service genset jogja
Genesis 4:4

The Substitute

Cain brought an offering from the “fruit of the ground” in Genesis 4:3. Then the next verse adds, “…and Abel also brought of the firstborn of his flock and their fat portions. And the Lord had regard for Abel and his offering.” First, notice that Abel brought of the “firstborn.” We learn in Scripture that the firstborn belongs to God. In verse Exodus 13:2, God says, “Consecrate every firstborn male to me, the firstborn from every womb among the Israelites, both man and domestic animal; it is mine.” I realize that Moses laid this down thousands of years later as he was leading the children of Israel out of slavery in Egypt. It’s not unreasonable to understand that this practice had been handed down from God to Adam and Eve and then to Cain and Abel. The practice existed before it became written down in the law of Moses. When Jesus confronts the religious leaders in his day about their not believing in him, they argue that they believe in Moses. Jesus replied that if they believed in Moses, they would believe Him because Moses wrote about Him. Jesus was the firstborn of God, His only begotten Son, and was the only one to satisfy the requirement of an acceptable offering. Since Jesus argues that the Old Testament is about himself, it seems we must see Jesus even in the offering that Abel made in Genesis 4. It must look forward to Jesus.

Next, not only was it the “firstborn,” but it was the “fat portions.” According to Reyburn, “…it (fat portions) refers to the highly prized parts of the animal that were offered as a sacrifice.” He then suggests that the French Common Language Translation says it well: “Abel for his part brought as sacrifice some first born lambs from his flock; from these he offered the Lord the best parts.” All of this makes it clear that as with the animal skins taken to clothe Adam and Eve, this animal “…must first be killed before anything can be offered. “He killed them and gave the best parts of them as a sacrifice.”[1] What is essential in the sacrificial system is that life is taken. We read in the New Testament that there is no forgiveness of sin without the shedding of blood. Paul tells us also that the wages of sin is death. This was required of the animal to clothe Adam and Eve and was therefore established as the appropriate sacrifice. In Genesis 22, we’ll read about God’s call for Abraham to bring the most precious thing (the fat portions of his life) to Mount Mariah and offer him on the altar as a burnt offering. But God will provide another lamb as a substitute. It’s all about Jesus.

Finally, God had “regard” for Abel as well as for his offering. Boice suggests that the way we see God accepting the sacrifice is like what happened when Elijah held his context with the prophets of Baal. He writes, “God then received Abel’s offering, perhaps by sending down fire on his altar, as he did on Elijah’s altar on Mount Carmel.” I’m not sure we need to see this happening, but Boice is correct when he continues his discussion and says, “Abel’s sacrifice involved blood and therefore testified to the death of a substitute. He was coming to God as God had shown he must be approached. When God killed animals in the Garden of Eden and then clothed Adam and Eve with their skins, God showed that, because sin means death, innocent victims must die so that sinners might be pardoned. The sacrifices pointed forward to Christ. When Abel came with the offering of blood, he was believing God and was looking forward to the provision of the deliverer.”[2]

[1] Reyburn, William David, and Euan McG. Fry. 1998. A Handbook on Genesis. UBS Handbook Series. New York: United Bible Societies.

[2] Boice, James Montgomery. 1998. Genesis: An Expositional Commentary. Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Books.

Genesis 4:3, Hebrews 10:10

Once and for all!

The first thing we learn about the two sons of Adam and Eve is that they brought offerings to God. Genesis 4:3 tells us about Cain’s offering. It says, “In the course of time Cain brought to the Lord an offering of the fruit of the ground….” The opening phrase, “in the course of time,” has opened some interesting dialogue. Mike Boling says, “Perhaps as suggested by Adam Clarke, the process of time ‘means the Sabbath’, on which Adam and his family undoubtedly offered oblations to God, as the Divine worship was certainly instituted, and no doubt the Sabbath properly observed in that family. This worship was, in its original institution, very simple. It appears to have consisted of two parts.” According to Mike, the two parts are thanksgiving and piacular sacrifices. He defines “piacular” for me. Thank you, Mike.  He says, “For those not familiar with the word piacular, it means ‘making or requiring atonement’.” This might help us understand why Cain’s offering was unacceptable.

Yet, there are no recorded instructions from God or Adam and Eve regarding the nature of sacrifices. Why isn’t there more detail given? To answer this, Mason Wheeler spoke about this in a web blog. He wrote, “Storytellers tend to explain unfamiliar concepts and not waste time explaining familiar ones, so it’s reasonable to infer that Adam and his family were under a commandment from God to offer sacrifices in a similar, if not identical, manner to the rules about sacrifices in the Law of Moses. Beyond that, the Bible is unfortunately silent.”[1] It is not silent, however. We have the instance of God’s sacrificing lambs, or a lamb, to make clothing for Adam and Eve to replace their inadequate fig leaves.

It might have been at the time of God’s slayings the lamb to make clothes for Adam and Eve that God gave instructions regarding worship. The best we can do is assume that such instruction happened. It seems as MacArthur points out, that this is reasonable. He says, “Apparently God had designated a special time for sacrificing because “in the course of time” (v. 3) literally means, “at the end of days”—at the end of a certain period of time. Additionally, He initiated a particular pattern for worship and sacrifices. Otherwise Cain and Abel would have known nothing about how it was to be done.”[2] As we look back at this from the perspective we have of the Old Testament sacrificial system and the “Lamb of God that takes away the sin of the world” we see that a sacrifice is something required of God. It’s all looking forward to the ultimate sacrifice that will be offered “once and for all” for all mankind. Our righteousness and sanctification is now an accomplished face according to Hebrews 10:10. It says, “And by that will we have been sanctified through the offering of the body of Jesus Christ once for all.”

[1] https://christianity.stackexchange.com/questions/572/how-did-cain-and-abel-know-to-offer-sacrifices-before-the-law-of-moses

[2] MacArthur, John F., Jr. 1993. Drawing Near—Daily Readings for a Deeper Faith. Wheaton, IL: Crossway Books.

Genesis 4:2, Various

The Two Sons!

There doesn’t appear to be a lot of time between Cain and Abel. Cain is born in Genesis 4:1, and Abel comes in the next verse. “And again, she bore his brother Abel. Now Abel was a keeper of sheep, and Cain, a worker of the ground.” I would like to have more information about the two boys growing up, but Moses doesn’t seem to care about that. He moves right from their births to their adult occupations. At Cain’s birth, Eve shouts out that she had brought forth a man with the help of God. The enthusiasm and excitement she showed have led many to think she expected Cain to be the fulfillment of God’s promise of a deliverer. When Abel was born, they named him “breathe, vapor or air,” which Solomon used to refer to the vanity of life. It’s only a “breathe.” It’s here today and gone tomorrow. It’s not unusual for God to reverse the order of the blessing on children. The second-born, or later-born child, inherits the promise instead of the firstborn, as with Jacob and Esau and Joseph’s children, Ephraim and Manasseh. John Bunyon observes this regarding Cain and Abel and says, “God often doth as Jacob did, even cross hands, in bestowing blessings, giving that which is best to him that is least esteemed: For Cain was the man in Eve’s esteem; she thought, when she had him, she had got an inheritance; but as for Abel, he was little worth; by his name, they showed how little they set by him.”[1]

Abel was a shepherd. One cannot help but wonder if Adam and Eve, along with their family, had become carnivorous at this point. Why would you raise and tend sheep if you didn’t eat mutton? The most straightforward answer seems to be that you would raise sheep for clothing. As the family grew, they would need more and more as time went by and children were added. They knew that sheepskin was the best for making clothing because that’s what God used to replace their fig leaves. Kissling thinks they raised sheep to eat. He says, “At creation, humanity is given plants for food (Gen 1:29; 2:9). Here animals have become a food source. …Animals are explicitly given as a food source to humanity only after the Flood in Genesis 9:3.”[2] There is no mention of eating meat at this time, and maybe the flesh of animals offered as a sacrifice was seen as “food of the gods,” and therefore, it was burnt upon the altar as a sacrifice while the skin was used for clothing as initially done by God himself.

Cain was a farmer. It’s more literally “a worker of the ground.” Butler writes, “Some may think Cain had an inferior job compared to Abel’s work, but that is not true. His job was the job first mentioned in Scripture. But our text records the first mention of a keeper of sheep.”[3] There may be an additional comment here, though, dealing with the word “ground.” As the serpent was condemned to crawl on the “ground,” with his belly (appetites), so too might the idea of ground be used here. Satan’s interests are all fleshly. The ground speaks of the things of the earth, and the use of the concept with Cain might be a comment on his lusts as well. He’s of his father, the Devil, and follows suit. John tells us not to be like Cain, the murderer. He’s of his father, the Devil. Jude tells us that Cain sought only personal gain. Like Satan himself. Sailhamer suggests this saying, “On the basis of Jude 11 (‘Woe to them! They have taken the way of Cain’) and Hebrews 11:4 (‘By faith Abel offered God a better sacrifice than Cain did’), Cain has often been taken as a ‘type’ of a godless humanity and Abel as a ‘type’ of the spiritual man.”[4]

[1] Bunyan, John. 2006. An Exposition of the First Ten Chapters of Genesis. Vol. 2. Bellingham, WA: Logos Bible Software.

[2] Kissling, Paul J. 2004–. Genesis. The College Press NIV Commentary. Joplin, MO: College Press Pub. Co.

[3] Butler, John G. 2008. Analytical Bible Expositor: Genesis. Clinton, IA: LBC Publications.

[4] Sailhamer, John H. 1990. “Genesis.” In The Expositor’s Bible Commentary: Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, edited by Frank E. Gaebelein, 2:60. Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan Publishing House.

Genesis 4:1, Psalm 139

Yada, Yada, Yada!!

Adam and Eve are alone outside the garden of Eden and away from the presence of God. They only had each other. What do men and women eventually do when they are alone? Genesis 4:1 tells us, “Now Adam knew Eve his wife, and she conceived and bore Cain, saying, “I have gotten a man with the help of the Lord.” The Biblical way of describing sexual intercourse is to say simply that a man “knew” his wife. “Knowing” is obviously referring to intercourse because it’s followed by conception and childbirth. Notice that it will come up again with the birth of Seth later in Chapter 4. Patterson and Goetz describe the biblical use of the Hebrew word for “know.” They say, “Yada, to know—it’s surprising the Bible uses a word like this to speak of something that we typically describe more clinically as ‘having sex,’ or perhaps more euphemistically as ‘having relations.’ Modern translations render this verse with such words as ‘lay’ (New International Version), ‘had relations’ (New American Standard), ‘slept’ (New Living Translation), ‘had intercourse’ (Jerusalem Bible). But the Hebrew text says Adam knew Eve, and she conceived a child, a new life.” They go on to suggest that the real root of the word deals more with intimacy than sex, “God’s knowledge of us is like that. That is not to say that his knowledge of us is sexual, but sexual knowledge is something like his knowledge of us. It is deeply intimate, life-creating, in-fleshed, and therefore transforming.”[1] When men are women “know” or are “intimate” with each other, conception often takes place as in this verse.

God knows our mothers and fathers, but he also knows us from the foundation of the earth. His knowledge leads to our conception. However, in one of his best-known Psalms, Psalm 139, David described the intimacy that he recognizes God has with him. He writes, “O Lord, you have searched me and known me! You know when I sit down and when I rise up; you discern my thoughts from afar. You search out my path and my lying down and are acquainted with all my ways.  Even before a word is on my tongue, behold, O Lord, you know it altogether. You hem me in, behind and before, and lay your hand upon me… For you formed my inward parts; you knitted me together in my mother’s womb.”

Many commentators recognize the second part of this verse as something more significant than what first meets the mind. Eve declared, “I have gotten a man with the help of the Lord.” This implies that she could have understood that Cain was the deliverer promised to them back in Genesis Chapter 3. Bennet even suggests, based on several other manuscripts, that Eve exclamation should say, “‘I have gotten a man, even the Lord.’” He says this reading was “…adopted by Luther and others and understood as expressing Eve’s conviction that the promised Messiah of 3:15 had been born.”[2] What a disappointment that Cain would be for his parents. They had high hopes dashed by Cain’s murder of his brother and subsequent expulsion from his parents’ life. The only one who could redeem Adam and Eve and all humanity had to be sinless. Adam and Eve, and you and me all know sin! But “For our sake, he (God) made him (Jesus) to be sin who knew no sin, so that in him we might become the righteousness of God.”

[1] Patterson, Ben, and David L. Goetz. 1999. Deepening Your Conversation with God. Vol. 7. The Pastor’s Soul Series. Minneapolis, MN: Bethany House Publishers.

[2] Bennett, W. H. 1911–1912. “EVE.” In A Dictionary of the Bible: Dealing with Its Language, Literature, and Contents Including the Biblical Theology, edited by James Hastings, John A. Selbie, A. B. Davidson, S. R. Driver, and H. B. Swete, 1:797. New York; Edinburgh: Charles Scribner’s Sons; T. & T. Clark.

Genesis 3:24

Paradise Lost

When God explained the consequences that would fall upon Adam and Eve if they ate from the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, he allowed the possibility. They were told not to eat and advised of the results, but they still had the “ability” to do so. After their expulsion from the Garden, God did not permit even the possibility of their eating from the tree of life. Genesis 3:24 says, “He drove out the man, and at the east of the garden of Eden he placed the cherubim and a flaming sword that turned every way to guard the way to the tree of life.” Kissling says, “This at first seems like another judgment, and in some senses it is. But in reality, this, too, is an act of grace. Not wanting humanity to be forever stuck in never-ending alienation with him, with each other, and with creation, the expulsion from the garden and the denial of access to eternal life prevents humanity being trapped.”[1]

Butler suggests that one of the reasons for their expulsion from the Garden and access to the tree of life “…is a merciful one in that it would be awful for a man to live forever in his sinful condition. As Barnhouse says, ‘The only thing that makes this life bearable is the fact that it will end.’ A principle in this reason reminds us that sin kills. It does not give life. ‘The wages of sin is death’ (Romans 6:23).”[2] John Bunyon, the author of ‘Pilgrim’s Progress,’ seems to suggest that the angel with the flaming sword was essential because Adam didn’t want to leave the garden and would have returned if allowed to. Adam tried to save himself. Coming back to God’s residence, he could take of the tree of life and save himself.  By barring the way into the presence of God, He made it clear that there was nothing in man’s power with which he could redeem himself. Bunyon writes, “Adam was loth to forsake the garden, loth to forsake his doing of something; but God sets a shaking sword against him, a sword to keep that way.”[3]

According to Walton, “The cherubim are supernatural creatures who, referred to over ninety times in the Old Testament, usually function as guardians of God’s presence. From guarding the tree of life to the ornamental representation over the mercy seat on the ark of the covenant to the accompaniment of the chariot/throne in Ezekiel’s visions, cherubim are always closely associated with the person or property of deity.”[4] The angel turns his flaming sword every way that’s necessary to prevent human access to the presence of God and the tree of life. Their banishment is complete. Helm describes it thus, “Adam and Eve are alone. Their souls are adrift. Their skies, so recently clear and blue, are now dark. The light has been taken from them. And thus, we come to Genesis’ explanation for our own sense of aloneness in the world. This is why we feel alone. It is because we have become disconnected from God.”[5] In his “Paradise Lost” with unbridled passion, Milton speaks for Adam and says, “O unexpected stroke, worse than death! Must I thus leave Thee, Paradise? Thus leave Thee, native soil? these happy walks and shades.… How shall I part, and whither wander down Into a lower world.… How shall we breathe in other air less pure…?”15

[1] Kissling, Paul J. 2004–. Genesis. The College Press NIV Commentary. Joplin, MO: College Press Pub. Co.

[2] Butler, John G. 2008. Analytical Bible Expositor: Genesis. Clinton, IA: LBC Publications.

[3] Bunyan, John. 2006. An Exposition of the First Ten Chapters of Genesis. Vol. 2. Bellingham, WA: Logos Bible Software.

[4] Walton, John H. 2001. Genesis. The NIV Application Commentary. Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan.

[5] Helm, David R., and Jon M. Dennis. 2001. The Genesis Factor: Probing Life’s Big Questions. Wheaton, IL: Crossway Books.

15 John Milton, “Paradise Lost,” in The Complete Poems of John Milton, Harvard Classics (New York: P. F. Collier, 1937), pp. 325–326.

Genesis 3:23, Psalm 51:5, 2 Samuel 14:14

The Banished Ones!

God, the great potter, took from the ground to form Adam’s flesh. After the Fall, God sends Adam out to wreak his living from the ground. Genesis 3:23 tells us, “Therefore the Lord God sent him (Adam) out from the garden of Eden to work the ground from which he was taken.” Bill Mounce argues that the verb “sent” in this verse, “In certain forms, this verb can carry the negative nuance of dismissal. For example, the Lord banishes (i.e., sends away) Adam and Eve from the Garden of Eden (Gen 3:23).”[1] VanGemeren pushes this idea from the couple to all of their descendants and says, “The alienation of the first human beings from God points to the reality of an alienated race, a reality that gives rise to the teaching of original sin.”[2] I expect that David expressed the idea of original sin in Psalm 51:5. He writes, “Behold; I was brought forth in iniquity, and in sin did my mother conceive me.”

“Adam and Eve began life in ideal conditions: an idyllic garden, plentiful food, a harmonious relationship with one another, and close fellowship with God. Due to sin, they lost their garden, were required to work to produce food, experienced interpersonal conflicts, and damaged their harmony with God. These consequences of Adam’s sin still affect us today.”[3] The banishment of Adam and Eve is ours. The expulsion from the presence of God and every good thing in the Garden of Eden to make our way in the world by the sweat of our brow is also ours. But God still loves his children. He loves Adam and Eve and you and me! We have a way out! That way is death. This sounds harsh, but “God’s action here is not vindictive or punitive; it is protective. God clothed Adam and Eve to hide their shame. He drove them out of Eden to protect them from further harm. God acted out of love. Then, God’s plan of redemption and restoration begins to unfold—a plan not designed after the Fall but before creation (1 Peter 1:20). God loves humankind so much that He chose to create us even knowing the heartache it would cause Him to redeem us.”[4] It appears that the serpent, Satan, won the war, but it was only a battle lost that would be overturned in the end.

The restoration of God’s people had always been the climax of God’s plan. We see types of our redemption in Jesus throughout the Old Testament. The story of David and the restoration of his son Absalom is one of them. The woman of Tekoa says some interesting things to King David regarding his banishment of his son Absalom. In 2 Samuel 14:14, she says, “We must all die; we are like water spilled on the ground, which cannot be gathered up again. But God will not take away life, and he devises means so that the banished one will not remain an outcast.” From our perspective, the means God uses is the death, burial, and resurrection of his Son, Jesus. He died to pay the penalty for our sins. Through faith in Him, we too can experience that same restoration. MacLaren writes, “If you think that that is too bold a thing to say, remember who it was that taught us that the father fell on the neck of the returning prodigal, and kissed him; and that the rapture of his joy was the token and measure of the reality of his regret, and that it was the father to whom the prodigal son was ‘lost.’ Deep as is the mystery, let nothing, dear brethren, rob us of the plain fact that God’s love moves all around the worst, the unworthiest, the most rebellious in the far-off land, and ‘desires not the death of a sinner, but rather that he may turn from his iniquity and live.’”[5]

[1] Mounce, William D. 2006. In Mounce’s Complete Expository Dictionary of Old & New Testament Words, 52. Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan.

[2] VanGemeren, Willem, ed. 1997. In New International Dictionary of Old Testament Theology & Exegesis, 2:89. Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan Publishing House.

[3] Got Questions Ministries. 2002–2013. Got Questions? Bible Questions Answered. Bellingham, WA: Logos Bible Software.

[4] Got Questions Ministries. 2002–2013. Got Questions? Bible Questions Answered. Bellingham, WA: Logos Bible Software.

[5] MacLaren, Alexander. 2009. Expositions of Holy Scripture: 2 Samuel–2 Kings 7. Bellingham, WA: Logos Bible Software.

Genesis 3:22

What is the knowledge of good and Evil?

With the fall of mankind, their lot in life was not death. Regardless of the number of years one might live, death is always the end. One wise old physician once said that he had watched all the modern medical advances and was astounded by the things that now could save people’s lives. There are even heart transplants as well as all the organs. But, he observed in spite of all our medical advances he still perceived that the mortality rate is still 100 percent. God in his grace had made provision for man to live eternally in close fellowship with him in the Garden. But once that fellowship was broken, and death was the specter hanging over every man God moved to save us. God says in Genesis 3:22, “Now, lest he reach out his hand and take also of the tree of life and eat and live forever—Therefore the Lord God sent him out from the garden of Eden to work the ground from which he was taken.” God did not curse man to live forever in the shadow of death. Courson asks, “Can you imagine what you would look like at 30,000 years of age at your present rate of decay? It would be sad. So, God in His mercy ruled out that possibility.”[1]

“Some interesting bits of evidence supporting the biblical account of the fall have been turned up by archaeologists. In the so-called Gilgamesh epic, an ancient Babylonian tale, the hero after a long and difficult quest obtains the plant of life only to have it stolen by a serpent. And in the vicinity of Nineveh two seals have been found, dating from 3000 B.C. and earlier, the one depicting a man, a woman, and a serpent, the other a tree in the center, a man on the right, a woman on the left plucking fruit, and a serpent standing erect behind her. However, the heathen nations may have twisted the details, it is evident that much of the truth about the origin of man and of sin remained widespread knowledge in ancient times.”[2]

We all (figuratively speaking) ate of the forbidden fruit and came to a certain knowledge that we did not have before. Baxter thinks very specifically about what that knowledge could be. He suggests that the tree is named The Knowledge of Good and Evil “because it gave man a power to know his own nature.”[3] It’s interesting that throughout the history of Israel the prophets had continually called the nation who had learned to put their confidence in religious externals, to repentance, i.e., the recognition and confession of a sinful nature. When Jesus observes two men praying in the temple, he uses it as a visual lesson for his followers. One of the prayers, a Pharisee, stood boldly before God and thanked God for making him such a good person, unlike the sinner who prayed beside him. The other man was a well-known sinner, a Publican, who recognized his sinfulness and prayed that God would have mercy on him. Surely part of the knowledge gained from sin is the corrupt nature of man. Remember, God sent Jesus for the sake of the sick, not the healthy. Jesus came for the sake of sinners, not for the righteous. It’s important for us to decide which we are.

[1] Courson, Jon. 2005. Jon Courson’s Application Commentary: Volume One: Genesis–Job. Nashville, TN: Thomas Nelson.

[2] Haines, Lee. 1967. “The Book of Genesis.” In Genesis-Deuteronomy, 1:1:36. The Wesleyan Bible Commentary. Grand Rapids, MI: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company.

[3] Baxter, Richard, and William Orme. 1830. The Practical Works of the Rev. Richard Baxter. Vol. 11. London: James Duncan.

Genesis 3:22

A New Creation!

After clothing Adam and Eve with some kind of animal skin to “make atonement” or cover their sin, He then makes a very interesting comment. Genesis 3:22 begins, “Then the Lord God said, ‘Behold, the man has become like one of us in knowing good and evil.’” Through eating the forbidden fruit, they somehow became “like” Elohim. I use the word “Elohim” because, as Constable points out, “Verse 22 shows that man’s happiness (good) does not consist in his being like God as much as it depends on his being with God ‘Like one of us’ may mean like heavenly beings (God and the angels).”[1] The heavenly beings also know the difference between good and evil. Some of them chose evil and fell under the leadership of Satan. Some of them chose good and remained with God in Paradise, possibly under the leadership of Michael, the leading archangel.

Becoming like the heavenly beings is defined in only one way. Man is not like the heavenly beings in every way. And he is surely not like God. Like them, man now knows “good and evil.” Considering the use of the word “know” in the early chapters of the Bible we can surely glean that there is a special kind of intimacy involved in that knowledge. Adam “knew” his wife Eve and she conceived. This obviously involves more than just intellectual knowledge. There is an intimacy assumed. After eating the fruit of the forbidden tree, they were now intimate with good and evil. Before the fall mankind only knew life in an intimate relationship with their Creator. But afterward, he became intimate with evil as well. Moller says, “God knows good and evil, because He Himself is good while evil is in revolt against Him. However, man cannot apprehend good and evil like that. While God knows evil from a position of triumphing over it and condemning it, man got to know it as a power that enslaves and destroys him. That happened when he committed that which God had forbidden him to do. By so doing man came into rebellion against God. The consequence of this was that man came under the power of death and judgment. Through his fall into sin, the law of God was obscured in him, although not totally obliterated.”[2]

Original sin put us all at odds with our creator and we know “good and evil” and are slaves to the lust of our flesh, the lust of our eyes and the pride of life. The only way for us around that is, as Jesus says, “You must be born again.” We must be, as Paul says, “A new creation.” We can’t cover our own sin. We need something drastic to happen. Lucado says, “Real change is an inside job. You might alter things a day or two with money and systems, but the heart of the matter is, and always will be, the matter of the heart. Allow me to get specific. Our problem is sin. Not finances. Not budgets. Not overcrowded prisons or drug dealers. Our problem is sin. We are in rebellion against our Creator. We are separated from our Father. We are cut off from the source of life. A new president or policy won’t fix that. It can only be solved by God. That’s why the Bible uses drastic terms like conversion, repentance, and lost and found. Society may renovate, but only God re-creates.”[3]

[1] Constable, Tom. 2003. Tom Constable’s Expository Notes on the Bible. Galaxie Software.

[2] Möller, F. P. 1998. The Wonderful Christ and the Meaning of Humanness (Christology and Anthropology). Vol. 2. Words of Light and Life. Pretoria: Van Schaik Religious Books.

[3] Lucado, Max. 1997. Life Lessons from the Inspired Word of God: Book of Genesis. Inspirational Bible Study Series. Dallas, TX: Word Pub.

sewa motor jogja
© Chuck Larsen 2019. Powered by WordPress.