; the servant’s rehabilitation in vv. 11b-12 would have to be a heavenly judgment scene. Rather, a “death experience” is described, like the psalmic “going down to the pit” (e.g., Pss. 28:1; 30:3; 88:4; 143:7). The servant’s entire life, from birth (Isa. 53:2) to death, was one of suffering and rejection.

In the last stanza of the speakers’ statement, 53:10-11a (unfortunately the text is damaged), the many see that the servant’s suffering was part of God’s plan. There is a hint in v. 10d, explicit in vv. 11b-12, that his reward is to possess the land; in Deuteronomy “to lengthen the days” is a phrase describing life in the promised land.

53:11b-12, The Servant’s Reward.

The servant’s self-conscious acceptance of the pain of exile as the deserved punishment from God, his “bearing of the sin” of Israel and his leading it in the exodus-conquest, wins him the great prize—possession of the land. To be in God’s land, Zion, makes one righteous, pleasing to God. Isa. 8:16-9:7, which speaks of possessing the land after the darkness of defeat, provides important clues to the meaning of the verses. Verse 11a should read, with lxx, “he shall see the light,” a reference to the dawning light in 9:2. Isa. 9:3 likens the joy of possessing the land to the joy of warriors dividing spoil (v. 12ab).

Due to the servant’s exemplary bearing of the guilt of all Israel, the whole people is now free to enjoy the great gift—the land. The servant’s suffering is accepted as valid, while the many—and the nations—look on in amazement.1

How we came to see Jesus as Isaiah’s Servant

The reason Christians so readily identify Jesus as the Servant in Isaiah is because Jesus and the Apostles did.  Isaiah is the most quoted OT prophet in the NT writings.  When Jesus stood up in the synagogue, at the beginning of his ministry, in Luke 4, he read from the Servant Song in Isaiah 61 and claimed that he was fulfilling that prophecy in their presence.

The important thing to remember is that Jesus’ interpretation of Isaiah was a radical departure from the contemporary interpretation of the text by the rabbis of his day.  The Jews were expecting the Messiah to be a mighty warrior who would suffer through battle and bear the iniquities of the nation through the bloodbath of overthrowing the oppressive armies that were still plaguing their holy city.

Below is a chart that demonstrates how the Apostles interpreted Isaiah after the events of Jesus’ life, death, and resurrection.  After Jesus completed his ministry and the Holy Spirit had been poured out in a dynamic way on ALL the people, not just the leaders, they were able to look back at Isaiah and the other prophets and see clearly what the intention was in their writings.

The Suffering Servant
Jesus fulfills Isaiah’s prophecy of the Suffering Servant.
The Prophecy The Fulfillment
He will be exalted (52:13) Philippians 2:9
He will be disfigured by suffering (52:14; 53:2) Mark 15:17, 19
He will be widely rejected (53:1, 3) John 12:37, 38
He will bear our sins and sorrows (53:4) Romans 4:25; 1 Peter 2:24, 25
He will make a blood atonement (53:5) Romans 3:25
He will be our substitute (53:6, 8 ) 2 Corinthians 5:21
He will voluntarily accept our guilt and punishment (53:7) John 10:11
He will be buried in a rich man’s tomb (53:9) John 19:38-42
He will justify many from their sin (53:10, 11) Romans 5:15-19
He will die with transgressors (53:12) Mark 15:27, 28; Luke 22:37

2

(Footnotes)

1Mays, J. L., Harper & Row, P., & Society of Biblical Literature. 1996, c1988. Harper’s Bible commentary . Harper & Row: San Francisco

2New Geneva study Bible. 1997, c1995 (electronic ed.) . Thomas Nelson: Nashville

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29Jun/100

A Good Q&A about the Bible and Sin

Someone recently asked me to answer some questions regarding the Bible, Sin, and judgment. I thought the questions were good ones, and I thought that others might benefit from the discussion. I'm not claiming to be the definitive word on this, of course, but this is where I'm at currently in my journey with Jesus. Enjoy!

Is God's word a rule book or a guide book?

Simple answer: it’s a guide book. It guides us into a dynamic relationship with the living God. True, it has lots of rules listed in the Old Testament. However, the Law of Moses was a specific document for a specific group of people in a specific time given by a loving God for the physical and spiritual protection of a very young, newly freed nation. The people took the law far beyond its purpose and worshipped it. Jesus came to deconstruct the distorted view of God and God’s law that the Jews had constructed through centuries of tradition, fear, and hatred and replace it with the indwelling Spirit that cannot be bound by rigid documents or doctrines. Additionally, the letters of the New Testament are not a new law for the church. They are the directives given by a pastor to a specific group of people in the context of a place and situation. We can learn a great deal from how the teacher handled the situation, but the letters were not meant to be law for all time.

What is your interpretation/understanding/commentary of the following passages:

Matthew 5:20-41

The Sermon on the Mount has a simple, overarching message. It was spoken to Jewish hearers who believed that God judged them based upon their external obedience to the laws of Moses. The message of Jesus was, “It doesn’t matter what your external behavior is, it is the condition of your heart that is the issue.” In other words, you can technically obey all the laws, and still have a rotten heart. That is the point of the specific passage highlighted here. Jesus says, “True, you haven’t murdered, but you still hate, so your heart is still sick.” Jesus wants to transform us from the inside out. If your heart is cleansed from self-loathing, shame, pride, envy, etc. and you have been set free to experience the love and grace of God, then your external behaviors will simply be the natural overflow of a clean heart.

Matthew 18:3-10

Children have clean minds. They look at the world with awe and wonder. They don’t have prejudice or doubt or fear or hatred. They are free to imagine and believe in the power of God to do anything. It is culture that beats them down and teaches them — both through instruction and experience — that people are scary and unreliable. Jesus calls us to become like children again and reach out to each other in openness.

Matthew 23:33-39

The only people that Jesus ever condemned were the religious leaders who made it their business to condemn everyone else. Think about this: Jesus was kinder to the legion of demons in the Gersene man than he was to the self-righteous Pharisees. Why? Because these men had taken the grace of God, the message of God’s kingdom, and turned it into a shame-based system that kept people in fear and exalted themselves into positions of power. They had completely misrepresented God and, in so doing, stolen the people’s rightful inheritance of freedom and love in the presence of God. Ironically, the only time Jesus talks about Hell (gehenna) is when he talks to the Pharisees. That’s because they used the idea of God’s eternal damnation as their power tool to drive people down and manipulate their behavior. That is not the way of God found in Jesus.

Matthew 25:14-46

I recently had this passage completely turned on its head for me. (Or more accurately, I was turned right side up to look at it differently). We’ve always been taught (and I have taught) that this is a stewardship passage where God punishes those who don’t use the gifts he’s given. That has always been difficult for me to completely accept in light of the rest of Jesus’ teaching. What if it is just the opposite? What if the only one who does the right thing in this parable is the one who hides the money? In the parable, the landowner represents the corrupted system of Israel and the Roman Empire. Jesus continually tells his disciples to not buy into that way of thinking, even if it means you will be punished by that system and thrown out in the trash heap (that is the inference in v. 30). By burying the money the servant defies the corrupt system and has the courage to face the consequences. As Jesus neared the end of his ministry he was preparing his disciples for a life of hardship and persecution. That is the nature of this parable.

What is the answer to Sin?

Don’t. How’s that? Seriously, I need to understand more clearly what the question implies. An “answer” implies a question. What is the question? Is it “Why is there sin?” or “What is sin?” or “How do we break the bonds of sin?”

The answer to all of it is Jesus. He taught us how to live the life of the Kingdom of God; a life of love and freedom. The key to all of it is forgiveness and self-sacrifice; looking to the needs of others before self. Jesus demonstrated this kind of love in laying down his own life. It is only when we are willing to lose our own life that we can ever truly find it.

What is God's standard for sin?

Once again, I need clarification on the question. “Standard” means “measurement.” Is it asking, “how does God measure sin?” The word “sin” literally means “miss the mark.” So, the question is, “what is the mark?” Is it perfection? Then we’re all doomed. This goes to the next question...

How can we live up to that standard?

You and I were raised as children of Modern Protestant Fundamentalism that, in reaction to a couple centuries worth of theological debate, got fixated on the idea of “sin management.” Ironically, it is very similar to the trap that the Pharisees had fallen into that got Jesus so upset. They — we — tend to see God as a great big judge that counts up all of our infractions — based upon a list of rules that the church has extrapolated through a particular set of lenses from the scripture — and condemns us for them. We all deserve to die and suffer forever in Hell because we blew it so badly. But, because of God’s love he tortures his son in our place.

Under this construct, no matter how you slice it, God is pretty vicious. Well, he’s either really mad and likes to condemn people (because, after all, he invented the law, right?). Or, he is actually powerless because he is bound to the law and is forced to torture us because the law demands it. Think about this... If God is bound to the law, then doesn’t that make the law greater than God? Wouldn’t that make the law God and the being we associate with the Father just a lesser being that succumbs to the same universal forces that we do?

I think there are serious problems with this system. It produces pain, fear, shame, and self-loathing within certain personality types, and self-righteous condemning power mongers in other personalities.

Jesus didn’t come to pay off Satan, or get tortured by God in our place. Jesus came to set us free from all the hatred and fear that we continually dish out to one another. He came to show us that it is possible to know God, to experience God’s love, and to live in peace with God and other humans. He taught that to us, He demonstrated that to us, and he showed us the ultimate example of loving others, even when they want to nail you to an execution stake.

The greatest Hell we live in is when we keep score in life and hold on to bitterness and grudges and don’t forgive others. Or, perhaps even more difficult, we don’t forgive ourselves.

God loves us. God wants us to be free to love Him back and to love others. Through experience we have learned that not everyone wants to play that way and we get hurt. So, we retreat, self-protect, and live in fear, bitterness, and hatred or self-loathing. God relentlessly pursues us, like a lover bent on knowing us, and brings opportunities into our life on a regular basis where we have to look to God for everything. When we release it all, then we can be free to receive what God wants to give and to love others the way God loves them.

Ok, I think I’m done preaching.

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9May/100

Finished Reading Manifold Witness: The Plurality of Truth

Manifold Witness: The Plurality of Truth by John R. Franke is an excellent book. Franke builds a strong thesis that truth itself, grounded in the reality of the Triune God, is pluralistic. It is impossible to speak of a universal, homogenous, supra-cultural theology. Theology is a contextual, human endeavor as we, limited beings, grapple with the reality of the infinite.

Franke does a good job of explaining the role of Scripture, church history, and, most importantly, the centrality of Jesus, in the ongoing process of forming and reforming the church to be the incarnation of the missional enterprise of being the body of Christ in the world.

I was encouraged by this book as I continue to journey. However, be warned. This book is not an easy read. Franke is a theologian writing to theologians. It is a little wooden, and sometimes seems somewhat repetitive. In other words, it is not a book of flowing prose that is easily accessible to the casual reader. Yet, to one who has some background in reading theological texts, this is a very helpful and signficant piece that should be read by anyone who seriously desires to be a leader in the 21st century church.

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15Mar/100

The Plurality of Truth

A quote from Manifold Witness: The Plurality of Truth by John R. Franke:

Christians committed to the lordship of Jesus Christ should not acquiesce to the cultural relativism that gives up on the notion of ulimate or transcendent truth. But we must also resist the temptation of espousing a notion of truth that makes an idol out of our own conceptions, assumptions, and desires as though they are not subject to critique. We must learn the discipline of diligently and self-critically seeking after truth by continually listening, looking, and learning. In this ongoing quest for truth, it is good to remember that we do not journey alone. We do so in the company of the church, in the fullness of its global and historical manifestations, under the guidance of the Spirit of the living God who leads us into the way, the truth, and the life of Jesus Christ. While the full manifestation of the Spirit's work will be realized only at the eschaton, it is also part of the vocation of the church to participate fully in the work of the Spirit through  the promotion of truth as part of its missional calling in order that what is promised , the fullness of truth, may be anticipated in the present life of the church.

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11Jan/100

Modern Cosmology

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22Nov/090

Medieval Cosmology

click on the words to play the video.

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31Oct/090

Ancient Cosmology

This is an animation I did a few years ago.  The sound quality is pretty bad, but I think it is a helpful overview of the ancient cosmological perspective.  Click the words to begin the movie.

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