Francis Turretin on the Trinity..

The ‘adorable mystery of the Trinity’!  (Francis Turretin)  The word “Adorable” says it all about the worship of our Triune God!

The Obedience of Christ!

The foundation of Christ’s sacerdotal work, both as priest and as sacrifice, is HIS obedience!  Only in the righteousness thereby established does He possess the holiness required to serve as priest and the purity to serve as an expiatory sacrifice. Calvin writes: ‘How has Christ abolished sin, banished the separation between us and God, and acquired righteousness to render God favourable and kindly toward us? To this we can in general reply that he has achieved this for us by the whole course of his obedience.’ (Calvin, Inst. II. xvi.5)  Scripture generally focuses on the atoning power of Christ death & resurrection, so that the Creed passes from his birth directly to his passion, as Calvin notes…’But we must also understand that the obedience that Christ manifested through the history of his life was vital to our salvation.’  In Reformed theology we call this Christ’s active obedience, for us, in our salvation. Christ alone keeps the righteousness of the Law for us!  This is really central in our being Justified by Faith!  We don’t “keep” the Law, but in regeneration we can by grace begin to walk after the Spirit, but even this is never perfection on our part, but the enablement wrought by sanctification, which will end in the eschatological end, in the presence of Christ Himself!  (Jude 24-25)  (Fr. R.)

*This was for you Dave!

Christians Who Hate Jews, Jerusalem Report

http://www.thejerusalemconnection.us/blog/2012/02/25/christians-who-hate-jews.html

I am sad to call myself an Anglican with this story!  But then I think of better days, when England, and the Brit’s had a fulfilled Jewish Christian PM, the grand Benjamen Disraeli (1804-1881), who wrote: “The view of Jerusalem is the history of the world; it is more, it is the history of earth and of heaven.”

The Triumph of Ontological and Eternal Generation, Nicene Creed

http://www.jsrhee.com/QA/thesis3.htm by Jung S. Rhee

This is a grand piece and article!

Augustine and the Trinity..

“In no other subject is error more dangerous, or inquiry more laborious, or the discovery of truth more profitable.” (Augustine De Trinitate 1.3.5.)

It is here sadly that we can see Calvin’s denial of the Eternal Generation of the Son. Well meaning Calvin simply did not see the “monarchy” of the Father in the Godhead, as did Augustine. But I quote John Murray here on Calvin…

‘Calvinist John Murray writes concerning this time:
Students of historical theology are acquainted with the furore which Calvin’s insistence upon the self-existence of the Son as to his deity aroused at the time of the Reformation. Calvin was too much a student of Scripture to be content to follow the lines of what had been regarded as Nicene orthodoxy on this particular issue. He was too jealous for the implications of the homo-ousion clause of the Nicene creed to be willing to accede to the interpretation which the Nicene fathers, including Athanasius, placed upon another expression in the same creed, namely ‘Very God of Very God’…this evidence shows that the meaning intended is that the Son derived his deity from the Father and that the Son was not therefore autotheos. It was precisely this position that Calvin controverted with vigour. (Systematic Theology, Westminster Theological Journal 25) ‘

The Splendor of the Three-in-One God, R. Scott Clark

http://wscal.edu/resource-center/resource/the-splendor-of-the-three-in-one-god

‘Lutheran & Catholic’ (Quote)

The more recent concept of “Catholicism” as an antonym of “Protestantism” is a typical product of Reformed thought. The Lutheran Church… does not know to which side it belongs. For there are heresies in Protestantism which are just as dangerous as those of Catholicism. Lutheran theology differs from Reformed theology in that it lays great emphasis on the fact that the evangelical church is none other than the medieval Catholic Church purged of certain heresies and abuses. The Lutheran theologian acknowledges that he belongs to the same visible church to which Thomas Aquinas and Bernard of Clairvaux, Augustine and Tertullian, Athanasius and Ireneaus once belonged. The orthodox evangelical church is the legitimate continuation of the medieval Catholic Church, not the church of the Council of Trent and the Vatican Council which renounced evangelical truth when it rejected the Reformation.
For the orthodox evangelical church is really identical with the orthodox Catholic Church of all times. And just as the very nature of the Reformed Church emphasizes its strong opposition to the medieval church, so the very nature of the Lutheran Church requires it to go to the farthest possible limit in its insistence on its solidarity and identity with the Catholic Church.
From Sasse, H. (1979, original 1938). Here We Stand. Adelaide, South Australia: Lutheran Publishing House. pp. 110-111. Emphasis added

Galatians 6:12; My own Lenten Reading..

“Those who desire to make a good showing in the flesh try to compel you to be circumcised, simply that they may not be persecuted for the cross of Christ.” (Gal. 6: 18, NASB, 1960)

Surely there is nothing wrong with just being “circumcised” (in Paul’s time), Jews did it, and sometimes the Gentile God-fearers. But for Paul “circumcision” was a sign of the OT covenant, which was Mosaic and included the so-called righteousness of works. And so Paul will simply not have it!  (Gal. 2)  And so for us today, let us not allow anything, other than, “Let us lift up our heart with our hands unto God in the heavens (heaven).”  (Lam. 3:41)

Psalm 90..

This A.M. Pslam 90 was my reading… God’s Eternity and man’s transitoriness!  My wife has been very ill again. She was in the hospital the other day and night. But she is home now and better, thanks be to God!

“Make us glad according to the days – or as many days, You have afflicted us..” (verse 15).  Pain and suffering will always be a mystery to us, even as God’s people, and actually especially as God’s people!  All of God’s people suffer!  But may we take our “suffering” straight to the Lord who suffered and died, and somehow redeemed “suffering” and even death itself!  (2 Cor. 4:10-11 / 1 Cor. 15: 54-55, etc.)

An Irrational Hatred, by Rabbi Yechiel

An Irrational Hatred

February 22, 2012

“Therefore pride is their necklace; they clothe themselves with violence. From their callous hearts comes iniquity; their evil imaginations have no limits. They scoff, and speak with malice;
with arrogance they threaten oppression.”
— Psalm 73:6–8
Have you ever felt like someone didn’t like you – maybe even hated you – for no particular reason? It’s puzzling, isn’t it? You wonder what you did to provoke a strong reaction, and if you can’t think of anything you did, it seems irrational. We Jews often find ourselves as the objects of such irrational hatred.
For example, at various points in history, Jews have been accused of being too poor or too wealthy; too politically domineering or too politically uninvolved. We’ve been accused of being too spiritual and too secular, unambitious and overly aggressive, too separated from others and too assimilated. Does that make sense? How can we be all those things?
Anti-Semitism, like other forms of racism, is a condition of the heart. It reflects a callous heart that has lost sensitivity to others. The writer of Psalm 73 says that “from their callous hearts comes iniquity” (v. 7). A hardened heart that has lost sensitivity to others is a breeding ground for evil.
In addition to a callous heart, anti-Semitism forms in a conceited mind. At the base of racism is the conceited belief that one person or group is better than another and “their evil imaginations have no limits” (Psalm 73:7). Rather than listening to the voice of reason, irrational thoughts prevail, driven by passionate hatred. For those who promote anti-Semitism, their hatred is simply hatred, without any reason or justification for it. This irrational racial hatred has often led to inconsistent accusations against the Jews – such as those above – because the accusations are not based on logic or merit, but hate.
Finally, the psalm writer says that those with callous hearts and conceited minds also have threatening lips, for “they scoff, and speak with malice; with arrogance they threaten oppression” (Psalm 73:8). Anti-Semitism, and other racial prejudice, often expresses itself in threats, intimidation, and oppression. Acts of terrorism against Jews and Jewish icons are an attempt to instill fear in the lives of Jews.
As the psalm writer concludes, when faced with unreasonable and unmerited prejudice, there is only one place to find hope and to remember, “Yet I am always with you; you hold me by my right hand. You guide me with your counsel, and afterward you will take me into glory. Whom have I in heaven but you?”(vv. 23–25). We can have confidence in God’s presence and guidance no matter what our circumstances or difficulties.
Rabbi Yechiel Eckstein

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