Showing posts with label Women's Ordination. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Women's Ordination. Show all posts

Friday, January 05, 2024

B, The Baptism of our Lord, Epiphany 1 - Acts 19:1-7 "Epiphany in Ephesus"

There were many things going on in the years leading up to Jesus’ incarnation, death, resurrection, and ascension.

For two to three hundred years within “Jerusalem Judaism”, murder, scandals, power battles, and political jockeying for favourable positions were occurring at a time when big social changes outside the temple were causing much chaos and confusion in a Greco-Roman world.

Jews whom God had allowed to be exiled to the east, were now not returning to Jerusalem.  Instead, they were spreading as diaspora throughout this new world and were seeking to come to terms with paganism and the philosophical thoughts that abounded in the Hellenisation of the Greco-Roman world.  

Years before, the Greek ruler, Alexander the Great, had annexed the known world under his control.  His kingdom spanned from India in the East to Europe in the west.  He became the father of Hellenisation, which sought to integrate Persian and Greek culture, religion, philosophical thinking, language, and identity.  This was the era in which the philosophical thoughts of Socrates, Plato, and the like, spread throughout the Greco-Roman world.

There were both positives and negatives for Jews in this world.  They were allowed to practice the Jewish faith, and at this time the Hebrew scriptures were translated into Greek by seventy-two translators at Alexandria in North Africa.  The translation is called Septuagint, commonly referred to as the LXX, or seventy, for its numbers of translators.  This was a notable positive for the mission of God the Father of the Jews amongst the Gentiles.  But the danger for Jewish faith was monotheism was now challenged by a pantheon of polytheistic male and female gods and ideologies.

Into this Jesus was born.  John the Baptist baptised Jews in the Jordan, preparing and refocusing the people of God, for the fullness of time came for God to fulfill his promise to Israel, made through the prophets of old.  Three full years saw the completion of God’s covenant with humanity, and then the work of the Holy Spirit continued in a new way, revealing Jesus Christ as “the way of God” for both Jews and Gentiles in Greco-Roman society.

The way of God born of one man and his remaining eleven disciples, at face value, was not going to survive, for all that long, amongst a hostile Jewish culture, from which it came.  Nor did anyone expect the “way of God” to survive the deluge of polytheistic gods and ideologies competing for people’s attention in this diverse new world.

But it did!  Why?  It was the power of God the Holy Spirit!  The Holy Spirit descended upon Jesus, the Son of God, who put his divinity aside, and suffered on earth as did any other person.  But he finished it without sinning!  Jesus allowed the Holy Spirit to lead him in life and death, fulfilling God the Father’s will in the fullness of time!  The Holy Spirit then raised Jesus from the dead to the right hand of the Father at his ascension after the resurrection.  Now the Holy Spirit would continue revealing the ascended Christ to both Jews and Gentiles!

The spread of the Gospel through the way of God was helped by what God allowed to occur in the dispersion of Jews in the four hundred years since the exile to Babylon before Jesus’ coming.  Jews are notable traders, and they were found along the trade routes of Asia Minor (modern Turkey) in the Roman Empire, that had grown and won out over all former empires.

Ephesus, once a seaport, was one of these trading places enroute to somewhere else!  But not only were goods traded, many ideas and philosophies were exchanged and intertwined along these routes that passed from the Far East to Rome and onto Western Europe.

Artemis was a female goddess in Asia Minor.  The world worshipped her.  (Acts 19:27) Ephesus housed her temple and the town relied on Artemis for its honour, as well as trade. 

To the Greeks she was known as Artemis, to the Romans, this same goddess is known as Diana.  We might consider her as a Mother Nature cult, since she was the patron goddess of nature, hunters, wildlife, and childbirth, to name a few.

The way of God, the Gospel, first came to the Jews at Ephesus, as Paul briefly passed through its port and synagogue on his way to Caesarea.  This was his second missionary journey.  (Acts 18: 18-21) 

Next came a man named Apollos, a Jew from Alexandria in North Africa.  Being from this town named after Alexander the Great, and encouraged as a centre of academia, diversity of thought, and culture, Apollos was well equipped in the art of rhetoric and debate, and was competent in the Old Testament Scriptures, most likely the Greek Septuagint.

After Paul’s first visit, Apollos made a stand for Jesus Christ in the synagogue in Ephesus.  However, Priscilla and Aquila, known tentmakers and acquaintances of Paul, having heard him, took him aside and explained the way of God more accurately.  From there Apollos moves onto what we would know as Greece today.  (Acts 18:24-28)

After these two encounters some of the Jews begin to believe in the way of God.  They know of Jesus Christ but not of the power of God through the Holy Spirit.  We hear what happens from Acts chapter nineteen…

Paul said to the disciples in Ephesus, “Did you receive the Holy Spirit when you believed?” And they said, “No, we have not even heard that there is a Holy Spirit.”  And he said, “Into what then were you baptized?” They said, “Into John’s baptism.”  And Paul said, “John baptized with the baptism of repentance, telling the people to believe in the one who was to come after him, that is, Jesus.”  On hearing this, they were baptized in the name of the Lord Jesus.  And when Paul had laid his hands on them, the Holy Spirit came on them, and they began speaking in tongues and prophesying.  There were about twelve men in all. (Acts 19:2–7 ESV)

Apollos, like John the Baptist brought a baptism of repentance, preparing for the coming of Jesus Christ in the Holy Spirit.  Now Paul, in the fullness of time, brings Jesus Christ with the power of the Holy Spirit.  Water and the Law came through Apollos, then through Paul the Holy Spirit brought the fullness of the Gospel.  Just as Jesus has called twelve into service during his ministry on earth, God did the same through Paul’s laying on of hands at Ephesus.

Paul remained in Ephesus for about three years on his third missionary journey.  (Acts 20:31) For the first three months he boldly persuaded them about the kingdom of God in the synagogue (Acts 19:8), but then moved to the hall of Tyrannus, where for the next two years, he continued to preach and teach, not only the Jews, but the Gentiles as well. 

The Holy Spirit gave Paul extraordinary healing powers while in Ephesus.  The sons of Sceva, sons of a Jewish High Priest, sought to copy Paul with their own exorcisms, but were overcome by the evil spirits they were trying to exorcize, because they sort to do it by their own power, without the power of the Holy Spirit.  Here stands a warning to anyone who seeks to work apart from the Holy Spirit, through their own human spirit.

So extraordinary was the event, the Sons of Sceva, were wounded and fled the house naked, bringing a sense of awe upon all at Ephesus.  So much so, a greater depth of reverence for Jesus Christ was fostered.  Even believers came confessing and divulging their practices.  Imagine that!  Such was the faith generated by the Holy Spirit in this event, they made public what they were doing, rather than chance being cut off from the power of God, by continuing in their hidden deeds.

Nearing the end of three years, as the Holy Spirit grew the way of God through Paul and the gathering in Ephesus, some became concerned their livelihoods were being diminished as more and more worshippers of Artemis became believers in the way of God through Jesus Christ.  There was much chaos and controversy in Ephesus, so much so, Paul’s fellow believers would not let Paul speak to the mob for fear of what might happen to him.

So, Paul left after being in Ephesus for just under three years, to continue his third missionary journey in Greece. 

On his way back to Jerusalem from Greece, Paul stopped in Miletus, to the south of Ephesus in Asia Minor and called the elders of Ephesus to him.  Paul teaches the elders in the wake of what had occurred earlier in Ephesus, and by what power he did it. 

He says, “You yourselves know how I lived among you the whole time from the first day that I set foot in Asia,  serving the Lord with all humility and with tears and with trials that happened to me through the plots of the Jews;  how I did not shrink from declaring to you anything that was profitable, and teaching you in public and from house to house,  testifying both to Jews and to Greeks of repentance toward God and of faith in our Lord Jesus Christ.  And now, behold, I am going to Jerusalem, constrained by the Spirit, not knowing what will happen to me there, except that the Holy Spirit testifies to me in every city that imprisonment and afflictions await me.  But I do not account my life of any value nor as precious to myself, if only I may finish my course and the ministry that I received from the Lord Jesus, to testify to the gospel of the grace of God.  …for I did not shrink from declaring to you the whole counsel of God.  Pay careful attention to yourselves and to all the flock, in which the Holy Spirit has made you overseers, to care for the church of God, which he obtained with his own blood.”  (Acts 20:18–24, 27b-28 ESV)

Paul knows these overseers at Ephesus will be attacked by those seeking to subvert the way of God to the ways of men. (Acts 20:29-32) In fact, Paul was so gifted with discernment in the Holy Spirit, the ministry to Ephesus continues to them through his epistle to them (the book of Ephesians) and in his encouragement for Timothy to remain at Ephesus.  (Paul’s first and second letters to Timothy)

Paul’s letters to Ephesus and Saint Timothy, give us great insight into the congregation and the pastoral care of it in the face of pagan and Jewish persecution of the way of God.

Through Paul, the Holy Spirit leads the church in this era of transformation.  As the pendulum of change swings, Paul seeks to keep the centrality of the cross before the people of Ephesus. 

Paul places the fulfilment of God’s fatherhood in Jesus Christ before the Ephesian congregation, which is caught between, the fatherhood through circumcision in the Law and its extreme opposite uncircumcised fatherless chaos and corruption.

Through Paul and Timothy, the Holy Spirit seeks to put the brakes on the pendulum swing from Judaism to pagan chaos and disorder in the church.  He does this by encouraging faith in the complementarian order within the church, as God had originally ordained in creation and then corrected and restored in Jesus Christ at the cross.  This is done in the face of “new woman” Artemis cultic worship in Ephesus, which is not unlike the mother earth and egalitarian imbalances pushed in our society today.  Not to mention, the Artemis magic similarities with the powers and principalities of the occult.

During 2024, as the LCANZ considers the expectations put before us in the last Synod, we will do well to further investigate and listen to the work of the Holy Spirit in Ephesus in the book of Acts and through Paul’s letters to the Ephesian congregation and Timothy it’s young pastor.  We know and do this trusting the Holy Spirit will keep us in Christ Jesus so like Paul amongst the Ephesians we can be faithfully testifying both to Jews and to Greeks of repentance toward God and of faith in our Lord Jesus Christ.  Amen.

Further reading: Acts 18:24-20:1, 17-38, Paul’s letter to the Ephesians, and letters First and Second Timothy, the pastor at Ephesus when Paul wrote to him.  

Friday, December 29, 2023

B, Christmas 1, New Year's Eve - 1 Peter 1:22-25 "The Word of God"

1 Peter 1:22–25 (ESV) Having purified your souls by your obedience to the truth for a sincere brotherly love, love one another earnestly from a pure heart,  since you have been born again, not of perishable seed but of imperishable, through the living and abiding word of God;  for “All flesh is like grass and all its glory like the flower of grass. The grass withers, and the flower falls, but the word of the Lord remains forever.” And this word is the good news that was preached to you.

In 2023 the Lord God has given, and the Lord God has taken away, blessed be the name of the Lord (Job 1:21)!   Whatever it is he has given you in 2023, he has given so you look to him and give thanks.  Whatever it is he has taken from you, he has taken from you, so you turn and learn to trust in him.

In 2023 God has given you, his Word!  His Word is given, and the Holy Spirit has moved in you with his Word, to discipline and disciple you, so you abide and remain living with Jesus, the Word made Flesh. 

If you have been faithful to God’s Word, the Holy Spirit brings comfort through the forgiveness of your sin.  If you have fought against being brought to repentance in the Word of God, or you have failed to hear the Word through disobedience, or have used God’s Word to your own glory, the Holy Spirit will let you suffer, to save you and return you to God’s Word, and his one true church.

It is the Holy Spirit’s job to call and gather you, enlighten you in the Word of God, and make you holy by keeping you united with Jesus Christ in the one true faith.  Push against the Holy Spirit from bringing you to Jesus Christ, and you place yourself on sinking sand, and in grave danger of sinning against the giver of faith.

God wants what’s good for you!  He wants to work his goodness for your good.  The Holy Spirit has been sent from God the Father, and God the Son, to bring you to our Father through the Son.  The Holy Spirit does this work by gently walking beside us, like a friend walking with his arm around our shoulder, comforting us as he moves us to the safety of the cross.  But sometimes he needs to walk behind us, giving us a sharp swift kick that might hurt a bit!  But it’s done for our eternal benefit returning us in repentance to the cross and worker of our salvation!

As individuals the Holy Spirit calls, gathers, enlightens, and makes us holy as God’s one church.  We remain in God’s church when we allow the Holy Spirit to set us apart. 

However, when we, the church of God, set ourselves apart from the Word of God and the Holy Spirit, we place ourselves in corporate danger.  Collectively gathering as one human spirit, we may think we have the Holy Spirit, but end up sitting in authority over the Word of God, judging the Word of God with a human spirit.  In other words, we use our powers and principles, which are our works and will, and not God’s!

Do you think that a loving Heavenly Father, will not seek to return us to him?  God indeed will fight for us, to correct us, and lead us back to Jesus Christ, to the Word made Flesh, so we re-submit to the written Word, from where he gives us light and life!  All prodigal sons and self-righteous sons are called back to our Heavenly Father through “the Son of God”, with his Sonship, worked within, by the Holy Spirit!

Like a fig tree that hasn’t been bearing fruit, we have been allowed to continue as the Lutheran Church in Australia by our heavenly Father.  Faithful pastors have dug around the roots and fertilised the tree of the church with the Word of God.  Some however have chosen to fertilise with a compromised word, leaving out the call to repentance, rather encouraging God’s children to follow their feelings. 

But Jesus says, “Beware of false prophets, who come to you in sheep’s clothing but inwardly are ravenous wolves.  You will recognize them by their fruits.  Every tree that does not bear good fruit is cut down and thrown into the fire.  Thus you will recognize them by their fruits.  (Matthew 7:15–16a, 19–20 ESV)

And again he warns “I tell you, on the day of judgment people will give account for every careless word they speak, for by your words you will be justified, and by your words you will be condemned.” (Matthew 12:36–37 ESV)

God calls us to return to the Word of God over against the feelings, the opinions, and the words of our hearts.  Our fleeting words will not save us.  Like rotten fruit will be thrown out or a fruitless tree will be taken to with an axe, those who persistently deny God and his Word, dangerously put themselves on the wrong side of God’s Word and his judgement!

If you think there are no ravenous wolves in the LCANZ, you need to wake up to the reality of the world and the church.  Do not accept what any pastor says, just because they are a pastor, me included! 

Submit what every pastor teaches and preaches to the glory test!  What is the glory test?  Does it glorify Jesus Christ eternally, or does the glory go somewhere else, dying before the fullness of time?  Investigate and judge for yourselves with a right judgement, to where the glory is going!

2024 will be a year of chaos for the LCANZ.  Many other churches of Christendom have chosen to walk away from the Word by following the ways of the world.  Modern heresies abound in the denominations of the Reformation, where the Word of God is watered down more and more to accommodate the confusion and chaos of the world.

The light and life, of God’s one true holy apostolic church gathered around Jesus Christ, has been diminished in many denominations, including the Lutheran Church of Australia.  The cult of the LCA has been caught up in the chaos and confusion of the world. 

The powers and principles the church has sought to trust, has moved from God to man, from trusting God and his Word, to seeking popularity and approval from the world, by reading the world into the Word, to make the Word and the LCANZ more accommodating to Australia’s sinful society. 

The LCANZ has realised it cannot discern from the Word of God that women should be ordained.  Yet because the desire is strong, we’re making the same mistakes as others and are stepping away from the Word, to become engaged in wilful mischief, deliberate sin, and self-glorifying righteousness. 

Where God is silent, some have become presumptuously boisterous, actively scoffing, and seeking to shame those who seek to follow the Word of God!  How have we got to a point where the spirit of the world reigns over the Holy Spirit?   Many refuse to repent, but rather travel the way that’s wide, that leads to eternal death!

The chaos that is unfolding in the church, is evident.  God is handing us over to our will, withdrawing and leaving us to our own devices.  Synod in Melbourne in February saw due process and the Word of God held ransom to the procedural direction of a few.  Chaos and confusion reigned, but submission to the Word was fleeting at best!

Rather than God speaking through gathered congregations in synod, a top-down directive occurred.  Where congregations once got together as synod to do what they could not do individually, now a small group of individuals has usurped the authority of the Synod, the Pastor’s Conference, but more importantly God and his Word.  Just like what happened in the Garden of Eden, the authority has been reversed!

It's no surprise that in 2023, a small group, without the authority of the synod, decided to secretly change the call of lecturers at the seminary without their consultation and has decided to sell off the seminary and national office in Adelaide.  In its best light, it’s a poor business decision, at its worse it is the complete mismanagement of God’s gifts to continue supplying confessional Christ centred pastors to feed, forgive, and prepare God’s flock of Lutherans to bear God’s Word in the world. 

2024 will be a year of chaos for the LCANZ as it continues on its path against God and his Word.  While the LCANZ follows the flesh, its glory will fade and fall like that of grass flowers.  “The grass withers, and the flower falls, but the word of the Lord remains forever.” 

Jeremiah talks about good figs and bad figs.  Just as we have taunted God for twenty-three years since the 2000 synod, Jeremiah informs the bad figs, the inhabitants of Judah and Jerusalem, saying, “For twenty-three years, …to this day, the word of the LORD has come to me, and I have spoken persistently to you, but you have not listened.  You have neither listened nor inclined your ears to hear, although the LORD persistently sent to you all his servants the prophets… Yet you have not listened to me, declares the LORD, that you might provoke me to anger with the work of your hands to your own harm.  (Jeremiah 25:3-4, 7 ESV)

We might say, “But we have Jesus, we have Jesus!”, just as they said, “We have the temple of the Lord, the temple of the Lord!” (Jeremiah 7:4)   But where is that temple of the Lord today?  It’s gone!  It disappeared into the echelons of time.

God calls you to follow his Word, and not the world, as he has done throughout the history of mankind.  We are no different to any other generation.  Moses called Israel to choose life and live!  Jesus calls us to abide in his Word, as branches live in the vine (John 15:1-9).   Paul and the Apostles proclaimed Jesus Christ, so we choose life and live.  Luther also calls us to choose life in the Word of God, and so too do many others. 

They all call us, to not stand over God’s Word for our short-term gain, but rather call us to remain in submission to God the Father, Jesus Christ, the Word of God made flesh, and the Holy Spirit who truly works the Word within for our repentance and salvation.  Amen.

Thursday, April 06, 2023

A, Maundy Thursday - John 13:15–17,34 "Holy or Hardhearted Passover"

John 13:15–17,34 (ESV)  For I have given you an example, that you also should do just as I have done to you.  Truly, truly, I say to you, a servant is not greater than his master, nor is a messenger greater than the one who sent him.  If you know these things, blessed are you if you do them.  A new commandment I give to you, that you love one another: just as I have loved you, you also are to love one another.

God always seeks to save humanity.  His focus is on life.  God’s intention to bring life to us, is his work of redemption.  For his work to be effective in the lives of those called as his church, it depends on one’s response to the salvation he seeks to give! 

Having been made holy by the blood of Jesus spilt on the cross, for the forgiveness of sins, life, and salvation, if one responds with holiness, this is allowing the Holy Spirit to generate faith within.  So, the person humbles their heart and lives a life of repentance.   This life gives the freedom to confess one’s sin and forgive others knowing this pleases God our Father. 

All these are a participation in the good works of holiness, as the Holy Spirit wills within each the desire to be what God has recreated his reborn to be.  For we are his workmanship, created in Christ Jesus for good works, which God prepared beforehand, that we should walk in them.” (Ephesians 2:10 ESV)

Those who know this, allow the Holy Spirit to bring them to confession, believe in their absolution, and are blessed.  Forgiven, one can forgive!  Loved, one can love as Jesus loves!

However, some do not respond positively to God’s work of salvation in sending Jesus to the cross.  They reject it outright, claiming they are good, not evil, and don’t need God’s work.

Then there are those who appear to hear and believe God’s work of salvation, but when push comes to shove, they do not allow the Holy Spirit to bring their human spirit to repentance in the blood of Jesus Christ. 

These two groups, those who reject Jesus Christ completely, and those who reject the Holy Spirit bringing them to Jesus Christ, participate in the works of hardheartedness and are not blessed. Without receiving forgiveness, one cannot forgive.  Without receiving Jesus’ love, one cannot love as Jesus loves!

In the lead up to the initial Passover in Egypt, Pharaoh stands as one whose heart is hardened. 

God gives room for Pharaoh to change his mind and repent.  But each time the hardness returns Pharaoh back to his original state of being. 

But Pharaoh, who stubbornly considered himself the earthly representation of the Egyptian sun god Ra, was no match against God our Father, who spoke through the seemingly weak and flawed mouth of Moses.

In fact, in Moses, God was using the weak things of the world to shame the wise and powerful, so God’s almighty glory would shine all the more.

God made Moses like God to Pharaoh.  (Ex 7:1)  But God also makes Pharaoh hardhearted so he would not listen to Moses.  Moses spoke with “uncircumcised lips”.  (Ex 6:30)  In other words, he did not speak with eloquent ability so Pharaoh might be persuaded by gifted rhetoric. 

God made this inarticulate Israelite like God to Pharaoh, so that God’s glory would shine all the more brightly over the hardhearted Pharaoh as Egypt descends deeper into darkness.  Each time Moses approached Pharaoh, Pharaoh’s retreat to hardness became easier and stronger. 

Like Pharaoh, all who resist God, do so each successive time, with greater ease and increased hardheartedness.  The stakes become so high, one completely rejects God in favour of one’s own goodness and godliness.

Judas Iscariot, unlike Pharaoh, believed in God.  However, he believed for his own advantage.  Like Pharaoh he too was hardhearted.  Over time, as Jesus neared Jerusalem and the cross, Judas became more distant from Jesus Christ.  Like the increase of Pharaoh’s heart being hardened in each successive plague, so too was Judas’ heart, as Jesus did less and less in being the Messiah Judas expected. 

Jesus washed the disciples’ feet, of which Judas was one.  And after dipping the morsel of bread and giving it to Judas, Satan enters him and Jesus says,  What you are going to do, do quickly!” (John 31:27)  After Judas took the bread and ate it, he left to betray Jesus.  The Gospel of John records after he left, “It was night.  (Jn 13:30) 

Judas, like true believers, knew, but unlike true followers, did not want to do what the Master was doing.  In his hardheartedness, he sought to bless himself in what he was doing and entered the darkness of eternal death in doing so! 

Judas and Pharaoh stand together in their hardheartedness and life passes over them.  Their love was for themselves, and not as the love God had for sinful humanity.

Thousands of years apart, these events begin and end the old covenant Passover!  The alpha and omega of Passovers.  The first and the last of effective Passovers!  Now, Jesus Christ has absorbed the Passover in his death and gives us life in the Holy Spirit by his resurrection.

Death did not pass over Pharaoh, Judas, and Jesus.  Whose love out of the three is worth following to receive life?  The new mandate from where we get the name, Maundy Thursday, is to love as Jesus has loved us.  For us to love as Jesus has loved us, we need to be washed and forgiven!  Unless Jesus washes us and gives us his Holy Spirit we have no share with him – no salvation and no ability to love as Jesus loves!  (Jn 13:8)

Jesus’ mandate is a clear warning to all in the church to continue allowing God the Holy Spirit to bring us to God the Son, so what was won on the cross does not pass over us!

God our Father is patient with us, but testing his patience is dangerous.  Do we wish to place ourselves in a position of hardheartedness, where we have passed the point of no return, and contribute to our final destruction?  As did Pharaoh and Judas?  Just as the Lord made a distinction between Israel and Egypt in the Passover, those who persist in their defiance and pride in resisting the Holy Spirit will be plagued with death and won’t be passed onto eternal life with God our Father.

God seeks to glorify Lutherans in Australia who follow and listen to him.  He wishes to bestow upon all believers in Jesus Christ, life.  Because of our sinful human nature, we would return to being like Pharaoh or Judas, if, after receiving Jesus Christ we did not receive the Holy Spirit, to engender faith within and continually gather us and return us to Jesus Christ.  God wants to pass over us with eternal death, so we are passed onto eternal life, this is why we receive the Holy Spirit.

The Lutheran Church of Australia and New Zealand is an organisation in which God’s church exists as a part of God’s kingdom.  But it depends on how those in the Lutheran Church of Australia and New Zealand (LCANZ) respond to his work of love, which saves and makes each individual holy.  In short, you need Jesus Christ and the Holy Spirit, for you to be at peace with God the Father.

For the best part of twenty years the LCANZ has been asking if we should ordain women along with men.  Five times we have prayed and voted.  God has said,  “No”, through the vote, upholding what he says to us in his Word.

After each vote there has been increased hardheartedness towards God saying, “No”!  With ease new motions are put to synod, with increasing desire and deception, God’s love is being redefined to that of the world’s definition of love and equality.  In equalling ourselves to God, we have not humbled ourselves, confessed, received forgiveness, and sought to love others as Jesus has loved us.

Plagued by renewed motions of disobedience against what God has intended through our prayerful votes, the LCANZ is now in a dangerous position as we gravitate the way of hardheartedness, grieving the Holy Spirit, and putting our holiness in jeopardy.  If we walk out on God’s will, we can expect the night of darkness just as Judas did!

Jesus is our example, despite not having a hard heart, he put his divinity aside, and entrusted his human spirit to the Holy Spirit.   We are understudies of his humility, so we might receive and live in his holiness.

The men who wilfully allow disobedience to happen in our church do so to their detriment.  God cuts to the core of our existence, dealing with life and death.  When Pharaoh was judged by God, it was the oldest males who died in the Passover.  If God was about equality as the world defines it, the oldest females would have died too. 

So too called male leaders will be judged who seek to subvert the male office of Christ’s love and servanthood, with a love that is self-centred and hardhearted.  Just as throughout history all men called into the ordained ministry in God’s church have been accountable to the Son of God, Jesus Christ.

Pray for the LCANZ, “Obey your leaders and submit to them, for they are keeping watch over your souls, as those who will have to give an account.” (Hebrews 13:17a ESV)

Let the Holy Spirit bring us all back to the foot of the Cross, and live peacefully in God’s forgiveness, with God’s words of caution, “For if we go on sinning deliberately after receiving the knowledge of the truth, there no longer remains a sacrifice for sins, but a fearful expectation of judgment, and a fury of fire that will consume the adversaries.  It is a fearful thing to fall into the hands of the living God.  (Hebrews 10:26–27, 31 ESV)

Let us pray.  Lord God Holy Spirit soften our hearts, help us receive forgiveness, believe forgiveness, and share Christ’s forgiveness with each other, so we might not only receive your bread for today, but having passed over death, receive it from you at the table of the Father’s eternal feast forever.  Amen.