Frank Turk Helps Case Against New Calvinism Before Excommunicating Me From Pyro
“So, is understanding Piper like going to college? Are there prerequisite books to understanding his other books? Notice that Turk does not address my reply, but brings up another book. Why? Was Piper for it before he was against it?”
“Here is Turk’s gracious reply; which by the way, he later pulled down: ‘Going forward, ‘Paul’ will be dealt with by the Blogger spam filter.’ ”
As Susan and many of my close friends know, the ill effects of New Calvinist theology on real life hits close to home for me. For me, this isn’t intriguing theological debate—I see the debris that is continually being cleaned up after this hideous doctrine. One writer called John Piper “the elder statesman of New Calvinism.” Yes, him: the one, who among other things, proclaims with certainty how someone who is genuinely saved will feel during the conversion process—apparently, they will always have joy. But the problem is how many of us, especially in western culture, and especially a new Christian, might interpret “joy.” Isn’t dogma concerning how we”feel” during conversion a subject that is best left alone lest it sets up a stumbling block to salvation? (As I have personally witnessed). Not for John Piper—he fearlessly pontificates with all confidence concerning such matters, like other New Calvinist such as Tim Keller who recently proclaimed that those who are genuinely saved must also repent of all “good works” that they did while they were unbelievers.
The insanity that is New Calvinism matters not to those I used to deeply respect among Evangelical leaders. John MacArthur and his closest associate, Phil Johnson, are absolutely hell-bent on lending creditability to the likes of John Piper via association and accolades. Phil Johnson authors a blog named Pyromaniacs. I have visited Pyro on two occasions (with multiple visits within a short time frame for each occasion)—at the behest of a friend: yesterday, and a year ago because of dialogue that was occurring there that my friend wanted me to be privy to.
Before I continue, the purpose of this post is to reveal the fact that Pyro will defend Piper for any reason and at all cost. Why? Have they, including MacArthur, become New Calvinist? I’m beginning to think so. The exchange also enabled me to better articulate what Piper teaches, which is very opportune because of his mastery in deceptive doublespeak. The latter is my primary purpose. If you want to skip all the drama and focus on that, see the two GREEN sections.
The latest topic was another open letter to John Piper authored by a member of the Pyro Team of authors, Frank Turk. The letter was like the last one I was referred to which was a “gee whiz, pweeze stop saying stuff wike that because we wuv you soooo much and it’s getting harder and harder and harder to defend you.” After being accused by Turk on an initial comment of being off-topic, I noted the first comment by another Pyro Team member (Dan Phillips) to make sure I was perceived as being on-topic regarding further comments:
Another stellar letter. Thanks, Frank.
I may say more later, but for now let me join you in affirming my own appreciation for and personal indebtedness to John Piper. Those factors don’t dull the concern I feel for Piper’s attempt here to help Warren; they heighten that concern. I think the interview neither helps Warren personally, nor does it help his perception in the eyes of those who are concerned about his (to be charitable) many missteps.
My comment that caused a disturbance was the following:
In light of Elizabeth’s comment and, [Frank Turks answer to it] “I read Ms. Taylor as saying that the radical anti-Warren crowd is disowning Piper without grasping Piper. I agree with her,” I assume the following is on-subject: I am completely indifferent to who Piper associates with because I have formed judgments about what Piper believes based on what he says and what he writes.
He believes that the Law only expresses the works of Christ and not any obligation on our part. He believes Christians are still “enslaved” to sinful passions. He believes sanctification and justification are the same thing. He believes (still undefined by him) joy ALWAYS proceeds saving faith. He believes that obedience without joy during the act “strips obedience of its moral value” (see Matthew 26 and Hebrews 11 on that ridiculous notion). My concern is for those he associates with more than anything.
A comment came later by a Pyro reader that challenged my accusation:
Paul, your comments should be retracted if you cannot back them up with evidence. Anyone who has spent time in Piper’s works already knows that you have either grossly misinterpreted his positions (at best) or are simply slandering him (at worst). Either way, you should retract the statements.
The challenge was pulled down by Turk later. Here is my response:
1. He believes that the Law only expresses the works of Christ and not any obligation on our part: “What Then Shall Those Who Are Justified Do with the Law of Moses?
Read it and meditate on it as those who are dead to it as the ground of your justification and the power of your sanctification. Read it and meditate on it as those for whom Christ is your righteousness and Christ is your sanctification. Which means read and mediate on it to know Christ better and to treasure him more” (John Piper Sermon: How to Use the Law of God Lawfully to Bear Fruit For God).
He’s saying that we are dead to the Law in regard to it having power in our sanctification. Is that true (Mathew 4:4 John 17:17 James 1:25)? Are we to just meditate on the law or obey it also? Do you really think he left out “obedience” by accident? He is also saying that we should read it as if Christ effects our sanctification in the same way he effected our justification. In other words, sanctification by justification. Also, the “Law of Moses” bit is a deliberate smoke screen. Is he saying we should only meditate on the Law of Moses and do something different with the rest of Scripture? As usual, he creates confusion in the way he uses words, like, all the time.
2. He believes Christians are still “enslaved” to sinful passions: “Yes, it becomes increasingly evident that the experience of joy in God is beyond what the sinful heart can do. It goes against our nature. We are enslaved to pleasure in other things (Romans 6:17).” [Treating Delight as Duty is Controversial written by John Piper and available on his “Desiring God” website].
“We [Christians] are enslaved to pleasure…” That’s not true about a Christian in ANY regard. Notice he cites Romans 6:17 which is in the past tense, but his statement is in the present tense speaking of the same condition of the past tense verse. How can he do that? Easy—he thinks justification and sanctification are the same regarding our role.
3. He believes sanctification and justification are the same thing: From Another Gospel P.M. Dohse, p.111 concerning Piper’s sermon, God Strengthens Us by the Gospel:
“’I know that there are people reading this [edited for written form] who are not trusting Jesus Christ, and therefore can only expect condemnation. So I’m just going to plead with you here at the end, lay down that rebellion. Lay it down. And simply embrace the gospel that Jesus Christ, the Son of God, the Righteous One, died for your sins. He was raised on the third day, triumphant over all his enemies. He reigns until he puts all of his enemies under his feet. Forgiveness of sins and a right standing with God comes freely through him alone, by faith alone. I plead with you, don’t try to be strong in your own strength; it will not be there when you need it. Only one strength will be there—the strength that God gives according to the gospel. Don’t put it off.’
Piper begins this section with the following: ‘I know that there are people reading this who are not trusting Jesus Christ, and therefore can only expect condemnation.’ In context, what does he mean that they are not ‘trusting Jesus Christ’? Well, he continues: ‘Forgiveness of sins and a right standing with God comes freely through him alone, by faith alone.’ So, who is he talking to? I’m glad you asked, he continues in the very next sentence: ‘I plead with you, don’t try to be strong in your own strength; it will not be there when you need it. Only one strength will be there—the strength that God gives according to the gospel.’ He is talking about being strong, or strengthened, in regard to ‘us’ (remember the title of the sermon that the video was excerpted from? ‘God Strengthens Us by the Gospel’). In other words, exerting our own effort in the sanctification process, and especially apart from the gospel, will result in ‘condemnation.’ This is a plea for any person who believes in synergistic sanctification to be saved.”
CONTINUE
4. He believes (still undefined by him) joy ALWAYS proceeds saving faith:
“The pursuit of joy in God is not optional. It is not an ‘extra’ that a person might grow into after he comes to faith. Until your heart has hit upon this pursuit, your ‘faith’ cannot please God. It is not saving faith” (Desiring God page 69).
“We are converted when Christ becomes for us a Treasure Chest of holy joy” (Desiring God page 66).
“Before the decision comes delight. Before trust comes the discovery of treasure” (Desiring God, page 68).
“Something has happened in our hearts before the act of faith. It implies that beneath and behind the act of faith which pleases God, a new taste has been created. A taste for the glory of God and the beauty of Christ. Behold, a joy has been born!” (Desiring God page 67).
“Not everybody is saved from God’s wrath just because Christ died for sinners. There is a condition we must meet in order to be saved. I want to try to show that the condition…is nothing less than the creation of a Christian Hedonist” (Desiring God page 61).
“Could it be that today the most straightforward biblical command for conversion is not, ‘Believe in the Lord,’ but, ‘Delight yourself in the Lord’?” (Desiring God page 55).
“Unless a man be born again into a Christian Hedonist he cannot see the kingdom of God” (Desiring God page 55).
5. He believes that obedience without joy during the act “strips obedience of its moral value”: “Unless a spontaneous affection for my person motivates you, your overtures are stripped of all moral value” (Treating Delight as Duty is Controversial written by John Piper and available on his Desiring God website).
Turk responded with a classic New Calvinist defense—if you haven’t read all of Piper’s books (what? 600 or so by now?), you can’t evaluate any of his particular statements:
Paul:
You have never read the book, “What Jesus Demands of the World”, by John Piper, have you?
So, is understanding Piper like going to college? There are prerequisite books to understanding his other books? Notice that Turk does not address my reply, but brings up another book. Why? Was Piper for it before he was against it? However, after this, he did reply:
I have read Paul’s mini-thesis on Dr. Piper and have found it, um, shall we say “less than serious with the subject matter, [Frank, please just address the quotes that plainly demonstrate my accusations] but very serious in terms of offensiveness.” It’s out, and if it turns up again, it will get deleted again [thanks for the warning Frank—like I would try to repost it—you take yourself waaaay too seriously].
Paul: for your own edification, [thanks Frank, got anything on discernment?] here’s my single-subject justification for deleting your posts [because you can’t answer the others].
You said:
[QUOTE]
He believes that the Law only expresses the works of Christ and not any obligation on our part: “What Then Shall Those Who Are Justified Do with the Law of Moses?
Read it and meditate on it as those who are dead to it as the ground of your justification and the power of your sanctification. Read it and meditate on it as those for whom Christ is your righteousness and Christ is your sanctification. Which means read and mediate on it to know Christ better and to treasure him more” (John Piper Sermon: “How to Use the Law of God Lawfully to Bear Fruit For God”).
He’s saying that we are dead to the Law in regard to it having power in our sanctification. Is that true (Mathew 4:4 John 17:17 James 1:25)? Are we to just meditate on the law or obey it also? Do you really think he left out “obedience” by accident? He is also saying that we should read it as if Christ effects our sanctification in the same way he effected our justification. In other words, sanctification by justification. Also, the “Law of Moses” bit is a deliberate smoke screen. Is he saying we should only meditate on the Law of Moses and do something different with the rest of Scripture? As usual, he creates confusion in the way he uses words, like, all the time.
[/QUOTE]
Here is the complete text of that sermon
The context for this sermon is a supplement to his 3-year preaching through the book of Romans — Rom 7-8, for example. You’ve read it, I am sure: [no Frank, I didn’t take that Piper prerequisite course] “we were living in the flesh, our sinful passions, aroused by the law, were at work in our members to bear fruit for death. 6But now we are released from the law, having died to that which held us captive,” “I was once alive apart from the law, but when the commandment came, sin came alive and I died. The very commandment that promised life proved to be death to me,” “I see in my members another law waging war against the law of my mind and making me captive to the law of sin that dwells in my members. Wretched man that I am! Who will deliver me from this body of death?” But also “For the law of the Spirit of life has set you free in Christ Jesus from the law of sin and death. For God has done what the law, weakened by the flesh, could not do.”
So Piper’s starting point is not whether there is a command to general obedience, or whether we ought to seek to do it: it is Paul’s own words which tell us that seeking justification of ourselves through the Law is only going to bring condemnation — thus we are wretched men. [But Frank, one of my points is that he then projects that point onto sanctification].
And his text for the sermon is 1 Tim 1:5-11. “we know that the Law is good, if one uses it lawfully, realizing the fact that law is not made for a righteous person” and so on [your not going to answer the question, are you?].
You are concerned that he says this much: ” if the law has done its condemning and convicting work to bring you to Christ for justification and transformation, then it is not made for you any more …”
But you have snatched it away from the very next clause: “– in that sense. There may be other uses you can make of it, but that’s not what this text is about.”
In doing that, you are the one making a confusion of the sermon and of the message [no, he later projects the justification point onto the subject of sanctification—making the two equal]. And you are using that confusion to slander Dr. Piper [no, you are slandering me, I assume, unwittingly, because you can’t decipher Piper’s deceptive doublespeak].
Don’t do that. This is your only warning.
Turk then pulled down my posts that I copied above, which I commented on:
Frank,
The fact that you pulled my posts while only addressing the more nuanced statement by Piper is telling. The fact that neither you, nor anyone else will address Piper’s outrageous statements in Desiring God is also telling. And, I find the linguistic demeanor that suggests that posting here is some kind of privilege….well, arrogant and laughable.
That initiated this lame response from Dan Phillips:
Yeah, it’s “telling” that we have a policy of trying to keep comments on the topic of the post, which your personal hobby-horse/vendetta isn’t.
And for general edification: the position that Christians are not under the law of Moses per se, but rather are under the spoken/enscripturated/heart-inscribed law of Christ per se, is neither fringe nor heresy.
Obviously, my comments were on topic. Turk is the one who opened the floor to the whole “condemning Piper without grasping Piper” thing. Hobby-horse? Vendetta? I checked. Of the 218 articles posted on my blog right now, a search turned-up zero on “John Piper” that are presently posted, but I remember one that I can’t find. In fact, someone who was apparently involved in the conversation over at Pyro emailed me and complained that they couldn’t find any of my articles on Piper. What is Phillips talking about? A New Calvinist hobby-horse? Well, he would be correct about that, but you know, somebody has to tell the truth. Accolades are not the truth just because they are accolades.
Furthermore, what’s up with, “Christians are not under the law of Moses per se, but rather are under the spoken/enscripturated/heart-inscribed law of Christ per se,” Huh? What’s the difference in light of Paul telling Timothy that “all Scrpture” is profitable for making the man of God fully equipped? What Scripture equips us and which doesn’t? Nothing in the Law of Moses equips us? And as far as living by every word that comes from the mouth of God (Matthew 4:4), is it not that per se, but this per se? Does Phillips even know what he’s saying? I doubt it.
Meanwhile, Piper Koolaid Drinker extraordinaire, Mike Ricardo, said this to the reader who launched the original challenge:
You’re welcome to venture into this with Paul, but just know that he’s already ground this axe some time ago — in fact, almost a year ago to the day [this should reveal how enamored I am with the Pyro team]. This is his pet issue, and despite the lengths to which responses have gone, there seems to be no arrival in his understanding.
Add to that the fact that this post has nothing to do with Piper’s theology of Law and Gospel, but with his recent interview with Rick Warren [then why did Phillips make the opening comment that he made?].
The individual who first challenged me then typed this Extreme Anti-Berean Team statement:
Mike Riccardi,
thanks for the heads up. I should have known better. [CLICK, that was easy! Is it now any wonder why Pyro has the following that they have?]
I made this final appeal:
Frank,
I’m not too sure you guy’s KNOW my motives; forgive me if I don’t take that to the bank just yet. So, you guys have no problem with the 6 quotes from Desiring God. Ok, fair enough, but just do me one last favor; I will not even respond—I will let your answer stand as it is for your readers and will be instructed by it—as my promise not to respond should indicate. Fair enough? And besides, you did respond to it—I’m just requesting a final clarification.
First, you said:
“But you have snatched it away from the very next clause: ‘– in that sense. There may be other uses you can make of it, but that’s not what this text is about.’
In doing that, you are the one making a confusion of the sermon and of the message. And you are using that confusion to slander Dr. Piper.”
But Frank, he goes on to say: “But for the righteous – for people who have come to Christ for justification and come to Christ for the inner spiritual power to love, this role of the law is past. From now on, the place where we seek the power to love is not the law of commandments but the gospel of Christ.” How does that jive with John 17:17 and John 14:15,16? Is he not saying that as believers, we have to go through the “gospel” first before the law—and if we don’t, we are acting as if the power is in the letter of the law instead of the Spirit? And what does it mean to love through the gospel as opposed to loving through the law? What does that even mean? Our love is defined by “gospel” and not “law”? Frank, is this not a fair question? AND, the law and the gospel are for justification, but moving forward—only the gospel is applicable for sanctification? Forgive me if it is eerily similar to, “The same gospel that saves you also sanctifies you.”
Second, and lastly, and I will bother you no more:
On point 3, I cite his entire conclusion (and summation) to God Strengthens Us by the Gospel. Ok, who is “us”? Christians, right? I mean, unbelievers don’t need “strengthening”—they need salvation. So, in the conclusion, apparently, if I’m sitting there listening, I’m thinking: “Oh, ok, this is a gospel presentation just in case there are unsaved people here”;
“I know that there are people reading this [edited for written form] who are not trusting Jesus Christ, and therefore can only expect condemnation. So I’m just going to plead with you here at the end, lay down that rebellion. Lay it down. And simply embrace the gospel that Jesus Christ, the Son of God, the Righteous One, died for your sins. He was raised on the third day, triumphant over all his enemies. He reigns until he puts all of his enemies under his feet. Forgiveness of sins and a right standing with God comes freely through him alone, by faith alone”
BUT then he concludes, STARTING IN THE VERY NEXT SENTENCE with:
“I plead with you, don’t try to be strong in your own strength; it will not be there when you need it. Only one strength will be there—the strength that God gives according to the gospel. Don’t put it off.”
Frank, he is clearly synthesizing those who need strengthening with those who need the gospel, and being “strengthened in you own strength” is the object. AND, this is an *either/or* hermeneutic that implies that it is either all God (gospel—ever read ”God is the Gospel”?) OR all “us.” But in John 14:16, which is connected to verse 15 by the conjunction “and,” (as translated by the Bible of choice according to Piper, the ESV), the Holy Spirit is called a “helper.” What is he helping us with? It’s in verse 15—loving Christ by keeping his commandments! So, how do we know when our “own efforts “ are our “own strength” instead of God’s? What’s the difference between striving to obey with the Spirit’s “help” and being strengthened by the strength God gives “according to the gospel” which also necessitates the law to condemn for justification, but now only the “gospel” apart from the law is needed?
Are these not fair questions?
Here is Turk’s gracious reply; which by the way, he later pulled down:
Going forward, “Paul” will be dealt with by the Blogger spam filter.
Frank, I’m not sure, but I have a hunch that I will get over it.
paul

Actually Paul, the “spam filter” comment is still up at TeamPryo, loud at proud at 8:49 AM.
Secondly, I want to retract my request for a copy of the updated edition of your book. I already have a copy of your first edition and will keep it on file for posterity but will not be posting a review of it on my website. Why? Because after a few months of prayer and research I have come to two conclusions: One, that your anti-GS position is wrong. Two, that engaging you in debate is moot. Others have tried to debate reasonably with you. They have presented their arguments clearly and compellingly, but you have utterly, absolutely and completely failed to answer them. Not only that, but the amount of times that they have clarified their positions, after which you have attributed to them the opposite of what they have said, is shocking. Paul, it’s my belief that your ears are stoppered.
Here is my final plea: if you decide to continue this ill-advised jihad, gain a grounding in sound logic, set aside the pejorative language which only hinders your cause, and take a few seminary courses (from the seminary of your choice and not a “GC” one) in biblical interpretation and exegesis. Until then, you only do yourself and your cause a disservice by your incessant ranting.
Until we meet in eternity,
Mark
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Mark,
Bottom line: These guys believe that a “deeper and deeper” understanding of the gospel results in Christ obeying for us. How do we know He is obeying for us?–our obedience will be a “mere natural flow” full of joy so as to not strip obedience of its “moral value.”
Furthermore, biblical commands “drive us back to the cross” because we are spiritually dead and can’t obey them anyway. They also show us what Christ did for us in the atonement (by obeying for us) which makes us more grateful–leading to obedience driven by gratitude only. That’s Horton’s Gratitude=Doxology=Obedience which originated with the Australian Forum.
Mark, as far as me being the only one these spiritual brainiacs haven’t been able to convince that they are orthodox–nice try. This blog is replete with materials from others who make the same charge. Chantry was calling the father of NCT an antinomian before I was even a Christian.
Moreover, Turk’s answers were the same old worn-out GS diversion tactics.He answered nothing except to say, more or less:”When Piper was talking about justification, he was talking about justification.” Ya, I got that. I have come to believe that Pyro is drinking the GS koolaid and that’s why they defend Piper. I found Phillips’ remarks about the law of Christ eerily similar to that of NCT. “Per se,” that is.
“Another Gospel” just addresses the symptoms of GS, the bigger picture is emerging, ie., a Seventh-Day Adventist who is now an atheist was at least the co-father of GS. The history of GS is the focus of the book I want to get out there, and it’s not [“your”] “my” book–“I” would rather be doing other things.
The fight continues as long as the Lord helps me–I will not relent.
Paul
> —–Original Message—– >
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WordPress, with a journalist 1.3 theme, is the way to go.
I am also banned from commenting at [edited]. Unlike you, I am not a Jesus worshiper. I saw this debate spilling over, and was tempted to look through it for a minute. Then I saw how many words you were spilling into the internet. I will say the same thing here that got me banned from [edited]…good grief.
chamblee54
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Chamblee,
You need to become a Jesus worshiper:
1Cor 15 For what I received I passed on to you as of first importance[a]: that Christ died for our sins according to the Scriptures, 4 that he was buried, that he was raised on the third day according to the Scriptures, 5 and that he appeared to Peter, and then to the Twelve. 6 After that, he appeared to more than five hundred of the brothers at the same time, most of whom are still living, though some have fallen asleep.
2Cor5 All this is from God, who reconciled us to himself through Christ and gave us the ministry of reconciliation: 19 that God was reconciling the world to himself in Christ, not counting men’s sins against them. And he has committed to us the message of reconciliation. 20 We are therefore Christ’s ambassadors, as though God were making his appeal through us. We implore you on Christ’s behalf: Be reconciled to God. 21 God made him who had no sin to be sin[a] for us, so that in him we might become the righteousness of God.
Acts 17 In the past God overlooked such ignorance, but now he commands all people everywhere to repent. 31 For he has set a day when he will judge the world with justice by the man he has appointed. He has given proof of this to all men by raising him from the dead.”
> —–Original Message—– >
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Thank you for your concern. I have had too many bad experiences with Jesus to ever want to follow him.
chamblee54
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Chamblee, I think that might might be the other way around, but for instance?:________
> —–Original Message—– >
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I see Jesus in the words and deeds of his believers. I don’t see the point of specifics, but it has been awful.
I should mention that I do not agree with your scheme for life after death.
chamblee54
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First, it is just my observation but it appears that this discussion is not being conducted in the spirit of Christian love. Certainly, there is nothing wrong with acting in a civil manner even though we may widely disagree.
Secondly, I don’t find any problem with repenting of those “good works” we performed while unbelievers. Did not the Apostle Paul himself write that he counted as “dung” all those “good works” he had performed and in which he had trusted prior to his conversion. If I have tried to substitute the filthy rags of my righteousness for the righteousness of Christ, have I not been in rebellion against God, and do I not need to repent?
Randy Seiver
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Randy,
Is there sufficient biblical evidence for this position to the degree that the following can be concluded: most Evangelicals are not really saved because they didn’t also repent of what they thought were good works before they believed; like, you know, going to work everyday, etc.?
> —–Original Message—– >
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You might want to consider that Chantry was misrepresenting Zen’s position [calling him an antinomian] the same way he has misrepresented the views of other NC theologians. [If you should read the correspondence between Zens and Chantry, you would clearly see this]. In the words of the Decalogue, he was “bearing false witness.” It never ceases to amaze me that those who contend for the perpetuity of the Decalogue feel no compunction in breaking it.
Randy Seiver
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So,saying the law is good while distorting its biblical purpose in sanctification isn’t antinomianism; is that what your saying? Also, was Al Martin lieing also?
> —–Original Message—– >
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Yes, I believe they have both deliberately misrepresented the NCT position in many ways. No one in that camp believes we are no longer God’s law or against the law. You can only conclude that if you pursue the unwarranted presupposition that the Decalogue IS the eternal, universal, moral law of God. If that were the case, how could the Apostle Paul state that the Gentiles do not have the law (Romans 2:14) and “those who are without law” (1 Cor. 9:21). Certainly, he cannot mean this in the absolute sense, i.e., that they are without moral obligation to God altogether. He must intend it as a contrast to the Jews who are “under the law.”
It would seem to me that to be antinomian [against the law], one would have to deny that we have any obligation to obey God’s unaltered standard of righteousness revealed in the New Testament Scriptures. By the way, you might want to find out if Pastor Chantry ever asked the church to discipline one of the members for Sabbath breaking because they ate out after church on Sunday. I know for a fact that many of them did. Certainly, in doing so they were causing someone else to break the sabbath even if they were not breaking it themselves. If he didn’t, then I guess he didn’t really take the Decalogue seriously.
I must just be drawing a blank, but I am having difficulty remembering all those New Testament passages that talk about the law’s [Decalogue’s] biblical purpose in sanctification. Perhaps you can refresh my memory.
Randy
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Randy,
Most of them are after Exodus 20. The purpose of the Sabbath was to give slaves a day of rest; if we see our enemies lost ox running about, we are to return it, etc. Though we do not stone rebellious children, that law certainly reveals God’s attitude towards rebellious children. It also demonstrates that in extreme situations, a final solution for parents in order to have peace in a household is not against God’s counsel; such as, military school, ect. Where literal application has ceased–principles still apply. Many Old Testament Laws also demonstrate sanctification because the definition of sanctification is “to set apart.” Do we eat different from the world? Do we dress different? Hope so. Do we do that in the exact way the Israelites did? No, for many reasons, of course not. I was at a church gathering yesterday, and when the food was ready, all of the young people got in line first (being faster) and all of the old people were last. Does the OT have anything to say about that? Uh, absolutely!
Randy, I have chewed the fat with NCT theologians for hundreds of hours, face to face. They believe that the law has been replaced with a “higher law of love” or the “higher law of Christ.” I have seen NCT in action as applied to real life by Reformed elders. What they perceive as their motive of love is in, a literal application of Law is out–they play by their own rules. For example, A literal interpretation of Matt 18 is out–“redemptive church discipline” is in etc.
> —–Original Message—– >
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Paul, as you know there are works that are “good” in the sight of other people, and there are works that are good in God’s sight. He says, “there is no one who does good, not even one.” I believe it is correct to say that a good work in God’s sight is one that is done for the right motive–love for God, with the right goal in view–the glory of God, and according to the right rule– the holy Scriptures.
Though working hard may be a good thing to do, it does not merit a right standing before God. If a person has trusted, in any way, in such actions to make him right with God, he must repent of that before he can trust in Christ. He does not need to repent for working hard, but for trusting in his hard work to make him right with God.
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Randy,
“Though working hard may be a good thing to do, it does not merit a right standing before God. If a person has trusted, in any way, in such actions to make him right with God, he must repent of that before he can trust in Christ. He does not need to repent for working hard, but for trusting in his hard work to make him right with God.”
So, what you are saying is that when we are leading someone to Christ, we need to find out whether or not they tried to earn justification with God by working hard at a false standard for justification. If they were in the Hell’s Angels motorcycle club, they only need to repent of bad behavior, but with others, we need to make sure they were not trying to earn justification through some kind of hard work as well, right?
> —–Original Message—– >
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I don’t mean any disrespect by this but this seems like a mindless response to my post. Of course, we must tell sinners they must forsake anything they may have been trusting to make them right with God other than the blood and righteousness of Christ. I don’t need to make sure of anything. It is God’s business to cause sinners to cast down every idol that has stood in his place and bring them to faith in Christ alone,
It doesn’t matter if they belong to the hell’s angels or not. Even they may trust that somehow God will smile on them because they have been loyal to their creed and their buddies. Who knows what might go through the minds of depraved sinners? Certainly you don’t believe it is OK to tell sinners it is fine if they wish to continue trusting in their dead works as long as that add faith in Christ to that?`
Randy
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Randy,
The Bible merely speaks of a turning away from the old to the new. Keller is the one who put the whole confusing dual repentance paradigm on the table (repentance from bad and good both–where is that in that Bible?).
> —–Original Message—– >
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I didn’t see a single passage from the New Testament Scriptures that indicated that the Decalogue is to be used as an instrument of sanctification. I will be patient in waiting for you to produce one.
It is clear you have neither “chewed the fat” with me nor have you read any of my writings. I would invite you to do so at http://www.new-covenant-theology.org. I think you will find there that I too believe that many of the principles of the Old Testament Scriptures are important. The point I have made is that NC believers are guided by the Spirit to implement the principles set forth in the Scriptures and obey the commandments of Christ and his Apostles.
It is anybody’s guess what some who now claim to be NC in their orientation may be saying and writing. I don’t want to be associated with the kooks in the movement nor will I defend them. At the same time, I would urge you to get your information from people like Dr. Gary Long who really know what NCT is all about.
Randy
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Randy,
“Man does not live by bread alone, but every word that comes from the mouth of God.” Did the Decalogue (is that a biblical distinction-or theological?) come from the mouth of God?
“All Scripture is profitable….that the man of God may be fully equipped for every good work.” Is the Decalogue “Scripture”?
> —–Original Message—– >
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