Praying

Sometimes when I pray I don’t really expect things to change – I just speak the words because that’s what you’re supposed to do. They are no doubt the proper, theologically correct words, but they are still hollow and meaningless because my mind or heart is not convinced anything is actually going to change because I have prayed.  This, in turn, ruins my prayer life because NOBODY wants to continue to do something they believe (even if they’re unwilling to say it!) is fruitless.

I think part of the problem is that I’m afraid to believe in prayer as a powerful tool – I’m mean, who wants to be like those Name-it-and-Claim-it kooks?

But at least they believe prayer, every prayer, actually does something! At least when they approach God they truly believe that their lives will be different. Their emphasis on the material things in life is the problem, not the fact that they believe that their prayers actually move the heart of God!

So I’ve been wondering what it would look like if I started praying with the understanding, not that I’ll get whatever I want just because I claim it, but that my very prayer, my very interaction with God, my very encounter with the Triune Redeemer, CHANGES THINGS!

Do I really believe that things are different because I prayed? Do I really believe that, even if I don’t see my prayer answered down to a ‘T’ that the world has changed and is different than it would otherwise be precisely because prayer actually does something?

We Modern people have a hard time believing that the world is different because we participate in what seems like a unilateral conversation where WE ARE THE ONLY AND PRIMARY SPEAKERS. But the Bible presents prayer differently – in the Bible, prayer is the work of God in our lives whereby he places in our hearts the desire to pray for the things of His kingdom – prayer is BOTH a human and a Divine act.

Therefore, when we are prompted by the Holy Spirit to pray, then that necessarily means that, even if things don’t come to pass as we expect, the world will still be different because God moved me to prayer and that changes everything!

Prayer changes the future; at least that’s what the Bible teaches. Maybe we Christians could start believing that sometime.

Psalm 110:1-3: Sit at My Right Hand

The first of the two prophetic oracles initiates the interpreter into the enthronement ritual. Here the prophet announces that Yahweh has extended to the king a position of prestige at his right hand. This imagery is incomparable; in the Psalter a king is regularly represented as sitting (bvy) before God’s face (ynEåp.li),[1] but rarely at His right hand (ynI+ymiyli(). This subtle shift and its similarities with Egyptian symbolism has led some scholars to suggest that the image is “imported from Egypt, as an invitation for the king to ‘dwell’ rather than ‘sit’ at the right hand of God.”[2] The imperative (bveî) is not merely a command but an invitation which permits the king to inhabit Yahweh’s presence.[3]

Yahweh’s invitation has three implications. First, the authority of kingship and the victory over enemies is entirely derivative. The enthronement ceremony involves an “actual transferral of authority,”[4] which occurs by divine decree (~aun>) spoken by a prophet, but God is the real King and the earthly ruler rules “as a co-regent and representative, deriving his authority from his divine counterpart.”[5]

Second, the summons assumes the king shares in the life and actions of the divine King. The king has dominion over his foes, not as a passive agent,[6] but as a sovereign who subjugates enemies in a manner that concedes he is deriving his power from and participating in the larger purposes of the God of Israel. Yahweh will make his enemies a footstool for his feet.[7] Subdued enemies becomes the theme of vs. 2 in explanation of the extent of the king’s authority which expands from Zion[8] right into the midst of his enemies (br<q<åB.). The metaphor employed here is an extended scepter (hJ,m;), an emblem of world dominance, martial authority, and national glory (Jer. 48:17).[9] The phrase dealing with world dominance is controlled by an imperative (hdEªr>÷) that involves an element of promise: the prophet assures the king that the vanquishing of his rivals will most certainly take place in the future.[10]

Finally, the transmission of authority and the promises of world dominance and divine protection are intimately connected in history and ritual with the king’s divine Sonship: an idea which speaks nothing of ontological realities, but rather of status and adoption. In the ceremony of conferral of authority, the prophet enacts a legal transmission whereby the king is declared the adopted son of God.[11] The designation of divine sonship finds its roots in Ps. 2:7, the parallel text to 110:3.  110:3 has long been deemed “mysterious”[12] and the “most obscure verse in the whole Psalter.”[13] Understanding the verse entails considering a fair amount of textual alteration and thus this text has fashioned numerous scholastic constructions and explanations. The factors are numerous but here are a few. First, the verse contains two nominal clauses which offer the interpreter no indication of time. Second, a textual variant in 3b might be rendered either “holy majesty” (MT) or the minority reading, “on the holy mountains.” Here I will retain the MT reading primarily because the majority rendering of vd<qoß-yrEd>h;B. provides a fitting transition between the discussion of kingship and the discussion of priesthood. Third, due to the corruption of the Hebrew text and its lack of verbs, the LXX offers the most likely route for interpretation by inserting evxege,nnhsa,. This makes the most sense, especially in light of Ps. 2:7. Fourth, a hapax legomenon (rx’v.mi) occurs in the second phrase creating the usual interpretive difficulties associated with such an anomaly.[14]

Verse 3 begins with the imagery of the king’s subjects eagerly offering themselves to his military service, then moves to a three line description of the king’s Sonship which occurs in mixed-metaphor. The first metaphor, as already noted, has two possible Hebrew constructions. The majority reading used here portrays the king as “arrayed in holy splendor (Ps. 29:2).” The word vd,qo places his kingly majesty in a cultic context and creates a nice transition into vs. 4.[15]

The metaphor shifts at this point into two lines describing how the king was begotten of God “from the womb of the dawn (rx”+v.mi ~x,r<äme).”[16] Employing the LXX reading, which provides the word evxege,nnhsa,, the final line carries the metaphor of birth by asserting that Yahweh is the progenitor of the king. The king is the son of God through divine decree and a decisive transformation “of the kings essential nature (Ps. 2:7)”[17] through the set of legal acts previously footnoted[18] This proclamation legitimizes the kings rule. By the time of the Psalter’s compilation, this psalm had clearly taken on messianic, eschatological significance, but at the time this particular psalm was written, it would have served the political ideologies of “that segment of society (urban elite) who benefited from a centralized government”[19] because of its exaltation of the king to the status of sharing in divine glory and receiving divine power with Yahweh’s “unconditional commitment to protect and prosper Israel.”[20] Centralizing political power into one figure is now accompanied by centralizing religious power in the same figure.

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[1] Ps. 61:7

[2] Bvy can mean both “to sit” and “to dwell.” Othmar Keel, The Symbolism of the Biblical World. (Winona Lake: Eisenbrauns, 1997), 263. Keel provides other evidence for this suggestion by citing the fact that certain reconstructive models of the temple have placed the royal palace on the right side of the temple, threshold to threshold with God’s dwelling place. The other option is that the ark may have been processed into the Gihon spring and the throne of the king placed beside it. Allen, 80.

[3] Bill T. Arnold & John H. Choi, A Guide to Biblical Hebrew Syntax. (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2003), 63.

[4] Kraus, 112.

[5] Allen, 86.

[6] Some scholars have suggested that the psalm is so Yahweh-centered that it depicts the king as a relatively passive agent who sits protected as Yahweh goes to war for him. While this is largely true, the psalm is concerned primarily with Yahweh’s actions, it misses the evidence of verse 3 where the king has troops who offer themselves as free will offerings as they rally around the king for battle.

[7] Such imagery has parallels in ancient Egpyt. Certain iconographic archeological discoveries depict adversaries situated underneath the feet of Egyptian rulers. At times the imagery in these discoveries depicted other deities being dominated by the superior, Egyptian deities. (Keel, 255) The implications of such a reading for Ps. 110 are staggering. Yahweh subdues the enemies of Israel, not merely as secular enemies but as enemies which are such because they have devoted themselves to false deities who are also defeated and possess no authority of their own.Greg Boyd, God at War. (Downers Grove: InterVarsity Press, 1997), 243. Aside from the possible Egyptian parallels, the Old Testament uses the footstool metaphor repeatedly in reference to Davidic kings and Yahweh’s defeat of their enemies (I Kings 5:3).

[8] The place of the kings coronation according to Ps. 2.  “It is the city of Jerusalem in its political and historical existence, particularly in the realm of cultic language and thus religious thought: it is concerned with the city of Yahweh. Zion in the place where Yahweh dwells or at least may be reached.” Randy G. Haney, Text and Concept Analysis in Royal Psalms. (New York: Peter Lang Publishers, 2002), 123.

[9] Allen, 86. Furthermore, it seems possible that the hJ,m; is reference back to the Exodus where Yahweh rescued Isreal from Egypt with a shepherds staff.

[10] The action itself is still dependent upon Yahweh’s prior actions because such ends lie “outside the power of the [king].” Arnold & Choi, 64.

[11]Referring to Ps. 2:7, Kraus notes, “The prophetic and procedural declaration, ‘You are my son, today I have begotten you,’ is disclosed as a creative word that establishes new existence. The divine choice is reflected in adoption. The chosen king is placed at god’s side by adoption. He is elevated to the position of representative of God’s sovereignty and of heir to his power. Thus it is that in the Old Testament the king was not “son of God” by nature, nor did he by his ascending the throne necessarily enter into the sphere of the divine, but by a decision of Israel’s God he was declared to be son at his entry into the office of king.” Kraus, 113.

[12] Ibid., 114.

[13] Allen, 80.

[14]Some have seen here a reference to the Canaanite deity Shahar in the word rx’v.mi, but this is entirely unlikely because the imagery in this verse is one of giving birth and Shahar was a male, not a female, deity. Also, Isaiah 14:12 describes the king of Babylon as rx;v’_-!B, (a son of the dawn), which seems to be a clearer connection with that Shahar.  Robert Davidson, The Vitality of Worship. (Grand Rapids: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Col, 1998), 365. Sigmund Mowinckel, The Psalms in Israel’s Worship. (Grand Rapids: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., 2004), 64.

[15]If the minority text is employed, “on the holy mountains,” the phrase would then describe “the location and process of begetting to the heavenly sphere. The king comes forth from heights beyond the world, from the world of God…Thus in Ps. 110:3 on the day when the ruler ascends the throne he is ascribed miraculous origin from on high and the hope of a dawning light, birth from the ‘heavenly world.’” This, of course, would flow nicely with the following assertion of divine sonship in the last two lines of this verse and the reference to the morning dew. Kraus, 114.

[16] The other attractive option at this point in this terribly difficult verse, is that the writer continues to speak of those who volunteered for the kings military service. The metaphor of the dew describes the vast number of warriors at the kings disposal. In this reading the entire army of Israel is dressed in holy attire, not just the king. Haney, 124.

[17] Kraus, 113.

[18]Taken in the larger military context of this passage, it seems plausible that Yahweh’s begetting of the king in the womb of the dawn is an indication that the king is Yahweh’s tool for helping Israel in her time of need, events often associated with the morning (Ps. 46:5-6). Such a reading also places this assistance nicely within the immediate context of the king having a zealous army at his side .Again, however, it should be remembered that the kings military might is derived from Yahweh not his own strength or military prowess.

[19] Brueggemann, 606.

[20] Brueggeman, 606.

Presencing

It often irks me when I’m trying to talk to someone and they won’t stop looking at their phone b/c their texting with 2 or 3 people while trying to have a conversation with me. I get relegated to a lower status because I AM ACTUALLY PRESENT.

Don’t get me wrong – I’m not a Nazi about it. In fact, I’ve probably been guilty of it a time or two myself. And I certainly think there are times when it may be perfectly appropriate.

But in most cases, I wonder if many of us have considered whether it’s the best thing – the moral thing- to do.

When I am on my phone texting non-stop when someone is trying to talk to me, it communicates to the person I’m with that they are less important than the faceless person on the other end of the text message. My presence does not matter as much as the non-presence of the other person. What I have to say in full sentences is less important than what the other person is typing in shorthand.

For the Christian, we are to redeem the time and make the most of our opportunities to glorify God in our interactions with other people. That means we are to be purposely present, intentionally aware of our surroundings and where God is at work in the moment. We cannot do that if we’re talking on the phone and texting while only having half-conversations with the people we’re actually with. You might think you can, but ask the people around you and if they’re honest they’ll tell you that you diminish the value of their presence in those moments.

What if, instead of texting and interrupting each other with answering phone calls in mid-conversation, we decided to value the person God has placed in our lives at that moment? What if we recognized the fingerprints of God in the present moment? What would that say to the world about how Christians value other people? What would that communicate about the importance of my presence to you and my contribution to your life – and yours to mine? What if this isn’t just a matter of bad etiquette, what if it might actually be bad theology?

I propose that we practices presencing. Value the moment and the people in our lives in the moment. The fingerprints of God aren’t always on the other side of my phone. But His face might be seen in the face of the person I’m present with.

A Late Christmas Poem: The Christmas Contradiction

I never write poetry, but have often had the desire. JR told me recently that I would never get to it if I didn’t just move past my inhibitions and give it a shot. So here is my feeble attempt. It was written for Christmas, but I didn’t want to post it until now. Maybe I’ll write one for Epiphany too.

Infinite infant in flesh finite

Of God and mortal man’s delight

Lowborn Lord incarnate here

Man’s Creator becomes his peer.

Tis a Sad Day…

If you’re not a baseball fan, then you don’t care.

If you are a baseball fan, you’re saddened by today’s announcement by Mark McGwire that he did use steroids, specifically during his record breaking homerun season. 

The question is now, what the heck do we do with this?

http://stlouis.cardinals.mlb.com/news/article.jsp?ymd=20100111&content_id=7900244&vkey=news_stl&fext=.jsp&c_id=stl

Miscarriages and Why Obstetricians Need Better Theology

A few days ago my wife and I had a little scare. Certain factors of her pregnancy were concerning us so we made an emergency appointment at the OB. In the end everything was just fine. We got to see the little peanut and her/his little heart beat.*

Subsequent to our ultrasound we saw the doctor. After reaffirming that our baby is fine he went on to talk a little about miscarriages. He told Cassie and I that if such a thing ever happened during the course of this pregnancy it would NOT be our fault….unless Cassie was secretly doing Cocaine or hitting the bars after I go to sleep.

He said in such circumstances, when the mother lives a completely healthy lifestyle, “God just wills it.” The miscarriage, that is.

Now this is a curious statement for many reasons. But what struck me at the time was how in the world does he think it is a comfort to anyone that God killed their baby (or even that He permitted its death)? I’m sure for him it’s just a cheap, churchy cliché that lays these things in the hands of Providence. I’m also sure such an answer probably actually works for most people.

But we’re not “most people.”

If my wife had actually had a miscarriage and he told us that it was the will of God, I’d probably punch him in the face (and I would have done it will a fist full of pacifist conviction!).

God does not “will” miscarriages. God’s desire is for life and its flourishing. When miscarriages occur, they are the result of human beings living in a broken world where death reigns. This was never God’s will. Never.

Technically, there is a sense in which the Christian tradition has always believed that the wages of sin is death, and so in a sense, miscarriages are the result of human sinfulness (not God’s punishment for your/my individual sin, but our general sinful condition). But God never “willed” this – this was not his desire or intention. He created us to celebrate beauty and life, to look to Him and live.

Miscarriages remind us of the frailty of human life. They remind us of the brokenness of the world in which we live and the brokenness of our own souls. But let us never speak of them as something that God “wills.” And let us especially never lay such a theological misunderstanding at the feet of someone who’s just experienced a miscarriage. A better suggestion would be to come along side the couple and remind them of God’s presence in the midst of their suffering. Divine presence in the midst of suffering: That God wills.

*If the baby is a boy, we’re going to name him Tommy (after my dad). If the baby is a girl, we’re going to name her June (after Junia in Romans 16 and June Hathersmith, one of the most godly women you’d ever meet). Until we know what the sex is, we’ve resorted to calling the little peanut something in between: Tune.

Frequenting

My friend Reuben frequents the local Mexican restraunt so much that when he comes in to eat, they barely even have to ask what he wants to eat. They already know not only that he wants a Special Texas, but they know everything to take off it.

My friend Chad has purposely frequented Clucker’s gas station at least once a day for quite a long time. In this, he’s developed a relationship with the people who work there, especially the owner – a Jordanian man who probably wouldn’t fit into the obviously white, rural Wilmore scene otherwise. Chad has intentionally gone to buy from him (even when it’s a bit more expensive) so that he could be a catalyst of welcome and hospitality to an “outsider.” By frequenting this place, he not only lets the man know that he cares about Ale-8-1’s, but that he cares about the man himself and his presence in the community.

I think of the show “Cheers.” The losers and dropouts, odd balls and pscyhologists all went to the same bar, sat in the same seats, and drank the same beer for years! Why? Because at Cheers “everybody knows your name!”  

Frequenting a place and getting to know the people helps us learn people’s stories:

The waitress becomes more than just your servant; she becomes “Marlene” – a mom and grandma, a person who worries about how her next rent payment is going to get made.

The cashier becomes more than someone who takes your money; he becomes “Haven” – the college kid who hates this small town, is pursuing a degree in Visual Arts, and for some reason is obsessed with the apocalypse even though he’s an atheist!

In other words, these people become more than nameless faces. They become human beings created in God’s image, people longing for redemption, and recipients of God’s infinite love.

I’m not saying that we frequent places to get people to come to church with us or “buy” Jesus from us. I’m saying that we do it because in a fractured and disconnected world, we show people that they matter to us when we come to see them and get to know them, especially when they’re in a setting when everyone else just ignores them. Frequenting gives us the opportunity to make the incarnation real on a daily basis to people who would not otherwise ever see the face of God.

Why the NT Doesn’t Teach Male “Authority” in Marriage

The following is written by Jon Zens, a prolific Reformed writer and authority on New Covenant Theology:

First, 1 Cor.7:1-5 is the only place in the NT where the word “authority” (Greek, exousia) is used with reference to marriage. But it is not the authority of the husband over the wife, or vice versa, that is in view, but rather a mutual authority over each other’s body. 1 Corinthians 7:4 states that the wife has authority over her husband’s body. One would think that this would be a hard pill to swallow for those who see “authority” as resting only in the husband’s headship.

Second, Paul states that a couple cannot separate from one another physically unless there is mutual consent (Greek, symphonou). Both parties must agree to the separation or it doesn’t happen. The husband cannot override the wife’s differing viewpoint.

John Piper suggests that “mature masculinity accepts the burden of the final say in disagreements between husband and wife, but does not presume to use it in every instance” (p.32). The problem with a dogmatic statement like this is that it will allow for no exceptions. But 1 Corinthians 7:5 contradicts Piper’s maxim. If the wife disagrees with a physical separation, the husband cannot overrule his wife with the “final choice” (p.33). Such separation can occur only if both husband and wife are in “symphony” (unity) about such an action.

Now if mutual consent applies in an important issue like physical separation from one another for a period of time, wouldn’t it seem proper that coming to one-mindedness would be the broad model for decision-making in a healthy marriage? Piper feels that “in a good marriage decision-making is focused on the husband, but is not unilateral” (p.32). In light of 1 Corinthians 7:1-5 I would suggest that decision-making should focus on finding the Lord’s mind together. Over the years the good ideas, solutions to problems and answers to dilemmas will flow from both husband and the wife as they seek the Lord as a couple for “symphony.”

1 Corinthians 7:5 throws a wrench into the works for those who would include the husband’s “final say” in male headship. Paul teaches that unless the couple can agree on a course of action, it cannot be executed. I suggest that this revelation invites us to re-examine what the husband’s headship really entails (cf. Gordon D. Fee, “1 Corinthians 7:1-7 Revisited,” Paul & the Corinthians: Studies On A Community in Conflict, Trevor J. Burke/J. Keith Elliott, eds., Brill, 2003, pp.197-213).

Psalm 110: Structure

The 110th Psalm’s structure is anchored within two prophetic pronouncements (vs. 1 and 4). Though scholars have espoused various structural breakdowns, a two section division seems most sensible. Parallelisms between verses 1-2 and 4-5 are too numerous to ignore. These include the repetition of the name hwhy and repetition of His acts of pronouncing a future reality.[1]

The entire psalm is a particularization of the phrase “until I make your enemies a footstool for your feet (^yl,(g>r:l. ~doåh] ^yb,ªy>ao÷ tyviîa’-d[;).” This particularization occurs by means of numerous contrasts: hands and feet; sitting and moving; Zion and the nations; my right hand and your right hand.

The first pronouncement proclaims that the king will sit on Yahweh’s right hand until the time at which his enemies become a footstool for him. As noted, this idea is then particularized in the four subsections that follow, essentially announcing “how” hwhy will bring this reality about. The second pronouncement (vs. 4) connects the king with the priestly lineage of Melchizedek, a feature which might seem out of place if we were discussing Aaronic priests, but because Melchizedek’s Genesis context is being blessed by Abraham after the defeat of the kings of Sodom, the psalmist’s connecting him to military imagery seems natural. This pronouncement is, like the first, accompanied by four subsections which serve to particularize verse 4.[2]

Finally, one of the more interesting features of the psalm involves a stylistic connection, at points, with prophetic oracles. Each of the two statements anchoring the structure of the psalm stylistically reflects prophetic discourse.[3] Examples of prophetic discourse and the importance of the structure of this psalm will be discussed in the following post in this series.

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[1] There are also other occurrences which indicate this two fold division, namely the repeated use of certain elements in the one section with no reference to the element in the other section. For example, Allen astutely notes the first strophe is characterized by the eightfold repetition of the pronominal suffix ^ (your) in vs. 1-3, while the second is marked by the fourfold repetition of the preposition l[;. Neither of these elements occur with the same frequency in the alternative strophe.

[2] Other notable features involve an inclusion that moves from the first verse with there reference to the kings enemies being placed under his feet (lg<r,) to the final verse which references his head (varo,) being lifted up. The alliterative aspect of this inclusion highlights another prominent feature of this psalm.

[3] One example will suffice here. The “Day of Wrath” rhetoric occurs in numerous prophetic books. It is a day in which Yahweh is viewed as a divine warrior warring against pagan nations and intervening to protect the king and His people. Is. 5:15, Jer. 9:21, Ez. 32:5-6