Showing posts with label Bond slave. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bond slave. Show all posts

Galatians 2 v 20 – 21 - No judicial approval for people seeking to keep the law

 ‘I have been crucified together with His Anointed, but I am alive - no longer I [ego] - but His Anointed alive within me. And at this present time, what I am living within flesh, I am living this within faith, the Son of God having loved me and having surrendered himself above and beyond me. 21 I am absolutely not setting aside the free gift of God, because if judicial approval and right wise-ness [is] by means of law, then His Anointed died without cause’, (Galatians 2 v 20 – 21).


In verse 19 Paul made the general statement that –


‘I, [ego], by means of law, died to law, in order that I live to God’


Now Paul begins explain what he means and how this relates to the error of Peter, Barnabas and the other Christian Jews who were turning back to observing Sinai Covenant law. He says, ‘I have been crucified together with His Anointed, but I am alive’. In effect he begins to talk about his ‘old humanity’ and his ‘new humanity’ or new formation. He makes a similar statement in his letter to the Romans, ‘Knowing this, that our old human appearance is crucified together with [Jesus], in order that the body of self-forfeiture and loss is rendered down to being idle and inactive. We are no longer devotedly enslaved to the self-forfeiture and loss’, (Romans 6 v 6). In being brought forth by God, what he was, his natural, earthy fleshly constitution, has been crucified together with the Messiah. His old human appearance was tied and enslaved to energies, impulses and raw passions inherent within the fabric of his flesh. But when God brought him forth his old appearance changed. He died and yet he is alive. He has been brought forth as a new form, a ‘new self’. 


He says that he is no longer ‘I’ [ego]. What does he mean? ‘I’ is the locus of self-governance – ‘I’ choose, ‘I’ desire, ‘I’ think and feel. He means that he is no longer governing and regulating his speech and behaviour based on tied enslavement to the impulses and energies inherent within his fleshly constitution. Rather, by means of the Breath of God, the Messiah is alive within him and he has been set free from enslavement to self-forfeiture, in order to serve the Lord. The Lord is governing his speech and behaviour by means of the Breath within. Paul is no longer dead within fleshly unresponsiveness and insensitivity to God, but roused up from out of the dead towards responsiveness to God and Life in His Messiah by means of the Breath. 


Paul had not physically died, he was still living within his ‘vessel of clay’ or ‘earthly tent’. He was still existing within flesh, but now he was alive to God and living within entrustment and persuasion, a bond-slave of the Messiah, the anointed one of God ‘having loved me and having surrendered himself above and beyond me’


So how does this new ‘self’ relate to the behaviour of Peter and the other Hebrew Christians who were turning back to observing the written codes of Covenant law? Paul says, ‘I am absolutely not setting aside the free gift of God’. God brought Paul forth when he was in a helpless state. Paul did not have the ability to deliver himself from divine condemnation. His deliverance, his ‘bringing forth’ and ‘making alive’ is a free gift away from God, and away from His only-begotten Son ‘having loved me and having surrendered himself above and beyond me’ – above and beyond Paul’s ability. Paul says that he is not going to set aside this free gift. He is not going to dismiss it, which is what he would do of he went back to seeking to attain and maintain divine judicial approval by means of investing his labour and energy into observing the injunctions of the written codes of Covenant law.


The bottom line is this – ‘if judicial approval and right wise-ness [is] by means of law, then His Anointed died without cause’


If the means of attaining and maintaining divine approval is by means of observing Covenant law, by labouring to put into practice its written codes,


Then, if such a thing were possible, that is what God would have put in place.


But such a task is beyond the ability of anyone. More than this, if the means of deliverance and the maintenance of cleanliness was through obedience to the written codes of Covenant law, it would mean that the Messiah had died without purpose. His death would not have been necessary, it would have been superfluous, because this other method of deliverance and maintenance of cleanliness was already in place.


Principles of living a godly life [76] – The divine plan

 ‘And those whom He predetermines, these He also summons, and whom He summons, these He also judicially approves and makes rightwise. Then, whom he judicially approves and makes rightwise, these He also honours and renders praiseworthy. 31 What then will we say to these things? Forasmuch as God is above us, who is down against us? 32 Indeed, He Who is not sparing His own Son, but surrendering him for us all, how will He not also give us all things together with him?’, (Romans 8 v 30 - 32).


As we come to the end of chapter 8, Paul steps back as it were to sum up the process of divine judicial approval and rightwiseness, which has been the main theme of his letter. As in other Scripture writings, the process of deliverance from condemnation is portrayed as being entirely down from God. When individuals are in a hopeless state and unable to deliver themselves, God, knowing some beforehand, predetermines them to be jointly formed to the image of His Son. It is God Who brings them forth – they are born again – and they become a new formation as a result of the atoning sacrifice of God’s only begotten Son, given as a free gift, coupled with the work of the set apart Breath of God and His Messiah. 


The process is this. God knows some beforehand and predetermines these to be conformed to the image of His Son. How does this happen? Those He knows beforehand and predetermines to be conformed to the image of His Son He summons, calls or invites, (by means of the good news of the Messiah and the word of the cross. Those who are summoned are, by means of the Breath, enlightened and such that they are persuaded to the point of entrusting the Messiah), and thus God accounts them judicially approved and rightwise. These He also honours and renders praiseworthy. 


All of this originates from and is brought into effect by God, and this gives Christians assurance and confident expectation. Because divine approval and deliverance from condemnation is not down to their fickle and unreliable energies and labours to be godly. Indeed, they lack ability and strength to deliver themselves because of their fleshly constitution. Nor is divine approval attained or maintained by Christians seeking to work to fully observe the written codes of divine law. Divine law is good and set apart, but it reveals our self-forfeiture and loss, and the impulses of our flesh take hold of this starting point such that our self-forfeiture is seen to increase even more. Christians are not placed under the written codes of law or the Sinai Covenant, but under the free, undeserved gift of God, and the New Covenant of the blood of the Messiah. Deliverance from condemnation, and divine approval, is given to them as a free gift from God. Christians maintain Life – responsiveness to God – by walking around moment-by-moment within their breath [pneuma] which is being moved by the Breath of God [Pneuma] dwelling in their deep inner core and effectively interceding for them. Christians are bond-slaves to their Lord who pays the price necessary to buy them back - the shedding of his own lifeblood as a substitute payment to send away their self-forfeiture.


So what shall we Christians say? Well here is the conclusion – ‘Forasmuch as God is above us, who is down against us? 32 Indeed, He Who is not sparing His own Son, but surrendering him for us all, how will He not also give us all things together with him?’ The deliverance of Christians is secure and certain. Since all this is away from the free gift of God, and since God did not hold back even His only begotten Son, but surrendered him for all of us, then who can be down against us? Who can successfully rob us of our deliverance? More than this, if God has not held back His own Son, then surely He will also give us all things together with him. Christians are adopted sons in God’s household, joint-heirs, joint inheritors with the Messiah. God does not surrender His only begotten Son so as to then hold back from us the benefits that His Son has attained.


Principles of living a godly life [61] – The polarising dichotomy separating Christians and ‘outsiders’ [1]

…God, having sent His Son within resemblance of self-forfeiting flesh, and concerning no share and self-forfeiture, has condemned loss and self-forfeiture within the flesh, 4 in order that the judicial approval and rightwise acts of the Law are being made full and complete within us – the not walking around down from flesh but down from breath. 5 Because the down from the flesh are existing thinking, judging and caring for that of the flesh, but the down from the Breath [pneuma], that of the Breath [pneuma],’, (Romans 8 v 3b - 5). 


Paul is comparing how Christians and unbelievers ‘walk around’, comparing how these two groups are living their lives day-by-day, how they are conducting themselves in the situations and circumstances that they face moment-by-moment. He is not only talking about ‘justification’ or ‘standing judicially approved’ in front of God in terms of whether they are ultimately forgiven, acquitted and going to heaven or not. He is also talking about how people are behaving at this present time in their daily lives. 


There is a polarising dichotomy between Christians and unbelievers. We see it throughout Paul’s writings, as well as in the letters of John, and the gospels. In verse 4 and the following verses, this polarisation comes to the fore. When it comes to successfully living a godly life moment-by-moment, how are those within the Messiah described? Are they described as those walking around making the effort to observe the external written codes of Covenant law? No. They are described as – 


The not walking around down from flesh, but down from breath


The polarising difference is that unbelievers or ‘outsiders’ are walking around down from the flesh, down from the energies, desires and passions within the fabric of their fleshly constitution. Indeed, they are enslaved to these energies within their fleshly constitution, which move on the basis of the fundamental principle of self-forfeiture, loss and death. But Christians on the other hand are indwelt by the Breath of God moving on the basis of Life within the Messiah. Because of the sacrifice of the Messiah as the spotless Lamb of God, at this present time Christians are liberated away from enslavement to the principle of self-forfeiture, loss and death. They are not under the authority of external written codes of divine law but bond-slaves of the Messiah, exhorted to be walking around down from Breath, [pneuma], that is related to God and the heavenly realm. In this waythe judicial approval of the Law and rightwise acts of the Law are being made full and complete within them’, (verse 4), whereas  ‘outsiders’ or ‘unbelievers’, by walking around within the flesh, turn things ‘upside down’. ‘Oh that those turning you upside down will also cut themselves off’, (Galatians 5 v 12).  


Why is this the case? Why are unbelievers turning things upside down? Paul tells us in the next verse. ‘Because the down from the flesh are existing thinking, judging and caring for that of the flesh, but the down from the Breath [pneuma], that of the Breath [pneuma], (Romans 8 v 5). There we see the polarisation working itself out in the different fundamental principles of behaviour of these two groups – 


The down from the flesh

Are existing thinking, judging and caring for that of the flesh


But


The down from the Breath

Are existing thinking, judging and caring for that of the Breath


Unbelievers are not persuaded concerning the Messiah. The gospel is foolishness as far as they are concerned, so they reject the good news of the Messiah and separate themselves away from it. This leads them to a process of becoming more and more ignorant of spiritual realities, even though they turn things upside down and think of themselves as wise. They increasingly lack perception concerning God. If they are religious-minded, they often exchange the Creator in favour of worshipping created things. If they are not religious-minded then they follow humanly constructed philosophies, (Romans 1 v 18 – 25). They focus their minds on the flesh – on their physical health and comfort, on sensual pleasurable experiences, on status, wealth and so on. One way or another they follow the impulses, passions, desires and instincts inherent in their fleshly constitution and that work themselves out into their speech and behaviour, (Romans 1 v 26 – 32). Even with those who possess the Sinai Covenant and divine Law, and who are diligently making the effort to work to observe the external written codes of the law to obtain or maintain divine approval, are walking down from the flesh, (Romans 2 v 17 – 27).


But thanks to the free gift of God, Christians are illuminated and persuaded concerning unseen heavenly realities and the Messiah, to the point of seeking to serve their Lord. They possess the Breath in their deep inner core as a free gift, the movement of the Breath working in opposition to the impulses of their flesh. Their enlightened minds focus on that of the Breath – on deliverance from condemnation, the allotted divine inheritance, behaving and speaking in a way that is pleasing to their Lord, and so on. They are placed in union with the Messiah by means of the Breath, and the Messiah, as their high priest, fills the law to completion on their behalf. 


Walking down from the Breath and existing thinking, judging and caring for that of the Breath such that divine law is made complete within Christians constitutes another of Paul’s general statements, and in the next few verses he goes on to explain what he means in more detail.

 

Principles of living a godly life [39] – Christians and divine law [6]

 At this present time Christians exist at a kind of mid-point, in a transitional state. They are no longer who they once were but their redemption has not yet reached its end point. Their old human appearance is dead thanks to being brought forth by God in union with the Messiah by means of the Breath, but they are not yet what they will be, indeed, it has not yet been revealed what they will be. Instead, the ‘new and fresh is coming into being’. Christians are in the middle of a transitional process. Their new formation has begun but it has not yet reached its culmination. 


So we have this situation. On being brought forth by God their old human appearance has died and a new formation has come into being. Reminding ourselves of what Paul said in the first four verses of Romans chapter 7, the fact that their old human appearance has died means that – 


The written codes of divine law have been rendered idle in terms of trying to obey these codes as a means of obtaining divine approval day-by-day or in terms of ultimate and final approval on the Day of Judgement. 


Christians are joined in union with the Messiah who has fulfilled the requirements of divine law in his body. He is the spotless Lamb of God. 


Because of this union, Christians are freed from condemnation within the sphere of the written codes of divine law. Instead the law penetrates into them becoming ‘the roused from out of the dead’. 


In II Corinthians 11 v 2 Paul says of the Corinthian Christians, ‘I have joined you to one husband, a set apart virgin to present and stand beside the Messiah’. He speaks of Jesus as their husband because they exist in union with him as their Lord and head.


The purpose of the death of the Christian’s ‘old human appearance’ and their union with the Messiah by means of the Breath, such that they penetrate into becoming ‘the aroused from out of the dead’ is that they actively ‘bear fruit for God’ in their speech and behaviour. They do not seek a life of godliness and good in order to obtain or maintain divine approval by working and expending their energy in such behaviour, but rather, out of loyal service for the honour and praise of God. Such clean speech and behaviour is the ‘fruit of the Breath’, (Galatians 5 v 22). 


Having been brought forth by God, Christians do not own themselves. I have often heard ‘outsiders’ or ‘unbelievers’ say in defence of their preferred behaviour, ‘It’s my body, or my life, I can do what I like’. This is not a Christian sentiment. Christians are bond-slaves of their Lord and Master the Messiah. They have been bought back, redeemed or purchased with a price, and placed in God’s household. By right of purchase, Christians are therefore under an obligation to behave as their Messiah directs. The Messiah purchases the taking away of the Christian’s condemnation by means of the shedding of his own lifeblood and in doing so he places upon them a new obligation to obedience. Those who are redeemed from out of slavery or captivity to self-forfeiture and condemnation are the purchased servants of him who redeemed them – as Paul goes on to say in the next verses in Romans 7.