He Is God, I Am Not

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He Is God, I Am Not The Facebook presence for the teaching and apologetic ministry of "He is God, I am Not".

24/04/2021

After extended technical delays, the next episode of 'He Is God, I am Not' will be released soon. The next topic is Question 6 of Keach's Catechism, "May all men make use of the Scriptures?"

It may sound like a boring question to the modern ear, but the applications of the answer to this question will likely surprise you.

20/04/2021

I had to install a new hard drive on my computer and am in the process of reinstalling all my programs. My templates for the podcast are all in the old hard drive, which is now giving me a failure message (which is what I was afraid was about to happen).

17/04/2021

The Bible is the most purchased, least read, and most misunderstood or improperly used book. With more than 450 English language versions, the problem is not a lack of Bible versions, it is the lack of CONVERSIONS.

07/04/2021

I have an upcoming podcast I have written, but not yet recorded. I know this is unusual, but I feel very moved to share the script with you today:

2021 Episode 5 – Catechism 5 – Part 3
April 7, 2021
Welcome to today’s episode of He Is God, I Am Not.

We have covered, so far, the heavenliness of the Bible’s doctrine, and the unity of its parts. I would like to point out something if I may: the first two parts, the heavenliness of its doctrine and the unity of its parts, are based on scripture and the evidence for it. But this next part is based, for lack of a better word, experiential evidence as observed on the lives of people. We as believers must tread very lightly and carefully when we base a position on our own, or someone else’s, ‘experience’. Many false doctrines have arisen from personal experience. Many mistaken ideas have been borne out of dramatic, and very real (at least to the person) incidents that have happened in their lives.

For this next point in the catechism, “How do we know the Bible is the Word of God”, we look toward evidence within the actions and behavior of people. However, this evidence is not based on the words of people who claim ‘it happened to them’, it is based on what the Bible claims it can do in the lives of people. Specifically, the catechism says in the third point that we know the Bible is the word of God because of…

Its power to convert sinners and to edify saints
Heb 4:12 For the word of God is living and powerful, and sharper than any two-edged sword, piercing even to the division of soul and spirit, and of joints and marrow, and is a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the heart.

Ps. 19:7-9 The law of the Lord is perfect, converting the soul; The testimony of the Lord is sure, making wise the simple; 8 The statutes of the Lord are right, rejoicing the heart; The commandment of the Lord is pure, enlightening the eyes; 9 The fear of the Lord is clean, enduring forever; The judgments of the Lord are true and righteous altogether.

Rom. 15:4 For whatever things were written before were written for our learning, that we through the patience and comfort of the Scriptures we might have hope.

When the word of God is preached, it is EFFECTIVE. In what way is it effective? Well, it depends on the person. But regardless of who the person is, the Bible, like no other book, CUTS. It cuts to the dividing line between the soul and spirit, which are, respectively, a person’s conscious, rational mind and the eternal substance and essence, the part that lives forever. That is why when a person is being drawn to God for salvation there is a literal war between the mind and the spirit, because they are fighting tooth and nail against the God of the Bible until they are brought under submission by the God the Bible speaks of. They fight to remain in their enjoyable sins while the Holy Spirit fights to convert them and excise them out of their sin and make them new creatures. The Bible cuts to the very thought and intent of the heart. The Bible brings conviction upon sinners over their behaviors, it brings remorse to the wayward Christian, and it brings joy to the righteous believer. This Bible I speak of has been banned over, and over, and over, in many places on planet Earth, yet those who read it and are converted by it are willing to risk their lives to read this Book of books.

The Bible creates a hunger and thirst for the Living Bread and Water, Jesus Himself. This Bible has angered kings, despots, monarchs, presidents, rich men, regular people, and peasants. It has also been the source of wisdom for kings and rulers who humble themselves to the King of kings, Who is the Author of the book. The Bible provides a standard of justice to the wronged and oppressed, and if wrongs are not righted in this life, there is a promise of justice in the next. It converts sweet children and hardened criminals alike, and like Joseph in Potiphar’s house, or Solomon in the Temple, it gives wisdom to those who seek it. It makes the bereaved heart glad with hope; it awakens minds dulled by sinful deeds to the glorious righteousness of Jesus Christ. The Bible evokes a righteous fear in both those who are against God, and in those who love the Lord, and the Bible declares of itself that it is true and righteous altogether- that no one can negate this wondrous book, the Bible.

Above all, this Bible provides hope. The Word of God provided hope and courage to the three Hebrew boys who faced death by fire in a burning furnace, and gave them hope and boldness in God even if He did not deliver them in a miraculous manner. The word of God gave hope to Daniel, to David, to all those listed as heroes of the faith in Hebrews 11. The Bible provides hope because in its pages we read of a Jesus who not only died for our sins, but rose again for us, and as Paul said, if not for the resurrection we as Christians should be pitied above all people for if Christ be not risen, our faith and preaching are in vain.

But the resurrected Jesus provides us with hope. I’ve seen a mother who lost two children within the space of a year glean hope and arise from the ashes of mourning, because of the hope we find in Jesus. I’ve read of those captured and beaten for the cause of Jesus smile in their misery, and pray for their captors. This is the same hope that caused Corrie ten Boom to forgive the N**i guard who once held her and sister prisoner at the Ravensbrück concentration camp, the same camp where she watched her sister die a slow and agonizing death. And in far less dire circumstances, I myself have placed hope in the Bible, knowing God has promised to care for me, watch over me and my loved ones, and that eventually, I will be with Him one day in Heaven. That is the kind of hope the Bible provides. I have found no other book that has had such a wide-ranging, long lasting effect on the world than the Bible, the Word of God. The God of Heaven has shared His Words with us. This is a miraculous book that convicts sinners, edifies saints, and magnifies God’s name. Such a book can come only from God. With that, all I can say is that He is God, we are not, and let us all be thankful for that.

A wonderful read from Ligonier Ministries.The Imago DeiFrom Mark Ross Mar 20, 2020The opening chapter of our Bible is a ...
02/04/2021

A wonderful read from Ligonier Ministries.

The Imago Dei

From Mark Ross Mar 20, 2020

The opening chapter of our Bible is a thrilling story of creation and formation, laying the foundation for all that follows. We are told that “in the beginning” our home in the universe, the earth, was formless and void, covered in water and shrouded in darkness, while the Spirit of God was hovering over the waters (Gen. 1:2).

As the days of creation unfolded, God gave form to the earth and filled it. He separated the day from the night, the waters above from the waters below, and the dry land from the waters below. God filled these realms by putting lights in the sky to separate the day from the night, creating living creatures to swim in the waters below and birds to fly in the sky above, and causing the earth to bring forth living creatures on the dry land. Finally, as the culminating act, God created another type of living being, man.

The focus of the narrative clearly falls on this creature. Not only was this the final act of creation, but fully one-fourth of the story is centered on it. Something very special and quite important is before us.

The chapter divides the totality of beings into two basic categories: the Creator and the created. God stands alone as the uncreated Lord of all, the maker of the heavens and the earth. Everything else is created and thus finite, temporal, dependent, and changeable. Some are living creatures (the plants and the animals). Some have the breath of life in them (v. 30). Among this group is man. Like other members of the group, man is made both male and female, and called to be fruitful, to multiply, and to fill the earth (vv. 22, 28). Other similarities could be noticed (hair on the skin, females give birth to their young and suckle them, and so on). But for all the similarities that may be noted, there is something about man that makes him quite distinct from all the other creatures.

Living things are first mentioned with the vegetation that God causes to sprout on the dry land (v. 11). Then come the creatures that live in the seas and birds that fly in the air (v. 20), livestock, creeping things, and beasts of the earth (v. 24). They are all made according to their kinds. This phrase occurs ten times and leaves a bold imprint on the narrative. It indicates that while there is great diversity among all the living creatures, there are groupings among them that share common features, forming as it were “families” of things, as in the modern distinction between genus and species. But the main purpose of the phrase is not so much to introduce us to the scientific work of taxonomy; rather, it is to provide the background necessary for contrasting human beings with all the other living creatures.

When God makes man, He breaks the pattern that He has set by creating living things according to their kinds. The tenfold mention of this pattern causes us to expect it with each new living creature to appear, but something quite diferent happens when man is made; he is not made “according to [his] kind.” Neither is man created according to any other kind among the living creatures. Man does not, therefore, belong to their kinds, whatever similarities there may be between him and the other creatures. To put it in modern scientific language, he is not a particular species within a given genus of living creatures. Man is unlike any of the other living creatures (v. 26). Surprising as it is, man is made according to God’s “kind,” made in the image of God (imago Dei). Man, like God, is a personal being. God Himself, as the Bible later reveals, is three persons all sharing one divine essence. Human persons are created beings, and in that regard (as in others) they are similar to and share characteristics with other created beings. But what is most important about human persons is their likeness to God. This likeness is so very special that it sets man apart from all the other creatures God made. Man is not made according to their kinds; he is made according to God’s “kind.” In other words, man is made as the image and likeness of God.

Bearing the imago Dei, the human persons are given a measure of sovereignty over all the earth, with dominion over the fish of the sea, the birds of the air, the livestock, and every creeping thing (v. 28). They are also charged to subdue the earth (v. 28). The language suggests a ruling, even conquering, position, as Psalm 8 makes plain (see vv. 5–8). All things are placed under man’s feet, but tyranny and exploitation are not in view. Genesis 2:4–25 shows that man is to follow the example of God in his stewardship of the earth. God plants a garden in Eden, and He puts the man there to work it and keep it (2:8, 15). What God initiates, man is to sustain and cultivate. God names the light day and the darkness night; He calls the expanse heaven and the waters seas (1:5, 8, 10). Now God commissions man to name all of the living creatures that He has made (2:19).

Though it doesn’t use the vocabulary of image and likeness, Genesis 2 has its own way of underscoring the uniqueness of human persons among all the living creatures. When God formed the man from the dust and placed him in the garden, He declared that it was not good for the man to be alone. So, God determined to make a helper fit for him (2:18).

After this solemn declaration, God presented all the animals that He had made to the man, in order that the man might name them. Why this parade of animals before the man? Why did God not immediately create the woman? What looks like an interruption in the story is actually driving home the motivation for the story: “But for Adam there was not found a helper fit for him” (v. 20). The point is that human beings do not really belong to the animals, whatever characteristics they might share with them. There was not found among all the animals a helper fit for Adam, a created being of the same kind as he, with whom he could fulfill his calling from God. Thus, God made a woman, who was “bone of [his] bones and flesh of [his] flesh” (v. 23). Like Adam, she was made in the image and likeness of God (1:28). Together they were to labor in fulfilling the work of God to be fruitful, to multiply, and to fill the earth and subdue it. God made the first male and female, but all other humans would come into existence through them. What God did, the man and woman now were to continue, having been made in the image and likeness of God.

Tragically, the man and the woman turned away from God and fell into sin, seeking to become yet more like God (3:5), to choose for themselves what is good and evil. The image of God was defaced. Though made upright, they sought out many schemes (Eccl. 7:29). Their descendants would likewise bear this defaced image (Rom. 5:12–21).

Yet the image of God was not entirely lost, and what remains is still sufcient to sustain the sanctity of human life that is grounded in the imago Dei. Genesis 9:6 shows that taking innocent human life is an attack on the image of God, so it must be punished by death. Man as the image of God is to be a giver of life, not a taker of innocent life. When we become murderers, we contradict our purpose in life and forfeit the divine protection that ordinarily covers us. So special is our life to God that even a beast is put to death if it takes the life of a human being (Gen. 9:5, Ex. 21:28–32).

Further, as we are to respect God and bless Him by our words, so we must never curse those made in the likeness of God (James 3:9). The whole of human ethics is grounded in the imago Dei. Husbands must love their wives as Christ loved the church (Eph. 5:25–27). Fathers must discipline and instruct their children as the Lord does His children (6:4). The comforting love of a mother is the image and likeness of the comforting love of God (Isa. 66:13). Earthly masters should reflect the justice and fairness found in the heavenly Master (Eph. 6:9; Col. 4:1). Though sin has greatly defaced God’s image in us, by God’s grace in Christ that image is renewed (Eph. 4:24; Col. 3:10). Living by that grace, people see our good works and give glory to our Father who is in heaven (Matt. 5:16). When our restoration is complete, we shall forever live in the presence of God, clothed with His glory (Rev. 21–22), having truly become His “kind” of people. Thanks be to God.

https://www.ligonier.org/blog/imago-dei/

The opening chapter of our Bible is a thrilling story of creation and formation, laying the foundation for all that follows. We are told that “in the beginning” our home in the universe, the earth, was formless and void, covered in water and shrouded in darkness, while the Spirit of God was hove...

29/03/2021
29/03/2021

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